RELATIVITY
SPECIAL AND GENERAL THEORY
BY
ALBERT EINSTEIN
(1879-1955)
TRANSLATED BY ROBERT W. LAWSON
Methuen & Co Ltd 1916
This rendition is from the 1924 edition
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Einstein's special theory of relativity (special
relativity) is all about what's relative
and what's absolute about time, space, and
motion. Some of Einstein's conclusions are
rather surprising. They are nonetheless correct,
as numerous physics experiments have shown.
And they have forced physicists to revise
the way they think about some of their science's
most basic conceptS. With the general
theory of relativity, in which Einstein managed
to reconcile relativity and gravitation,
he had to discard the traditional physics
worldview, which saw space as merely a stage
on which the events of the world unfold.
Instead, space-time is a dynamic entity,
which is distorted by any matter that is
contained in it, and which in turn tells
that matter how to move and evolve. This
interaction between spacetime and matter
is described by Einstein's geometric, relativistic
theory of gravity. The consequences of that
theory are spectacular. For instance, general
relativity predicts that even light is deflected
by gravity - a prediction that has been confirmed
by numerous astronomical observations. In
addition, it predicts exotic phenomena like
gravitational waves and black holes, which
are described in later sections of Einstein
Online.
See:
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RELATIVITY: THE SPECIAL AND GENERAL THEORY
BY ALBERT EINSTEIN
CONTENTS
Preface
Part I: The Special Theory of Relativity
01. Physical Meaning of Geometrical Propositions
02. The System of Co-ordinates
03. Space and Time in Classical Mechanics
04. The Galileian System of Co-ordinates
05. The Principle of Relativity (in the Restricted
Sense)
06. The Theorem of the Addition of Velocities
employed in Classical Mechanics
07. The Apparent Incompatability of the Law
of Propagation of Light with the Principle
of Relativity
08. On the Idea of Time in Physics
09. The Relativity of Simultaneity
10. On the Relativity of the Conception of
Distance
11. The Lorentz Transformation
12. The Behaviour of Measuring-Rods and Clocks
in Motion
13. Theorem of the Addition of Velocities.
The Experiment of Fizeau
14. The Hueristic Value of the Theory of
Relativity
15. General Results of the Theory
16. Expereince and the Special Theory of
Relativity
17. Minkowski's Four-dimensial Space
Part II: The General Theory of Relativity
18. Special and General Principle of Relativity
19. The Gravitational Field
20. The Equality of Inertial and Gravitational
Mass as an Argument for the General Postulate
of Relativity
21. In What Respects are the Foundations
of Classical Mechanics and of the Special
Theory of Relativity Unsatisfactory?
22. A Few Inferences from the General Principle
of Relativity
23. Behaviour of Clocks and Measuring-Rods
on a Rotating Body of Reference
24. Euclidean and non-Euclidean Continuum
25. Gaussian Co-ordinates
26. The Space-Time Continuum of the Speical
Theory of Relativity Considered as a Euclidean
Continuum
27. The Space-Time Continuum of the General
Theory of Relativity is Not a Eculidean Continuum
28. Exact Formulation of the General Principle
of Relativity
29. The Solution of the Problem of Gravitation
on the Basis of the General Principle of
Relativity
Part III: Considerations on the Universe
as a Whole
30. Cosmological Difficulties of Netwon's
Theory
31. The Possibility of a "Finite"
and yet "Unbounded" Universe
32. The Structure of Space According to the
General Theory of Relativity
PREFACE
(December, 1916)
The present book is intended, as far as possible,
to give an exact insight into the theory
of Relativity to those readers who, from
a general scientific and philosophical point
of view, are interested in the theory, but
who are not conversant with the mathematical
apparatus of theoretical physics. The work
presumes a standard of education corresponding
to that of a university matriculation examination,
and, despite the shortness of the book, a
fair amount of patience and force of will
on the part of the reader. The author has
spared himself no pains in his endeavour
to present the main ideas in the simplest
and most intelligible form, and on the whole,
in the sequence and connection in which they
actually originated. In the interest of clearness,
it appeared to me inevitable that I should
repeat myself frequently, without paying
the slightest attention to the elegance of
the presentation. I adhered scrupulously
to the precept of that brilliant theoretical
physicist L. Boltzmann, according to whom
matters of elegance ought to be left to the
tailor and to the cobbler. I make no pretence
of having withheld from the reader difficulties
which are inherent to the subject. On the
other hand, I have purposely treated the
empirical physical foundations of the theory
in a "step-motherly" fashion, so
that readers unfamiliar with physics may
not feel like the wanderer who was unable
to see the forest for the trees. May the
book bring some one a few happy hours of
suggestive thought!
December, 1916 A. EINSTEIN
PART I
THE SPECIAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY
PHYSICAL MEANING OF GEOMETRICAL PROPOSITIONS.
In your schooldays most of you who read this
book made acquaintance with the noble building
of Euclid's geometry, and you remember --
perhaps with more respect than love -- the
magnificent structure, on the lofty staircase
of which you were chased about for uncounted
hours by conscientious teachers. By reason
of our past experience, you would certainly
regard everyone with disdain who should pronounce
even the most out-of-the-way proposition
of this science to be untrue. But perhaps
this feeling of proud certainty would leave
you immediately if some one were to ask you:
"What, then, do you mean by the assertion
that these propositions are true?" Let
us proceed to give this question a little
consideration.
Geometry sets out form certain conceptions
such as "plane," "point,"
and "straight line," with which
we are able to associate more or less definite
ideas, and from certain simple propositions
(axioms) which, in virtue of these ideas,
we are inclined to accept as "true."
Then, on the basis of a logical process,
the justification of which we feel ourselves
compelled to admit, all remaining propositions
are shown to follow from those axioms, i.
e. they are proven. A proposition is then
correct ("true") when it has been
derived in the recognised manner from the
axioms. The question of "truth"
of the individual geometrical propositions
is thus reduced to one of the "truth"
of the axioms. Now it has long been known
that the last question is not only unanswerable
by the methods of geometry, but that it is
in itself entirely without meaning. We cannot
ask whether it is true that only one straight
line goes through two points. We can only
say that Euclidean geometry deals with things
called "straight lines," to each
of which is ascribed the property of being
uniquely determined by two points situated
on it. The concept "true" does
not tally with the assertions of pure geometry,
because by the word "true" we are
eventually in the habit of designating always
the correspondence with a "real"
object; geometry, however, is not concerned
with the relation of the ideas involved in
it to objects of experience, but only with
the logical connection of these ideas among
themselves.
It is not difficult to understand why, in
spite of this, we feel constrained to call
the propositions of geometry "true."
Geometrical ideas correspond to more or less
exact objects in nature, and these last are
undoubtedly the exclusive cause of the genesis
of those ideas. Geometry ought to refrain
from such a course, in order to give to its
structure the largest possible logical unity.
The practice, for example, of seeing in a
"distance" two marked positions
on a practically rigid body is something
which is lodged deeply in our habit of thought.
We are accustomed further to regard three
points as being situated on a straight line,
if their apparent positions can be made to
coincide for observation with one eye, under
suitable choice of our place of observation.
If, in pursuance of our habit of thought,
we now supplement the propositions of Euclidean
geometry by the single proposition that two
points on a practically rigid body always
correspond to the same distance (line-interval),
independently of any changes in position
to which we may subject the body, the propositions
of Euclidean geometry then resolve themselves
into propositions on the possible relative
position of practically rigid bodies.* Geometry
which has been supplemented in this way is
then to be treated as a branch of physics.
We can now legitimately ask as to the "truth"
of geometrical propositions interpreted in
this way, since we are justified in asking
whether these propositions are satisfied
for those real things we have associated
with the geometrical ideas. In less exact
terms we can express this by saying that
by the "truth" of a geometrical
proposition in this sense we understand its
validity for a construction with rule and
compasses.
Of course the conviction of the "truth"
of geometrical propositions in this sense
is founded exclusively on rather incomplete
experience. For the present we shall assume
the "truth" of the geometrical
propositions, then at a later stage (in the
general theory of relativity) we shall see
that this "truth" is limited, and
we shall consider the extent of its limitation.
Notes
*) It follows that a natural object is associated
also with a straight line. Three points A,
B and C on a rigid body thus lie in a straight
line when the points A and C being given,
B is chosen such that the sum of the distances
AB and BC is as short as possible. This incomplete
suggestion will suffice for the present purpose.
THE SYSTEM OF CO-ORDINATES
On the basis of the physical interpretation
of distance which has been indicated, we
are also in a position to establish the distance
between two points on a rigid body by means
of measurements. For this purpose we require
a " distance " (rod S) which is
to be used once and for all, and which we
employ as a standard measure. If, now, A
and B are two points on a rigid body, we
can construct the line joining them according
to the rules of geometry ; then, starting
from A, we can mark off the distance S time
after time until we reach B. The number of
these operations required is the numerical
measure of the distance AB. This is the basis
of all measurement of length. *
Every description of the scene of an event
or of the position of an object in space
is based on the specification of the point
on a rigid body (body of reference) with
which that event or object coincides. This
applies not only to scientific description,
but also to everyday life. If I analyse the
place specification " Times Square,
New York,"
**A I arrive at the following result. The
earth is the rigid body to which the specification
of place refers; " Times Square, New
York," is a well-defined point, to which
a name has been assigned, and with which
the event coincides in space.**B
This primitive method of place specification
deals only with places on the surface of
rigid bodies, and is dependent on the existence
of points on this surface which are distinguishable
from each other. But we can free ourselves
from both of these limitations without altering
the nature of our specification of position.
