Happy 95th Anniversary, Relativity 120
StartsWithABang (3485481) writes "It's hard to believe, but there are people alive today who remember a world where Newtonian gravity was the accepted theory of gravitation governing our Universe. 95 years ago today, the 1919 solar eclipse provided the data that would provide the test of the three key options for how light would respond to the presence of a gravitational field: would it not bend at all? Would it bend according to Newton's predictions if you took the "mass" of a photon to be E/c^2? Or would it bend according to the predictions of Einstein's wacky new idea? Celebrate the 95th anniversary of relativity's confirmation by reliving the story."
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Wouldn't it be more fun to relive the story of the first time he got laid?
That's not something to celebrate publicly. Gentlemen and Ladies don't kiss and tell.
95 years but (Score:4, Interesting)
its less than that time if it was travelling at significant speed
Re:95 years but (Score:5, Informative)
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Well, it depends.
If you go many-worlds then the cat is both alive and dead - but in the world were you are, yes, it's either alive or dead.
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Well sure, but in many-worlds, it's also alive because you never put it in the box*, and it's also a dog, and it also passed straight through the walls of the box and into the Earth's molten core.
*Not to say that conscious decisions are directly quantum events, but quantum mechanics causes thermal fluctuations, and the brain is likely chaotic enough that the right fluctuation at the right time could create a different decision. The odds of all this happening are infinitesimal, but according to many-worlds,
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Well sure, but in many-worlds, it's also alive because you never put it in the box*, and it's also a dog, and it also passed straight through the walls of the box and into the Earth's molten core.
Nah, that's infinite-worlds.
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Yes but you and the cat are only in one of those worlds. There is no such thing as "the same cat in a different world". It is a different cat that branched off at some time in the past. Therefore no matter which interpretation you use, the cat is either alive or dead, full stop.
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It's not known what counts as an "observer". This is a major problem with the Copenhagen interpretation (not that other interpretations don't have their own issues).
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Irony (Score:2)
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There's no such thing as a passive detector.
Sure there is. There is nothing special about a detector. If you can put a whole cat (=a bunch of atoms) in a superposition of quantum states, you can also include the detector (=a bunch of atoms) in that superposition.
It only works if the inside of the box (including the detector) is isolated from the rest of the universe. Then there is a superposition of 2 states: (1) the radioisotope didn't decay, the detector detected nothing, the cat is alive; and (2) the radioisotope decayed, the detector detected the
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Well, I surely can detect that you posted the same response both in this thread and the "Scientists Find Method To Reliably Teleport Data" one.
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are you implying that cats have souls, and that there is in fact a cafterlife? (cat+afterlife, sorry.)
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You conflate correlation with causation. (Score:1)
It is also possible that the universe has determined, or more correctly caused, both the particle's state and your actions.In other words the cause is in the past of both the particle's current state and your actions. That is why they are correlated, not because either causes the other, but because both are caused by what has happened in the past.
A key logical error is in thinking that anything at all is outside the system and yet still interacts with it. Another key logical error is thinking that we can ac
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Eh, it's all relative.
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Eh, it's all relative.
Except for the speed of light. That is absolute.
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Eh, it's all relative.
Except for the speed of light. That is absolute.
Nope. Depends on the medium and it's velocity factor. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V... [wikipedia.org]
And no, creationists, that does not prove your whack-a-doodle variable speed of light conjecture.
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The photons themselves are still traveling at c. What's "slowing them down" is that they're being absorbed and re-emitted by the atoms in the medium. The speed of light is absolute.
Cherenkov radiation
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Exactly my point. The light in Cherenkov radiation isn't travelling faster than c, it's just going faster than the "c" for that medium.
The particle triggering the radiation is, the Cherenkov photons themselves are not -
that's what makes those nice Mach-like Cherenkov cones.
Simultaneity is in the eye of the beholder. (Score:3)
Re:Simultaneity is in the eye of the beholder. (Score:5, Interesting)
The truth is, relativity doesn't have to be as confusing as it's usually made out to be. The most accessible explanation I've found for time dilation came from Brian Greene's The Elegant Universe [wikipedia.org]:
Suppose you have a race car that can only go 100 m/s, no faster, no slower. Suppose it's racing down a very wide track that's 1km in length . Depending on the angle at which the car travels, it may cross the finish line in 10 seconds, 20, 50 or however long, just no less than 10 seconds. So similarly, we can think of our journey through the universe as happening along a "time" direction as well as three "space" directions: the faster we travel through space, necessarily the slower we travel through time, but no matter what, we're travelling at c.