If, for instance, a cloud is hovering over
Times Square, then we can determine its position
relative to the surface of the earth by erecting
a pole perpendicularly on the Square, so
that it reaches the cloud. The length of
the pole measured with the standard measuring-rod,
combined with the specification of the position
of the foot of the pole, supplies us with
a complete place specification. On the basis
of this illustration, we are able to see
the manner in which a refinement of the conception
of position has been developed.
(a) We imagine the rigid body, to which the
place specification is referred, supplemented
in such a manner that the object whose position
we require is reached by. the completed rigid
body.
(b) In locating the position of the object,
we make use of a number
(here the length of the pole measured with
the measuring-rod) instead of designated
points of reference.
(c) We speak of the height of the cloud even
when the pole which reaches the cloud has
not been erected. By means of optical observations
of the cloud from different positions on
the ground, and taking into account the properties
of the propagation of light, we determine
the length of the pole we should have required
in order to reach the cloud.
From this consideration we see that it will
be advantageous if, in the description of
position, it should be possible by means
of numerical measures to make ourselves independent
of the existence of marked positions (possessing
names) on the rigid body of reference. In
the physics of measurement this is attained
by the application of the Cartesian system
of co-ordinates.
This consists of three plane surfaces perpendicular
to each other and rigidly attached to a rigid
body. Referred to a system of co-ordinates,
the scene of any event will be determined
(for the main part) by the specification
of the lengths of the three perpendiculars
or co-ordinates (x, y, z) which can be dropped
from the scene of the event to those three
plane surfaces. The lengths of these three
perpendiculars can be determined by a series
of manipulations with rigid measuring-rods
performed according to the rules and methods
laid down by Euclidean geometry.
In practice, the rigid surfaces which constitute
the system of co-ordinates are generally
not available ; furthermore, the magnitudes
of the co-ordinates are not actually determined
by constructions with rigid rods, but by
indirect means. If the results of physics
and astronomy are to maintain their clearness,
the physical meaning of specifications of
position must always be sought in accordance
with the above considerations. ***
We thus obtain the following result: Every
description of events in space involves the
use of a rigid body to which such events
have to be referred. The resulting relationship
takes for granted that the laws of Euclidean
geometry hold for "distances;"
the "distance" being represented
physically by means of the convention of
two marks on a rigid body.
Notes
* Here we have assumed that there is nothing
left over i. e. that the measurement gives
a whole number. This difficulty is got over
by the use of divided measuring-rods, the
introduction of which does not demand any
fundamentally new method.
**A Einstein used "Potsdamer Platz,
Berlin" in the original text. In the
authorised translation this was supplemented
with "Tranfalgar Square, London".
We have changed this to "Times Square,
New York", as this is the most well
known/identifiable location to English speakers
in the present day. [Note by the janitor.]
**B It is not necessary here to investigate
further the significance of the expression
"coincidence in space." This conception
is sufficiently obvious to ensure that differences
of opinion are scarcely likely to arise as
to its applicability in practice.
*** A refinement and modification of these
views does not become necessary until we
come to deal with the general theory of relativity,
treated in the second part of this book.
SPACE AND TIME IN CLASSICAL MECHANICS
The purpose of mechanics is to describe how
bodies change their position in space with
"time." I should load my conscience
with grave sins against the sacred spirit
of lucidity were I to formulate the aims
of mechanics in this way, without serious
reflection and detailed explanations. Let
us proceed to disclose these sins.
It is not clear what is to be understood
here by "position" and "space."
I stand at the window of a railway carriage
which is travelling uniformly, and drop a
stone on the embankment, without throwing
it. Then, disregarding the influence of the
air resistance, I see the stone descend in
a straight line. A pedestrian who observes
the misdeed from the footpath notices that
the stone falls to earth in a parabolic curve.
I now ask: Do the "positions" traversed
by the stone lie "in reality" on
a straight line or on a parabola? Moreover,
what is meant here by motion "in space"
? From the considerations of the previous
section the answer is self-evident. In the
first place we entirely shun the vague word
"space," of which, we must honestly
acknowledge, we cannot form the slightest
conception, and we replace it by "motion
relative to a practically rigid body of reference."
The positions relative to the body of reference
(railway carriage or embankment) have already
been defined in detail in the preceding section.
If instead of " body of reference "
we insert " system of co-ordinates,"
which is a useful idea for mathematical description,
we are in a position to say : The stone traverses
a straight line relative to a system of co-
ordinates rigidly attached to the carriage,
but relative to a system of co-ordinates
rigidly attached to the ground (embankment)
it describes a parabola. With the aid of
this example it is clearly seen that there
is no such thing as an independently existing
trajectory (lit. "path-curve"*),
but only a trajectory relative to a particular
body of reference.
In order to have a complete description of
the motion, we must specify how the body
alters its position with time ; i. e. for
every point on the trajectory it must be
stated at what time the body is situated
there. These data must be supplemented by
such a definition of time that, in virtue
of this definition, these time-values can
be regarded essentially as magnitudes (results
of measurements) capable of observation.
If we take our stand on the ground of classical
mechanics, we can satisfy this requirement
for our illustration in the following manner.
We imagine two clocks of identical construction
; the man at the railway-carriage window
is holding one of them, and the man on the
footpath the other. Each of the observers
determines the position on his own reference-body
occupied by the stone at each tick of the
clock he is holding in his hand. In this
connection we have not taken account of the
inaccuracy involved by the finiteness of
the velocity of propagation of light. With
this and with a second difficulty prevailing
here we shall have to deal in detail later.
Notes
*) That is, a curve along which the body
moves.
THE GALILEIAN SYSTEM OF CO-ORDINATES
As is well known, the fundamental law of
the mechanics of Galilei-Newton, which is
known as the law of inertia, can be stated
thus: A body removed sufficiently far from
other bodies continues in a state of rest
or of uniform motion in a straight line.
This law not only says something about the
motion of the bodies, but it also indicates
the reference-bodies or systems of coordinates,
permissible in mechanics, which can be used
in mechanical description. The visible fixed
stars are bodies for which the law of inertia
certainly holds to a high degree of approximation.
Now if we use a system of co-ordinates which
is rigidly attached to the earth, then, relative
to this system, every fixed star describes
a circle of immense radius in the course
of an astronomical day, a result which is
opposed to the statement of the law of inertia.
So that if we adhere to this law we must
refer these motions only to systems of coordinates
relative to which the fixed stars do not
move in a circle. A system of co-ordinates
of which the state of motion is such that
the law of inertia holds relative to it is
called a " Galileian system of co-ordinates."
The laws of the mechanics of Galflei-Newton
can be regarded as valid only for a Galileian
system of co-ordinates.
THE PRINCIPLE OF RELATIVITY
(IN THE RESTRICTED SENSE)
In order to attain the greatest possible
clearness, let us return to our example of
the railway carriage supposed to be travelling
uniformly. We call its motion a uniform translation
("uniform" because it is of constant
velocity and direction, " translation
" because although the carriage changes
its position relative to the embankment yet
it does not rotate in so doing). Let us imagine
a raven flying through the air in such a
manner that its motion, as observed from
the embankment, is uniform and in a straight
line. If we were to observe the flying raven
from the moving railway carriage. we should
find that the motion of the raven would be
one of different velocity and direction,
but that it would still be uniform and in
a straight line. Expressed in an abstract
manner we may say : If a mass m is moving
uniformly in a straight line with respect
to a co-ordinate system K, then it will also
be moving uniformly and in a straight line
relative to a second co-ordinate system K1
provided that the latter is executing a uniform
translatory motion with respect to K. In
accordance with the discussion contained
in the preceding section, it follows that:
If K is a Galileian co-ordinate system. then
every other co-ordinate system K' is a Galileian
one, when, in relation to K, it is in a condition
of uniform motion of translation. Relative
to K1 the mechanical laws of Galilei-Newton
hold good exactly as they do with respect
to K.
We advance a step farther in our generalisation
when we express the tenet thus: If, relative
to K, K1 is a uniformly moving co-ordinate
system devoid of rotation, then natural phenomena
run their course with respect to K1 according
to exactly the same general laws as with
respect to K. This statement is called the
principle of relativity (in the restricted
sense).
As long as one was convinced that all natural
phenomena were capable of representation
with the help of classical mechanics, there
was no need to doubt the validity of this
principle of relativity. But in view of the
more recent development of electrodynamics
and optics it became more and more evident
that classical mechanics affords an insufficient
foundation for the physical description of
all natural phenomena. At this juncture the
question of the validity of the principle
of relativity became ripe for discussion,
and it did not appear impossible that the
answer to this question might be in the negative.
Nevertheless, there are two general facts
which at the outset speak very much in favour
of the validity of the principle of relativity.