The math even works out, in terms of c=sqrt(v_x^2+v_t^2) where "v_t" (your velocity through time) is c*dtau/dt.
This analogy obviously only gets you so far, and the real "wow" of relativity comes from the concepts of simultaneity (I wish more SF authors realized that FTL and time travel are the same friggin' thing), but especially for non-majors this is a great way to get one's foot in the door and begin to understand what is a pretty alien concept.
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Funny, I read that book (which is excellent) but don't remember that analogy. But I think you're talking about special relativity, not general relativity. The best GR explanation I've seen is an article Lost in Hyperbolia [coffeeshopphysics.com]. For me that explanation worked perfectly.
Now I remember reading in various places that the solar eclipse data on GR was not actually conclusive. Bad science. The earlier work Einstein did that explained the precession of mercury's orbit was actually the first confirmation of GR. Also, of
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Indeed. Parent was talking about Special (simultaneity).
Re: Mercury's precession, I'm still a believer in Vulcan [wikipedia.org].
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Re: Mercury's precession, I'm still a believer in Vulcan [wikipedia.org].
Yeah, even the term "disproves" is not exactly correct. Newtonian gravity has a very hard time explaining Mercury's precession and is completely untenable with today's observational evidence. General relativity explains Mercury's orbit without having to invent new invisible planets & stuff. And today General relativity is still doing spectacularly well with many careful neutron star observations as well as experiments closer to home, like Gravity Probe B's measurements of frame dragging and more.
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Oh, what I do remember from Bairn Greene's The Elegant Universe was his analogy for Bell's Inequality. Looks like that has been put up on Wikipedia [wikipedia.org].
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I never found relativity to be that hard or confusing. Now quantum mechanics on the other hand.... *shudders*
95? (Score:1, Funny)
Meh, anniversaries are relative.
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It's nowhere to be found in Genesis.
So now that we have had the official American view on the matter, any other nationalities care to chime in?
Re: I don't believe in relativity (Score:1)
It is found in several places in Qur'an if that's the comment that you're after
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Not sure what a British rock group has to do with a German/Swiss/American physicist's work, but whatever...
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Re:I don't believe in relativity (Score:5, Funny)
It's nowhere to be found in Genesis.
Sure it is! How do you think Methuselah lived for 969 years? Time dilation, dude.
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Nobody ever talks about Methusaleh's twin, Rodney Shortlife.
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Don't tell the fundies that, maybe they'd stop breathing.
Uh, hang on a minute, let me rephrase that... ... Please tell the fundies that, with luck they'll stop breathing.
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Everyone knows that God is everywhere at once. How is this possible? He's travelling really, really fast. This means that there's some massive time dilation going on. So obviously what was "six days" for him was billions of years for the rest of the Universe.
In all seriousness, though, the next time someone tells me that X can't be true because it's not in the bible, I'm going to pull out my smartphone and ask where smartphones are in the bible. Or computers. Or integrated circuitry. Then, I'll play
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Does mass matter? (Score:2)
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Newton's law of universal gravitation doesn't include velocity at all; it's just the product of the masses over the square of the distance between them.
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Ha, actually looking at the physics shows that the mass just cancels out and velocity is all that matters. Newton didn't predict this though, lacking a good velocity for light.
Re:Does mass matter? (Score:5, Informative)
Trivia: Newton's Principa contains only two explicit assumptions, one of them was the assumption that "time is constant".
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Trivia: Newton's Principa contains only two explicit assumptions, one of them was the assumption that "time is constant".
I was under the impression that Leibniz though disagreed:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_space_and_time#Leibniz_and_Newton
Re:Does mass matter? (Score:5, Informative)
Newton's primary insight is the gravitational field, ie: two bodies attract each other with a force proportional to the combined masses and the distance between them.
It's worth noting that this insight was not at all unique to Newton. There was, in fact, a major dispute [wikipedia.org] in the scientific community about who came up with this idea at the time, since Robert Hooke had already published on this notion. Other scientists had basically also postulated similar ideas in the decades before the Principia.
That he invented calculus to prove it and wrote it all down in his "Principia" is why he is remembered.