Even though classical mechanics does not
supply us with a sufficiently broad basis
for the theoretical presentation of all physical
phenomena, still we must grant it a considerable
measure of " truth," since it supplies
us with the actual motions of the heavenly
bodies with a delicacy of detail little short
of wonderful. The principle of relativity
must therefore apply with great accuracy
in the domain of mechanics. But that a principle
of such broad generality should hold with
such exactness in one domain of phenomena,
and yet should be invalid for another, is
a priori not very probable.
We now proceed to the second argument, to
which, moreover, we shall return later. If
the principle of relativity (in the restricted
sense) does not hold, then the Galileian
co-ordinate systems K, K1, K2, etc., which
are moving uniformly relative to each other,
will not be equivalent for the description
of natural phenomena. In this case we should
be constrained to believe that natural laws
are capable of being formulated in a particularly
simple manner, and of course only on condition
that, from amongst all possible Galileian
co-ordinate systems, we should have chosen
one (K[0]) of a particular state of motion
as our body of reference. We should then
be justified (because of its merits for the
description of natural phenomena) in calling
this system " absolutely at rest,"
and all other Galileian systems K "
in motion." If, for instance, our embankment
were the system K[0] then our railway carriage
would be a system K, relative to which less
simple laws would hold than with respect
to K[0]. This diminished simplicity would
be due to the fact that the carriage K would
be in motion (i. e."really")with
respect to K[0]. In the general laws of nature
which have been formulated with reference
to K, the magnitude and direction of the
velocity of the carriage would necessarily
play a part. We should expect, for instance,
that the note emitted by an organpipe placed
with its axis parallel to the direction of
travel would be different from that emitted
if the axis of the pipe were placed perpendicular
to this direction.
Now in virtue of its motion in an orbit round
the sun, our earth is comparable with a railway
carriage travelling with a velocity of about
30 kilometres per second. If the principle
of relativity were not valid we should therefore
expect that the direction of motion of the
earth at any moment would enter into the
laws of nature, and also that physical systems
in their behaviour would be dependent on
the orientation in space with respect to
the earth. For owing to the alteration in
direction of the velocity of revolution of
the earth in the course of a year, the earth
cannot be at rest relative to the hypothetical
system K[0] throughout the whole year. However,
the most careful observations have never
revealed such anisotropic properties in terrestrial
physical space, i. e. a physical non-equivalence
of different directions. This is very powerful
argument in favour of the principle of relativity.
THE THEOREM OF THE ADDITION OF VELOCITIES
EMPLOYED IN CLASSICAL MECHANICS
Let us suppose our old friend the railway
carriage to be travelling along the rails
with a constant velocity v, and that a man
traverses the length of the carriage in the
direction of travel with a velocity w. How
quickly or, in other words, with what velocity
W does the man advance relative to the embankment
during the process ? The only possible answer
seems to result from the following consideration:
If the man were to stand still for a second,
he would advance relative to the embankment
through a distance v equal numerically to
the velocity of the carriage. As a consequence
of his walking, however, he traverses an
additional distance w relative to the carriage,
and hence also relative to the embankment,
in this second, the distance w being numerically
equal to the velocity with which he is walking.
Thus in total be covers the distance W=v+w
relative to the embankment in the second
considered. We shall see later that this
result, which expresses the theorem of the
addition of velocities employed in classical
mechanics, cannot be maintained ; in other
words, the law that we have just written
down does not hold in reality. For the time
being, however, we shall assume its correctness.
THE APPARENT INCOMPATIBILITY OF THE LAW OF
PROPAGATION OF LIGHT WITH THE PRINCIPLE OF
RELATIVITY
There is hardly a simpler law in physics
than that according to which light is propagated
in empty space. Every child at school knows,
or believes he knows, that this propagation
takes place in straight lines with a velocity
c= 300,000 km./sec. At all events we know
with great exactness that this velocity is
the same for all colours, because if this
were not the case, the minimum of emission
would not be observed simultaneously for
different colours during the eclipse of a
fixed star by its dark neighbour. By means
of similar considerations based on observa-
tions of double stars, the Dutch astronomer
De Sitter was also able to show that the
velocity of propagation of light cannot depend
on the velocity of motion of the body emitting
the light. The assumption that this velocity
of propagation is dependent on the direction
"in space" is in itself improbable.
In short, let us assume that the simple law
of the constancy of the velocity of light
c (in vacuum) is justifiably believed by
the child at school. Who would imagine that
this simple law has plunged the conscientiously
thoughtful physicist into the greatest intellectual
difficulties? Let us consider how these difficulties
arise.
Of course we must refer the process of the
propagation of light (and indeed every other
process) to a rigid reference-body (co-ordinate
system). As such a system let us again choose
our embankment. We shall imagine the air
above it to have been removed. If a ray of
light be sent along the embankment, we see
from the above that the tip of the ray will
be transmitted with the velocity c relative
to the embankment. Now let us suppose that
our railway carriage is again travelling
along the railway lines with the velocity
v, and that its direction is the same as
that of the ray of light, but its velocity
of course much less. Let us inquire about
the velocity of propagation of the ray of
light relative to the carriage. It is obvious
that we can here apply the consideration
of the previous section, since the ray of
light plays the part of the man walking along
relatively to the carriage. The velocity
w of the man relative to the embankment is
here replaced by the velocity of light relative
to the embankment. w is the required velocity
of light with respect to the carriage, and
we have
w = c-v.
The velocity of propagation ot a ray of light
relative to the carriage thus comes cut smaller
than c.
But this result comes into conflict with
the principle of relativity set forth in
Section V. For, like every other general
law of nature, the law of the transmission
of light in vacuo [in vacuum] must, according
to the principle of relativity, be the same
for the railway carriage as reference-body
as when the rails are the body of reference.
But, from our above consideration, this would
appear to be impossible. If every ray of
light is propagated relative to the embankment
with the velocity c, then for this reason
it would appear that another law of propagation
of light must necessarily hold with respect
to the carriage -- a result contradictory
to the principle of relativity.
In view of this dilemma there appears to
be nothing else for it than to abandon either
the principle of relativity or the simple
law of the propagation of light in vacuo.
Those of you who have carefully followed
the preceding discussion are almost sure
to expect that we should retain the principle
of relativity, which appeals so convincingly
to the intellect because it is so natural
and simple. The law of the propagation of
light in vacuo would then have to be replaced
by a more complicated law conformable to
the principle of relativity. The development
of theoretical physics shows, however, that
we cannot pursue this course. The epoch-making
theoretical investigations of H. A. Lorentz
on the electrodynamical and optical phenomena
connected with moving bodies show that experience
in this domain leads conclusively to a theory
of electromagnetic phenomena, of which the
law of the constancy of the velocity of light
in vacuo is a necessary consequence. Prominent
theoretical physicists were theref ore more
inclined to reject the principle of relativity,
in spite of the fact that no empirical data
had been found which were contradictory to
this principle.
At this juncture the theory of relativity
entered the arena. As a result of an analysis
of the physical conceptions of time and space,
it became evident that in realily there is
not the least incompatibilitiy between the
principle of relativity and the law of propagation
of light, and that by systematically holding
fast to both these laws a logically rigid
theory could be arrived at. This theory has
been called the special theory of relativity
to distinguish it from the extended theory,
with which we shall deal later. In the following
pages we shall present the fundamental ideas
of the special theory of relativity.
VIII. On the Idea of Time in Physics
LIGHTNING has struck the rails on our railway
embankment at two places A and B far distant
from each other. I make the additional assertion
that these two lightning flashes occurred
simultaneously. If now I ask you whether
there is sense in this statement, you will
answer my question with a decided "Yes."
But if I now approach you with the request
to explain to me the sense of the statement
more precisely, you find after some consideration
that the answer to this question is not so
easy as it appears at first sight. 1 After
some time perhaps the following answer would
occur to you: "The significance of the
statement is clear in itself and needs no
further explanation; of course it would require
some consideration if I were to be commissioned
to determine by observations whether in the
actual case the two events took place simultaneously
or not." I cannot be satisfied with
this answer for the following reason. Supposing
that as a result of ingenious considerations
an able meteorologist were to discover that
the lightning must always strike the places
A and B simultaneously, then we should be
faced with the task of testing whether or
not this theoretical result is in accordance
with the reality. We encounter the same difficulty
with all physical statements in which the
conception "simultaneous" plays
a part. The concept does not exist for the
physicist until he has the possibility of
discovering whether or not it is fulfilled
in an actual case. We thus require a definition
of simultaneity such that this definition
supplies us with the method by means of which,
in the present case, he can decide by experiment
whether or not both the lightning strokes
occurred simultaneously. As long as this
requirement is not satisfied, I allow myself
to be deceived as a physicist (and of course
the same applies if I am not a physicist),
when I imagine that I am able to attach a
meaning to the statement of simultaneity.
(I would ask the reader not to proceed farther
until he is fully convinced on this point.)
2 After thinking the matter over for some
time you then offer the following suggestion
with which to test simultaneity. By measuring
along the rails, the connecting line AB should
be measured up and an observer placed at
the mid-point M of the distance AB. This
observer should be supplied with an arrangement
(e. g. two mirrors inclined at 90°) which
allows him visually to observe both places
A and B at the same time. If the observer
perceives the two flashes of lightning at
the same time, then they are simultaneous.
3 I am very pleased with this suggestion,
but for all that I cannot regard the matter
as quite settled, because I feel constrained
to raise the following objection: "Your
definition would certainly be right, if I
only knew that the light by means of which
the observer at M perceives the lightning
flashes travels along the length A - M with
the same velocity as along the length B -
M. But an examination of this supposition
would only be possible if we already had
at our disposal the means of measuring time.
It would thus appear as though we were moving
here in a logical circle." 4 After further
consideration you cast a somewhat disdainful
glance at me-and rightly so-and you declare:
"I maintain my previous definition nevertheless,
because in reality it assumes absolutely
nothing about light. There is only one demand
to be made of the definition of simultaneity,
namely, that in every real case it must supply
us with an empirical decision as to whether
or not the conception that has to be defined
is fulfilled. That my definition satisfies
this demand is indisputable. That light requires
the same time to traverse the path A - M
as for the path B - M is in reality neither
a supposition nor a hypothesis about the
physical nature of light, but a stipulation
which I can make of my own freewill in order
to arrive at a definition of simultaneity."
5 It is clear that this definition can be
used to give an exact meaning not only to
two events, but to as many events as we care
to choose, and independently of the positions
of the scenes of the events with respect
to the body of reference 1 (here the railway
embankment). We are thus led also to a definition
of "time" in physics. For this
purpose we suppose that clocks of identical
construction are placed at the points A,
B and C of the railway line (co-ordinate
system), and that they are set in such a
manner that the positions of their pointers
are simultaneously (in the above sense) the
same. Under these conditions we understand
by the "time" of an event the reading
(position of the hands) of that one of these
clocks which is in the immediate vicinity
(in space) of the event. In this manner a
time-value is associated with every event
which is essentially capable of observation.
6 This stipulation contains a further physical
hypothesis, the validity of which will hardly
be doubted without empirical evidence to
the contrary. It has been assumed that all
these clocks go at the same rate if they
are of identical construction. Stated more
exactly: When two clocks arranged at rest
in different places of a reference-body are
set in such a manner that a particular position
of the pointers of the one clock is simultaneous
(in the above sense) with the same position
of the pointers of the other clock, then
identical "settings" are always
simultaneous (in the sense of the above definition).
7
Note 1. We suppose further that, when three
events A, B and C take place in different
places in such a manner that, if A is simultaneous
with B, and B is simultaneous with C
(simultaneous in the sense of the above definition),
then the criterion for the simultaneity of
the pair of events A, C is also satisfied.
This assumption is a physical hypothesis
about the law of propagation of light; it
must certainly be fulfilled if we are to
maintain the law of the constancy of the
velocity of light in vacuo.
IX. The Relativity of Simultaneity
UP to now our considerations have been referred
to a particular body of reference, which
we have styled a "railway embankment."
We suppose a very long train travelling along
the rails with the constant velocity v and
in the direction indicated in Fig. 1. People
travelling in this train will with advantage
use the train as a rigid reference-body
(co-ordinate system); they regard all events
in reference to the train. Then every event
which takes place along the line also takes
place at a particular point of the train.
Also the definition of simultaneity can be
given relative to the train in exactly the
same way as with respect to the embankment.
As a natural consequence, however, the following
question arises: 1 Are two events (e. g.
the two strokes of lightning A and B) which
are simultaneous with reference to the railway
embankment also simultaneous relatively to
the train? We shall show directly that the
answer must be in the negative.
2 When we say that the lightning strokes
A and B are simultaneous with respect to
the embankment, we mean: the rays of light
emitted at the places A and B, where the
lightning occurs, meet each other at the
mid-point M of the length A - B of the embankment.
But the events A and B also correspond to
positions A and B on the train. Let M' be
the mid-point of the distance A - B on the
travelling train. Just when the flashes 1
of lightning occur, this point M' naturally
coincides with the point M, but it moves
towards the right in the diagram with the
velocity v of the train. If an observer sitting
in the position M' in the train did not possess
this velocity, then he would remain permanently
at M, and the light rays emitted by the flashes
of lightning A and B would reach him simultaneously,
i. e. they would meet just where he is situated.
Now in reality (considered with reference
to the railway embankment) he is hastening
towards the beam of light coming from B,
whilst he is riding on ahead of the beam
of light coming from A. Hence the observer
will see the beam of light emitted from B
earlier than he will see that emitted from
A. Observers who take the railway train as
their reference-body must therefore come
to the conclusion that the lightning flash
B took place earlier than the lightning flash
A. We thus arrive at the important result:
3 Events which are simultaneous with reference
to the embankment are not simultaneous with
respect to the train, and vice versa (relativity
of simultaneity). Every reference-body (co-ordinate
system) has its own particular time; unless
we are told the reference-body to which the
statement of time refers, there is no meaning
in a statement of the time of an event. 4
Now before the advent of the theory of relativity
it had always tacitly been assumed in physics
that the statement of time had an absolute
significance, i. e. that it is independent
of the state of motion of the body of reference.
But we have just seen that this assumption
is incompatible with the most natural definition
of simultaneity; if we discard this assumption,
then the conflict between the law of the
propagation of light in vacuo and the principle
of relativity (developed in Section VII)
disappears. 5 We were led to that conflict
by the considerations of Section VI, which
are now no longer tenable. In that section
we concluded that the man in the carriage,
who traverses the distance w per second relative
to the carriage, traverses the same distance
also with respect to the embankment in each
second of time. But, according to the foregoing
considerations, the time required by a particular
occurrence with respect to the carriage must
not be considered equal to the duration of
the same occurrence as judged from the embankment
(as reference-body). Hence it cannot be contended
that the man in walking travels the distance
w relative to the railway line in a time
which is equal to one second as judged from
the embankment. 6 Moreover, the considerations
of Section VI are based on yet a second assumption,
which, in the light of a strict consideration,
appears to be arbitrary, although it was
always tacitly made even before the introduction
of the theory of relativity. 7
X. On the Relativity of the Conception of
Distance
LET us consider two particular points on
the train 1 travelling along the embankment
with the velocity v, and inquire as to their
distance apart. We already know that it is
necessary to have a body of reference for
the measurement of a distance, with respect
to which body the distance can be measured
up. It is the simplest plan to use the train
itself as the reference-body (co-ordinate
system). An observer in the train measures
the interval by marking off his measuring-rod
in a straight line (e. g. along the floor
of the carriage) as many times as is necessary
to take him from the one marked point to
the other. Then the number which tells us
how often the rod has to be laid down is
the required distance. 1 It is a different
matter when the distance has to be judged
from the railway line. Here the following
method suggests itself. If we call A' and
B' the two points on the train whose distance
apart is required, then both of these points
are moving with the velocity v along the
embankment. In the first place we require
to determine the points A and B of the embankment
which are just being passed by the two points
A' and B' at a particular time t-judged from
the embankment. These points A and B of the
embankment can be determined by applying
the definition of time given in Section VIII.
The distance between these points A and B
is then measured by repeated application
of the measuring-rod along the embankment.
2 A priori it is by no means certain that
this last measurement will supply us with
the same result as the first. Thus the length
of the train as measured from the embankment
may be different from that obtained by measuring
in the train itself. This circumstance leads
us to a second objection which must be raised
against the apparently obvious consideration
of Section VI. Namely, if the man in the
carriage covers the distance w in a unit
of time-measured from the train,-then this
distance-as measured from the embankment-is
not necessarily also equal to w. 3
Note 1. e. g. the middle of the first and
of the hundredth carriage
XI. The Lorentz Transformation
THE RESULTS of the last three sections show
that the apparent incompatibility of the
law of propagation of light with the principle
of relativity (Section VII) has been derived
by means of a consideration which borrowed
two unjustifiable hypotheses from classical
mechanics; these are as follows:
The time-interval (time) between two events
is independent of the condition of motion
of the body of reference.
The space-interval (distance) between two
points of a rigid body is independent of
the condition of motion of the body of reference.
If we drop these hypotheses, then the dilemma
of Section VII disappears, because the theorem
of the addition of velocities derived in
Section VI becomes invalid. The possibility
presents itself that the law of the propagation
of light in vacuo may be compatible with
the principle of relativity, and the question
arises: How have we to modify the considerations
of Section VI in order to remove
the apparent disagreement between these two
fundamental results of experience? This question
leads to a general one. In the discussion
of Section VI we have to do with places and
times relative both to the train and to the
embankment. How are we to find the place
and time of an event in relation to the train,
when we know the place and time of the event
with respect to the railway embankment? Is
there a thinkable answer to this question
of such a nature that the law of transmission
of light in vacuodoes not contradict the
principle of relativity? In other words:
Can we conceive of a relation between place
and time of the individual events relative
to both reference-bodies, such that every
ray of light possesses the velocity of transmission
c relative to the embankment and relative
to the train? This question leads to a quite
definite positive answer, and to a perfectly
definite transformation law for the space-time
magnitudes of an event when changing over
from one body of reference to another.