Yes -- Newton may have been the first to explicitly identify the specific inverse square relationship (rather than a general form relationship mentioned in the first quotation above), and he had the mathematical apparatus to prove how it all worked.
But it's also important to be clear that the idea of a "gravitational field" or an "unseen force acting at a distance" was a very spooky and strange notion to contemporary scientists in Newton's era. In fact, such ideas were commonly associated with occult ideas; they didn't fit in with the conception of a simple mechanistic universe. Thus, Newton's idea of some strange unseen "force" acting across vast distances would seem like invoking the power of God or angels or some mystical astrological "force" today.
Because of that, many scientists were initially very suspicious of Newton's methodology. Newton therefore wrote a clarification [wikipedia.org] as an appendix to the second edition of the Principia explicitly saying he was NOT assuming the existence of unseen forces and fields. Instead, he claimed his model was valuable simply because the mathematics were an accurate model. (Some historians have argued that this was in fact the most important element of Newton's revolution in thought: he argued for the acceptance of a mathematical model as a scientific explanation, even if we can't explain the underlying causes of that model.) Of course, Newton was a pretty weird guy and believed in all sorts of things that modern science would think weird, so obviously he thought the unseen forces were real. But it's interesting that he worked so hard to distance himself from such ideas at the time -- to be in accord with science of the time, the "force" in his model was thus to be considered a mere mathematical contrivance, rather than how the universe actually worked.
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Newton therefore wrote a clarification as an appendix to the second edition of the Principia explicitly saying he was NOT assuming the existence of unseen forces and fields. Instead, he claimed his model was valuable simply because the mathematics were an accurate model.
But that was some pretty weaselly bullshit, because that's precisely what he was describing mathematically. And per your link, the text which you claim distances him from unseen forces and fields in fact assumes the existence of unseen forces and fields, simply attributing the forces to God.
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Covered in a 2005 episode of Nova. See it here
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/p... [pbs.org]
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Then the blind men drew their swords and shot each other in the back, right?
It explains how Han managed to shoot first.
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One bright day in the middle of the night
Two dead men got up to fight
Back to back they faced each other
Drew their swords and shot each other
And if you think my tale is tall
Ask the blind man, he saw it all
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Lorenz contraction, says the tachyon.
Why the long face? asks the barman.
A tachyon walks into a bar.
Why not 100? (Score:2)
Of course, we're celebrating this now because its age will only asymptotically approach 100 years.
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Amusing, but on seeing this news article I can't help but wonder if Slashdot celebrated every 5 year anniversary with such enthusiasm. 95 isn't really a special marker, and this story is a bit of a non-event.
99 Years (Score:2)
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Uh..Relativity didn't disprove Newtown (Score:2)
Newton's Law of Gravity showed that the force of attraction was proportional to the masses of the objects and inversely proportional to the distance squared: Fg=kM1M2/r^2
Einstein demonstrated in his experiment, through gravitational lensing effect, that mass bends space-time and his famous equation showed mass and energy to be equivalent. This effect, not normally observable in our daily lives, shows that Newton's law is still correct. It's at relativistic speeds and at the quantum level that other terms
95 years? (Score:1)
95 years according to which frame of reference?
The poetry of the Universe (Score:3)
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That was the point, right? Mind-blowing = infinitely stultifying?
was it 1922 eclipse that provided solid data? (Score:2)
I am not a physicist but I'm confused (Score:2)
95 years? Must not have gone to a public school (Score:2)
Newtonian gravitation was still being taught at my high school less than 20 years ago.
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This is coming from a man who failed his PhD thesis more than once due to algebraic errors and other sloppiness.
While he did make an algebraic mistake in his thesis, he was awarded his PhD in 1905, and his correction was not made until 1911. He didn't fail the doctorate program, let alone multiple times.
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He didn't fail the doctorate program. He failed his defense. Three times.
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The point is that he had enough hubris to believe that general relativity worked up to cosmic scales without any error. The fact that there was in fact a substantial amount of experimental error, some of which didn't add up, didn't disturb him in the least.
General relativity actually does have problems on the cosmic scale, which is what led Einstein to introduce the cosmological constant, amongst other things. (Today people still don't know if/how general relativity holds in some places in the cosmos, iro
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Whoever modded this down really succeeded in pissing me off. This is the last time I bother making posts to scientifically-illiterate code monkeys who are clearly the same Einstein worshippers I abhor. Bye.