Before we deal with this, we shall introduce
the following incidental consideration. Up
to the present we have only considered events
taking place along the embankment, which
had mathematically to assume the function
of a straight line. In the manner indicated
in Section II
we can imagine this reference-body supplemented
laterally and in a vertical direction by
means of a
framework of rods, so that an event which
takes place anywhere can be localised with
reference to this framework. Similarly, we
can imagine the train travelling with the
velocity v to be continued across the whole
of space, so that every event, no matter
how far off it may be, could also be localised
with respect to the second framework. Without
committing any fundamental error, we can
disregard the fact that in reality these
frameworks would continually interfere with
each other, owing to the impenetrability
of solid bodies. In every such framework
we imagine three surfaces perpendicular to
each other marked out, and designated as
"co-ordinate planes" ("co-ordinate
system"). A co-ordinate system K then
corresponds to the embankment, and a co-ordinate
system K' to the train. An event, wherever
it may have taken place, would be fixed in
space with respect to K by the three perpendiculars
x, y, z on the co-ordinate planes, and with
regard to time by a time-value t. Relative
to K', the same event would be fixed in respect
of space and time by corresponding values
x', y', z', t', which of course are not identical
with x, y, z, t. It has already been set
forth in detail how these magnitudes are
to be regarded as results of physical measurements.
Obviously our problem can be exactly formulated
in the following manner. What are the values
x', y', z', t' of an event with respect to
K', when the magnitudes x, y, z, t, of the
same event with respect to K are given? The
relations must be so chosen that the law
of the transmission of light in vacuo is
satisfied for one and the same ray of light
(and of course for every ray) with respect
to K and K'. For the relative orientation
in space of the co-ordinate systems indicated
in the diagram (Fig. 2), this problem is
solved by means of the equations:
This system of equations is known as the
"Lorentz transformation." 1
If in place of the law of transmission of
light we had taken as our basis the tacit
assumptions of the older mechanics as to
the absolute character of times and lengths,
then instead of the above we should have
obtained the following equations: x' = x
- vt
y' = y
z' = z
t' = t.
This system of equations is often termed
the "Galilei transformation." The
Galilei transformation can be obtained from
the Lorentz transformation by substituting
an infinitely large value for the velocity
of light c in the latter transformation.
Aided by the following illustration, we can
readily see that, in accordance with the
Lorentz transformation, the law of the transmission
of light in vacuo is satisfied both for the
reference-body K and for the reference-body
K'. A light-signal is sent along the positive
x-axis, and this light-stimulus advances
in accordance with the equation
x = ct,
i. e. with the velocity c. According to the
equations of the Lorentz transformation,
this simple relation between x and t involves
a relation between x' and t'. In point of
fact, if we substitute for x the value ct
in the first and fourth equations of the
Lorentz transformation, we obtain:
from which, by division, the expression
x' = ct'
immediately follows. If referred to the system
K', the propagation of light takes place
according to this equation. We thus see that
the velocity of transmission relative to
the reference-body K' is also equal to c.
The same result is obtained for rays of light
advancing in any other direction whatsoever.
Of course this is not surprising, since the
equations of the Lorentz transformation were
derived conformably to this point of view.
Note 1. A simple derivation of the Lorentz
transformation is given in Appendix I
XII. The Behaviour of Measuring-Rods and
Clocks in Motion
I PLACE a metre-rod in the x'-axis of k'
in such a manner that one end (the beginning)
coincides with the point x' = 0, whilst the
other end (the end of the rod) coincides
with the point x' = 1. What is the length
of the metre-rod relatively to the system
K? In order to learn this, we need only ask
where the beginning of the rod and the end
of the rod lie with respect to K at a particular
time t of the system K. By means of the first
equation of the Lorentz transformation the
values of these two points at the timet =
0 can be shown to be
the distance between the points being
But the metre-rod is moving with the velocity
v relative to K. It therefore follows that
the length of a rigid metre-rod moving in
the direction of its length with a velocity
v is
of a metre. The rigid rod is thus shorter
when in motion than when at rest, and the
more quickly it is moving, the shorter is
the rod. For the velocity v = 0 we should
have
and for still greater velocities the square-root
becomes imaginary. From this we conclude
that in the theory of relativity the velocity
c plays the part of a limiting velocity,
which can neither be reached nor exceeded
by any real body.
Of course this feature of the velocity c
as a limiting velocity also clearly follows
from the equations of the Lorentz transformation,
for these become meaningless if we choose
values of v greater than c.
If, on the contrary, we had considered a
metre-rod at rest in the x-axis with respect
to K, then we should have found that the
length of the rod as judged from K' would
have been
this is quite in accordance with the principle
of relativity which forms the basis of our
considerations.
A priori it is quite clear that we must be
able to learn something about the physical
behaviour of measuring-rods and clocks from
the equations of transformation, for the
magnitudes x, y, z, t, are nothing more nor
less than the results of measurements obtainable
by means of measuring-rods and clocks. If
we had based our considerations on the Galilei
transformation we should not have obtained
a contraction of the rod as a consequence
of its motion.
Let us now consider a seconds-clock which
is permanently situated at the origin (x'=
0) of K'. t' = 0 and t' = 1 are two successive
ticks of this clock. The first and fourth
equations of the Lorentz transformation give
for these two ticks:
t = 0
and
As judged from K, the clock is moving with
the velocity v; as judged from this reference-body,
the time which elapses between two strokes
of the clock is not one second, but
seconds, i. e. a somewhat larger time. As
a consequence of its motion the clock goes
more slowly than when at rest. Here also
the velocity c plays the part of an unattainable
limiting velocity.
XIII. Theorem of the Addition of Velocities.
The Experiment of Fizeau
NOW in practice we can move clocks and measuring-rods
only with velocities that are small compared
with the velocity of light; hence we shall
hardly be able to compare the results of
the previous section directly with the reality.
But, on the other hand, these results must
strike you as being very singular, and for
that reason I shall now draw another conclusion
from the theory, one which can easily be
derived from the foregoing considerations,
and which has been most elegantly confirmed
by experiment.
In Section VI we derived the theorem of the
addition of velocities in one direction in
the form which also results from the hypotheses
of classical mechanics. This theorem can
also be deduced readily from the Galilei
transformation (Section XI). In place of
the man walking inside the carriage, we introduce
a point moving relatively to the co-ordinate
system K' in accordance with the equation
x' = wt'.
By means of the first and fourth equations
of the Galilei transformation we can express
x' and t' in terms of x and t, and we then
obtain
x = (v + w)t.
This equation expresses nothing else than
the law of motion of the point with reference
to the system K (of the man with reference
to the embankment). We denote this velocity
by the symbol W, and we then obtain, as in
Section VI,
W = v + w . (A).
But we can carry out this consideration just
as well on the basis of the theory of relativity.
In the equation
x' = wt'
we must then express x' and t' in terms of
x and t, making use of the first and fourth
equations of the Lorentz transformation.
Instead of the equation (A) we then obtain
the equation
which corresponds to the theorem of addition
for velocities in one direction according
to the theory of relativity. The question
now arises as to which of these two theorems
is the better in accord with experience.
On this point we are enlightened by a most
important experiment which the brilliant
physicist Fizeau performed more than half
a century ago, and which has been repeated
since then by some of the best experimental
physicists, so that there can be no doubt
about its result. The experiment is concerned
with the following question. Light travels
in a motionless liquid with a particular
velocity w. How quickly does it travel in
the direction of the arrow in the tube T
(see the accompanying diagram, Fig. 3) when
the liquid above mentioned is flowing through
the tube with a velocity v?
FIG. 3.
In accordance with the principle of relativity
we shall certainly have to take for granted
that the propagation of light always takes
place with the same velocity w with respect
to the liquid, whether the latter is in motion
with reference to other bodies or not. The
velocity of light relative to the liquid
and the velocity of the latter relative to
the tube are thus known, and we require the
velocity of light relative to the tube.
It is clear that we have the problem of Section
VI again before us. The tube plays the part
of the railway embankment or of the co-ordinate
system K, the liquid plays the part of the
carriage or of the co- ordinate system K',
and finally, the light plays the part of
the man walking along the carriage, or of
the moving point in the present section.
If we denote the velocity of the light relative
to the tube by W, then this is given by the
equation (A) or (B), according as the Galilei
transformation or the Lorentz transformation
corresponds to the facts. Experiment 1 decides
in favour of equation (B) derived from the
theory of relativity, and the agreement is,
indeed, very exact. According to recent and
most excellent measurements by Zeeman, the
influence of the velocity of flow v on the
propagation of light is represented by formula
(B) to within one per cent.
Nevertheless we must now draw attention to
the fact that a theory of this phenomenon
was given by H. A. Lorentz long before the
statement of the theory of relativity. This
theory was of a purely electrodynamical nature,
and was obtained by the use of particular
hypotheses as to the electromagnetic structure
of matter. This circumstance, however, does
not in the least diminish the conclusiveness
of the experiment as a crucial test in favour
of the theory of relativity, for the electrodynamics
of Maxwell-Lorentz, on which the original
theory was based, in no way opposes the theory
of relativity. Rather has the latter been
developed from electrodynamics as an astoundingly
simple combination and generalisation of
the hypotheses, formerly independent of each
other, on which electrodynamics was built.
Note 1. Fizeau found
where
is the index of refraction of the liquid.
On the other hand, owing to the smallness
of
as compared with 1, we can replace (B) in
the first place by
or to the same order of approximation by
which agrees with Fizeau's result.
XIV. The Heuristic Value of the Theory of
Relativity
OUR train of thought in the foregoing pages
can be epitomised in the following manner.
Experience has led to the conviction that,
on the one hand, the principle of relativity
holds true, and that on the other hand the
velocity of transmission of light in vacuo
has to be considered equal to a constant
c. By uniting these two postulates we obtained
the law of transformation for the rectangular
co-ordinates x, y, z and the time t of the
events which constitute the processes of
nature. In this connection we did not obtain
the Galilei transformation, but, differing
from classical mechanics, the Lorentz transformation.
1 The law of transmission of light, the acceptance
of which is justified by our actual knowledge,
played an important part in this process
of thought. Once in possession of the Lorentz
transformation, however, we can combine this
with the principle of relativity, and sum
up the theory thus: 2 Every general law of
nature must be so constituted that it is
transformed into a law of exactly the same
form when, instead of the space-time variables
x, y, z, t of the original co-ordinate system
K, we introduce new space-time variables
x', y', z', t' of a co-ordinate system K'.
In this connection the relation between the
ordinary and the accented magnitudes is given
by the Lorentz transformation. Or, in brief:
General laws of nature are co-variant with
respect to Lorentz transformations. 3 This
is a definite mathematical condition that
the theory of relativity demands of a natural
law, and in virtue of this, the theory becomes
a valuable heuristic aid in the search for
general laws of nature. If a general law
of nature were to be found which did not
satisfy this condition, then at least one
of the two fundamental assumptions of the
theory would have been disproved. Let us
now examine what general results the latter
theory has hitherto evinced. 4
XV. General Results of the Theory
IT is clear from our previous considerations
that the (special) theory of relativity has
grown out of electrodynamics and optics.
In these fields it has not appreciably altered
the predictions of theory, but it has considerably
simplified the theoretical structure, i.
e. the derivation of laws, and-what is incomparably
more important-it has considerably reduced
the number of independent hypotheses forming
the basis of theory. The special theory of
relativity has rendered the Maxwell-Lorentz
theory so plausible, that the latter would
have been generally accepted by physicists
even if experiment had decided less unequivocally
in its favour.
Classical mechanics required to be modified
before it could come into line with the demands
of the special theory of relativity. For
the main part, however, this modification
affects only the laws for rapid motions,
in which the velocities of matterv are not
very small as compared with the velocity
of light. We have experience of such rapid
motions only in the case of electrons and
ions; for other motions the variations from
the laws of classical mechanics are too small
to make themselves evident in practice. We
shall not consider the motion of stars until
we come to speak of the general theory of
relativity. In accordance with the theory
of relativity the kinetic energy of a material
point of mass m is no longer given by the
well-known expression
but by the expression
This expression approaches infinity as the
velocity v approaches the velocity of lightc.
The velocity must therefore always remain
less than c, however great may be the energies
used to produce the acceleration. If we develop
the expression for the kinetic energy in
the form of a series, we obtain
When
is small compared with unity, the third of
these terms is always small in comparison
with the second, which last is alone considered
in classical mechanics. The first termmc2
does not contain the velocity, and requires
no consideration if we are only dealing with
the question as to how the energy of a point-mass
depends on the velocity. We shall speak of
its essential significance later.
The most important result of a general character
to which the special theory of relativity
has led is concerned with the conception
of mass. Before the advent of relativity,
physics recognised two conservation laws
of fundamental importance, namely, the law
of the conservation of energy and the law
of the conservation of mass; these two fundamental
laws appeared to be quite independent of
each other. By means of the theory of relativity
they have been united into one law. We shall
now briefly consider how this unification
came about, and what meaning is to be attached
to it.
The principle of relativity requires that
the law of the conservation of energy should
hold not only with reference to a co-ordinate
system K, but also with respect to every
co-ordinate system K' which is in a state
of uniform motion of translation relative
toK, or, briefly, relative to every "Galileian"
system of co-ordinates. In contrast to classical
mechanics, the Lorentz transformation is
the deciding factor in the transition from
one such system to another.
By means of comparatively simple considerations
we are led to draw the following conclusion
from these premises, in conjunction with
the fundamental equations of the electrodynamics
of Maxwell: A body moving with the velocity
v, which absorbs 1an amount of energy E0
in the form of radiation without suffering
an alteration in velocity in the process,
has, as a consequence, its energy increased
by an amount
In consideration of the expression given
above for the kinetic energy of the body,
the required energy of the body comes out
to be
Thus the body has the same energy as a body
of mass
moving with the velocity v. Hence we can
say: If a body takes up an amount of energy
E0, then its inertial mass increases by an
amount
the inertial mass of a body is not a constant,
but varies according to the change in the
energy of the body. The inertial mass of
a system of bodies can even be regarded as
a measure of its energy. The law of the conservation
of the mass of a system becomes identical
with the law of the conservation of energy,
and is only valid provided that the system
neither takes up nor sends out energy. Writing
the expression for the energy in the form
we see that the term mc2, which has hitherto
attracted our attention, is nothing else
than the energy possessed by the body 1 before
it absorbed the energy E0.
A direct comparison of this relation with
experiment is not possible at the present
time, owing to the fact that the changes
in energy E0 to which we can subject a system
are not large enough to make themselves perceptible
as a change in the inertial mass of the system.
is too small in comparison with the mass
m, which was present before the alteration
of the energy. It is owing to this circumstance
that classical mechanics was able to establish
successfully the conservation of mass as
a law of independent validity.
Let me add a final remark of a fundamental
nature. The success of the Faraday-Maxwell
interpretation of electromagnetic action
at a distance resulted in physicists becoming
convinced that there are no such things as
instantaneous actions at a distance (not
involving an intermediary medium) of the
type of Newton's law of gravitation. According
to the theory of relativity, action at a
distance with the velocity of light always
takes the place of instantaneous action at
a distance or of action at a distance with
an infinite velocity of transmission. This
is connected with the fact that the velocity
c plays a fundamental rôle in this theory.
In Part II we shall see in what way this
result becomes modified in the general theory
of relativity.
Note 1. E0 is the energy taken up, as judged
from a co-ordinate system moving with the
body.
As judged from a co-ordinate system moving
with the body
XVI. Experience and the Special Theory of
Relativity
TO what extent is the special theory of relativity
supported by experience? This question is
not easily answered for the reason already
mentioned in connection with the fundamental
experiment of Fizeau. The special theory
of relativity has crystallised out from the
Maxwell-Lorentz theory of electromagnetic
phenomena. Thus all facts of experience which
support the electromagnetic theory also support
the theory of relativity. As being of particular
importance, I mention here the fact that
the theory of relativity enables us to predict
the effects produced on the light reaching
us from the fixed stars. These results are
obtained in an exceedingly simple manner,
and the effects indicated, which are due
to the relative motion of the earth with
reference to those fixed stars, are found
to be in accord with experience. We refer
to the yearly movement of the apparent position
of the fixed stars resulting from the motion
of the earth round the sun (aberration),
and to the influence of the radial components
of the relative motions of the fixed stars
with respect to the earth on the colour of
the light reaching us from them. The latter
effect manifests itself in a slight displacement
of the spectral lines of the light transmitted
to us from a fixed star, as compared with
the position of the same spectral lines when
they are produced by a terrestrial source
of light (Doppler principle). The experimental
arguments in favour of the Maxwell-Lorentz
theory, which are at the same time arguments
in favour of the theory of relativity, are
too numerous to be set forth here. In reality
they limit the theoretical possibilities
to such an extent, that no other theory than
that of Maxwell and Lorentz has been able
to hold its own when tested by experience.
But there are two classes of experimental
facts hitherto obtained which can be represented
in the Maxwell-Lorentz theory only by the
introduction of an auxiliary hypothesis,
which in itself-i. e. without making use
of the theory of relativity-appears extraneous.
It is known that cathode rays and the so-called
-rays emitted by radioactive substances consist
of negatively electrified particles (electrons)
of very small inertia and large velocity.
By examining the deflection of these rays
under the influence of electric and magnetic
fields, we can study the law of motion of
these particles very exactly.
In the theoretical treatment of these electrons,
we are faced with the difficulty that electrodynamic
theory of itself is unable to give an account
of their nature. For since electrical masses
of one sign repel each other, the negative
electrical masses constituting the electron
would necessarily be scattered under the
influence of their mutual repulsions, unless
there are forces of another kind operating
between them, the nature of which has hitherto
remained obscure to us. 1 If we now assume
that the relative distances between the electrical
masses constituting the electron remain unchanged
during the motion of the electron (rigid
connection in the sense of classical mechanics),
we arrive at a law of motion of the electron
which does not agree with experience. Guided
by purely formal points of view, H. A. Lorentz
was the first to introduce the hypothesis
that the particles constituting the electron
experience a contraction in the direction
of motion in consequence of that motion,
the amount of this contraction being proportional
to the expression
This hypothesis, which is not justifiable
by any electrodynamical facts, supplies us
then with that particular law of motion which
has been confirmed with great precision in
recent years.
The theory of relativity leads to the same
law of motion, without requiring any special
hypothesis whatsoever as to the structure
and the behaviour of the electron. We arrived
at a similar conclusion in Section XIII in
connection with the experiment of Fizeau,
the result of which is fore-told by the theory
of relativity without the necessity of drawing
on hypotheses as to the physical nature of
the liquid.
The second class of facts to which we have
alluded has reference to the question whether
or not the motion of the earth in space can
be made perceptible in terrestrial experiments.
We have already remarked in Section V that
all attempts of this nature led to a negative
result. Before the theory of relativity was
put forward, it was difficult to become reconciled
to this negative result, for reasons now
to be discussed. The inherited prejudices
about time and space did not allow any doubt
to arise as to the prime importance of the
Galilei transformation for changing over
from one body of reference to another. Now
assuming that the Maxwell-Lorentz equations
hold for a reference-body K, we then find
that they do not hold for a reference-body
K' moving uniformly with respect to K, if
we assume that the relations of the Galileian
transformation exist between the co-ordinates
of K and K'.It thus appears that of all Galileian
co-ordinate systems one (K) corresponding
to a particular state of motion is physically
unique. This result was interpreted physically
by regarding K as at rest with respect to
a hypothetical ćther of space. On the other
hand, all co-ordinate systems K' moving relatively
to K were to be regarded as in motion with
respect to the ćther. To this motion of K'
against the ćther ("ćther-drift"
relative to K') were assigned the more complicated
laws which were supposed to hold relative
to K'. Strictly speaking, such an ćther-drift
ought also to be assumed relative to the
earth, and for a long time the efforts of
physicists were devoted to attempts to detect
the existence of an ćther-drift at the earth's
surface.
In one of the most notable of these attempts
Michelson devised a method which appears
as though it must be decisive. Imagine two
mirrors so arranged on a rigid body that
the reflecting surfaces face each other.
A ray of light requires a perfectly definite
time T to pass from one mirror to the other
and back again, if the whole system be at
rest with respect to the ćther. It is found
by calculation, however, that a slightly
different time T' is required for this process,
if the body, together with the mirrors, be
moving relatively to the ćther. And yet another
point: it is shown by calculation that for
a given velocity v with reference to the
ćther, this time T' is different when the
body is moving perpendicularly to the planes
of the mirrors from that resulting when the
motion is parallel to these planes. Although
the estimated difference between these two
times is exceedingly small, Michelson and
Morley performed an experiment involving
interference in which this difference should
have been clearly detectable. But the experiment
gave a negative result-a fact very perplexing
to physicists. Lorentz and FitzGerald rescued
the theory from this difficulty by assuming
that the motion of the body relative to the
ćther produces a contraction of the body
in the direction of motion, the amount of
contraction being just sufficient to compensate
for the difference in time mentioned above.
Comparison with the discussion in Section
XII shows that from the standpoint also of
the theory of relativity this solution of
the difficulty was the right one. But on
the basis of the theory of relativity the
method of interpretation is incomparably
more satisfactory. According to this theory
there is no such thing as a "specially
favoured" (unique) co-ordinate system
to occasion the introduction of the ćther-idea,
and hence there can be no ćther-drift, nor
any experiment with which to demonstrate
it. Here the contraction of moving bodies
follows from the two fundamental principles
of the theory without the introduction of
particular hypotheses; and as the prime factor
involved in this contraction we find, not
the motion in itself, to which we cannot
attach any meaning, but the motion with respect
to the body of reference chosen in the particular
case in point. Thus for a co-ordinate system
moving with the earth the mirror system of
Michelson and Morley is not shortened, but
it is shortened for a co-ordinate system
which is at rest relatively to the sun.
Note 1. The general theory of relativity
renders it likely that the electrical masses
of an electron are held together by gravitational
forces.
XVII. Minkowski's Four-Dimensional Space
THE NON-MATHEMATICIAN is seized by a mysterious
shuddering when he hears of "four-dimensional"
things, by a feeling not unlike that awakened
by thoughts of the occult. And yet there
is no more common-place statement than that
the world in which we live is a four-dimensional
space-time continuum. 1 Space is a three-dimensional
continuum. By this we mean that it is possible
to describe the position of a point (at rest)
by means of three numbers (co-ordinates)
x, y, z, and that there is an indefinite
number of points in the neighbourhood of
this one, the position of which can be described
by co- ordinates such as x1, y1, z1, which
may be as near as we choose to the respective
values of the co-ordinates x, y, z of the
first point. In virtue of the latter property
we speak of a "continuum," and
owing to the fact that there are three co-ordinates
we speak of it as being "three-dimensional."
2 Similarly, the world of physical phenomena
which was briefly called "world"
by Minkowski is naturally four- dimensional
in the space-time sense. For it is composed
of individual events, each of which is described
by four numbers, namely, three space co-ordinates
x, y, z and a time co-ordinate, the time-value
t. The "world" is in this sense
also a continuum; for to every event there
are as many "neighbouring" events
(realised or at least thinkable) as we care
to choose, the co-ordinates x1, y1, z1, t1
of which differ by an indefinitely small
amount from those of the event x, y, z, t
originally considered. That we have not been
accustomed to regard the world in this sense
as a four-dimensional continuum is due to
the fact that in physics, before the advent
of the theory of relativity, time played
a different and more independent rôle, as
compared with the space co-ordinates. It
is for this reason that we have been in the
habit of treating time as an independent
continuum. As a matter of fact, according
to classical mechanics, time is absolute,
i. e. it is independent of the position and
the condition of motion of the system of
co- ordinates. We see this expressed in the
last equation of the Galileian transformation
(t' = t). 3 The four-dimensional mode of
consideration of the "world" is
natural on the theory of relativity, since
according to this theory time is robbed of
its independence. This is shown by the fourth
equation of the Lorentz transformation:
Moreover, according to this equation the
time difference t' of two events with respect
to K' does not in general vanish, even when
the time difference t of the same events
with reference to K vanishes. Pure "space-distance"
of two events with respect to K results in
"time-distance" of the same events
with respect to K'. But the discovery, of
Minkowski, which was of importance for the
formal development of the theory of relativity,
does not lie here. It is to be found rather
in the fact of his recognition that the four-dimensional
space-time continuum of the theory of relativity,
in its most essential formal properties,
shows a pronounced relationship to the three-dimensional
continuum of Euclidean geometrical space.
1 In order to give due prominence to this
relationship, however, we must replace the
usual time co-ordinate t by an imaginary
magnitude
ct proportional to it. Under these conditions,
the natural laws satisfying the demands of
the (special) theory of relativity assume
mathematical forms, in which the time co-ordinate
plays exactly the same rôle as the three
space co-ordinates. Formally, these four
co-ordinates correspond exactly to the three
space co-ordinates in Euclidean geometry.
It must be clear even to the non-mathematician
that, as a consequence of this purely formal
addition to our knowledge, the theory perforce
gained clearness in no mean measure. 4 These
inadequate remarks can give the reader only
a vague notion of the important idea contributed
by Minkowski. Without it the general theory
of relativity, of which the fundamental ideas
are developed in the following pages, would
perhaps have got no farther than its long
clothes. Minkowski's work is doubtless difficult
of access to anyone inexperienced in mathematics,
but since it is not necessary to have a very
exact grasp of this work in order to understand
the fundamental ideas of either the special
or the general theory of relativity, I shall
at present leave it here, and shall revert
to it only towards the end of Part II.
Part II: The General Theory of Relativity
XVIII. Special and General Principle of Relativity
THE BASAL principle, which was the pivot
of all our previous considerations, was the
special principle of relativity, i. e. the
principle of the physical relativity of all
uniform motion. Let us once more analyse
its meaning carefully. 1 It was at all times
clear that, from the point of view of the
idea it conveys to us, every motion must
only be considered as a relative motion.
Returning to the illustration we have frequently
used of the embankment and the railway carriage,
we can express the fact of the motion here
taking place in the following two forms,
both of which are equally justifiable: The
carriage is in motion relative to the embankment.
The embankment is in motion relative to the
carriage.
2 In (a) the embankment, in (b) the carriage,
serves as the body of reference in our statement
of the motion taking place. If it is simply
a question of detecting or of describing
the motion involved, it is in principle immaterial
to what reference-body we refer the motion.
As already mentioned, this is self-evident,
but it must not be confused with the much
more comprehensive statement called "the
principle of relativity," which we have
taken as the basis of our investigations.
3 The principle we have made use of not only
maintains that we may equally well choose
the carriage or the embankment as our reference-body
for the description of any event (for this,
too, is self-evident). Our principle rather
asserts what follows: If we formulate the
general laws of nature as they are obtained
from experience, by making use of the embankment
as reference-body, the railway carriage as
reference-body, then these general laws of
nature (e. g. the laws of mechanics or the
law of the propagation of light in vacuo)
have exactly the same form in both cases.
This can also be expressed as follows: For
the physical description of natural processes,
neither of the reference-bodies K, K' is
unique (lit. "specially marked out")
as compared with the other. Unlike the first,
this latter statement need not of necessity
hold a priori; it is not contained in the
conceptions of "motion" and "referencebody"
and derivable from them; only experience
can decide as to its correctness or incorrectness.
4 Up to the present, however, we have by
no means maintained the equivalence of all
bodies of reference K in connection with
the formulation of natural laws. Our course
was more on the following lines. In the first
place, we started out from the assumption
that there exists a reference-body K, whose
condition of motion is such that the Galileian
law holds with respect to it: A particle
left to itself and sufficiently far removed
from all other particles moves uniformly
in a straight line. With reference to K (Galileian
reference-body) the laws of nature were to
be as simple as possible. But in addition
to K, all bodies of reference K' should be
given preference in this sense, and they
should be exactly equivalent to K for the
formulation of natural laws, provided that
they are in a state of uniform rectilinear
and non-rotary motion with respect to K;
all these bodies of reference are to be regarded
as Galileian reference-bodies. The validity
of the principle of relativity was assumed
only for these reference-bodies, but not
for others (e. g. those possessing motion
of a different kind). In this sense we speak
of the special principle of relativity, or
special theory of relativity. 5 In contrast
to this we wish to understand by the "general
principle of relativity" the following
statement: All bodies of reference K, K',
etc., are equivalent for the description
of natural phenomena (formulation of the
general laws of nature), whatever may be
their state of motion. But before proceeding
farther, it ought to be pointed out that
this formulation must be replaced later by
a more abstract one, for reasons which will
become evident at a later stage. 6 Since
the introduction of the special principle
of relativity has been justified, every intellect
which strives after generalisation must feel
the temptation to venture the step towards
the general principle of relativity. But
a simple and apparently quite reliable consideration
seems to suggest that, for the present at
any rate, there is little hope of success
in such an attempt. Let us imagine ourselves
transferred to our old friend the railway
carriage, which is travelling at a uniform
rate. As long as it is moving uniformly,
the occupant of the carriage is not sensible
of its motion, and it is for this reason
that he can un-reluctantly interpret the
facts of the case as indicating that the
carriage is at rest, but the embankment in
motion. Moreover, according to the special
principle of relativity, this interpretation
is quite justified also from a physical point
of view. 7 If the motion of the carriage
is now changed into a non-uniform motion,
as for instance by a powerful application
of the brakes, then the occupant of the carriage
experiences a correspondingly powerful jerk
forwards. The retarded motion is manifested
in the mechanical behaviour of bodies relative
to the person in the railway carriage. The
mechanical behaviour is different from that
of the case previously considered, and for
this reason it would appear to be impossible
that the same mechanical laws hold relatively
to the non-uniformly moving carriage, as
hold with reference to the carriage when
at rest or in uniform motion. At all events
it is clear that the Galileian law does not
hold with respect to the non-uniformly moving
carriage. Because of this, we feel compelled
at the present juncture to grant a kind of
absolute physical reality to non-uniform
motion, in opposition to the general principle
of relativity. But in what follows we shall
soon see that this conclusion cannot be maintained.
XIX. The Gravitational Field
"IF we pick up a stone and then let
it go, why does it fall to the ground?"
The usual answer to this question is: "Because
it is attracted by the earth." Modern
physics formulates the answer rather differently
for the following reason. As a result of
the more careful study of electromagnetic
phenomena, we have come to regard action
at a distance as a process impossible without
the intervention of some intermediary medium.
If, for instance, a magnet attracts a piece
of iron, we cannot be content to regard this
as meaning that the magnet acts directly
on the iron through the intermediate empty
space, but we are constrained to imagine-after
the manner of Faraday-that the magnet always
calls into being something physically real
in the space around it, that something being
what we call a "magnetic field."
In its turn this magnetic field operates
on the piece of iron, so that the latter
strives to move towards the magnet. We shall
not discuss here the justification for this
incidental conception, which is indeed a
somewhat arbitrary one. We shall only mention
that with its aid electromagnetic phenomena
can be theoretically represented much more
satisfactorily than without it, and this
applies particularly to the transmission
of electromagnetic waves. The effects of
gravitation also are regarded in an analogous
manner. 1 The action of the earth on the
stone takes place indirectly. The earth produces
in its surroundings a gravitational field,
which acts on the stone and produces its
motion of fall. As we know from experience,
the intensity of the action on a body diminishes
according to a quite definite law, as we
proceed farther and farther away from the
earth. From our point of view this means:
The law governing the properties of the gravitational
field in space must be a perfectly definite
one, in order correctly to represent the
diminution of gravitational action with the
distance from operative bodies. It is something
like this: The body (e. g. the earth) produces
a field in its immediate neighbourhood directly;
the intensity and direction of the field
at points farther removed from the body are
thence determined by the law which governs
the properties in space of the gravitational
fields themselves.
2 In contrast to electric and magnetic fields,
the gravitational field exhibits a most remarkable
property, which is of fundamental importance
for what follows. Bodies which are moving
under the sole influence of a gravitational
field receive an acceleration, which does
not in the least depend either on the material
or on the physical state of the body. For
instance, a piece of lead and a piece of
wood fall in exactly the same manner in a
gravitational field (in vacuo), when they
start off from rest or with the same initial
velocity. This law, which holds most accurately,
can be expressed in a different form in the
light of the following consideration. 3 According
to Newton's law of motion, we have (Force)
= (inertial mass) × (acceleration), where
the "inertial mass" is a characteristic
constant of the accelerated body. If now
gravitation is the cause of the acceleration,
we then have (Force) = (gravitational mass)
× (intensity of the gravitational field),
where the "gravitational mass"
is likewise a characteristic constant for
the body. From these two relations follows:
4 If now, as we find from experience, the
acceleration is to be independent of the
nature and the condition of the body and
always the same for a given gravitational
field, then the ratio of the gravitational
to the inertial mass must likewise be the
same for all bodies. By a suitable choice
of units we can thus make this ratio equal
to unity. We then have the following law:
The gravitational mass of a body is equal
to its inertial mass. 5 It is true that this
important law had hitherto been recorded
in mechanics, but it had not been interpreted.
A satisfactory interpretation can be obtained
only if we recognise the following fact:
The same quality of a body manifests itself
according to circumstances as "inertia"
or as "weight" (lit. "heaviness").
In the following section we shall show to
what extent this is actually the case, and
how this question is connected with the general
postulate of relativity. 6
XX. The Equality of Inertial and Gravitational
Mass
as an Argument for the General Postulate
of Relativity
WE imagine a large portion of empty space,
so far removed from stars and other appreciable
masses that we have before us approximately
the conditions required by the fundamental
law of Galilei. It is then possible to choose
a Galileian reference-body for this part
of space (world), relative to which points
at rest remain at rest and points in motion
continue permanently in uniform rectilinear
motion. As reference-body let us imagine
a spacious chest resembling a room with an
observer inside who is equipped with apparatus.
Gravitation naturally does not exist for
this observer. He must fasten himself with
strings to the floor, otherwise the slightest
impact against the floor will cause him to
rise slowly towards the ceiling of the room.
1 To the middle of the lid of the chest is
fixed externally a hook with rope attached,
and now a "being" (what kind of
a being is immaterial to us) begins pulling
at this with a constant force. The chest
together with the observer then begin to
move "upwards" with a uniformly
accelerated motion. In course of time their
velocity will reach unheard-of values-provided
that we are viewing all this from another
reference-body which is not being pulled
with a rope. 2 But how does the man in the
chest regard the process? The acceleration
of the chest will be transmitted to him by
the reaction of the floor of the chest. He
must therefore take up this pressure by means
of his legs if he does not wish to be laid
out full length on the floor. He is then
standing in the chest in exactly the same
way as anyone stands in a room of a house
on our earth. If he release a body which
he previously had in his hand, the acceleration
of the chest will no longer be transmitted
to this body, and for this reason the body
will approach the floor of the chest with
an accelerated relative motion. The observer
will further convince himself that the acceleration
of the body towards the floor of the chest
is always of the same magnitude, whatever
kind of body he may happen to use for the
experiment. 3 Relying on his knowledge of
the gravitational field (as it was discussed
in the preceding section), the man in the
chest will thus come to the conclusion that
he and the chest are in a gravitational field
which is constant with regard to time. Of
course he will be puzzled for a moment as
to why the chest does not fall in this gravitational
field. Just then, however, he discovers the
hook in the middle of the lid of the chest
and the rope which is attached to it, and
he consequently comes to the conclusion that
the chest is suspended at rest in the gravitational
field. 4 Ought we to smile at the man and
say that he errs in his conclusion? I do
not believe we ought if we wish to remain
consistent; we must rather admit that his
mode of grasping the situation violates neither
reason nor known mechanical laws. Even though
it is being accelerated with respect to the
"Galileian space" first considered,
we can nevertheless regard the chest as being
at rest. We have thus good grounds for extending
the principle of relativity to include bodies
of reference which are accelerated with respect
to each other, and as a result we have gained
a powerful argument for a generalised postulate
of relativity. 5 We must note carefully that
the possibility of this mode of interpretation
rests on the fundamental property of the
gravitational field of giving all bodies
the same acceleration, or, what comes to
the same thing, on the law of the equality
of inertial and gravitational mass. If this
natural law did not exist, the man in the
accelerated chest would not be able to interpret
the behaviour of the bodies around him on
the supposition of a gravitational field,
and he would not be justified on the grounds
of experience in supposing his reference-body
to be "at rest." 6 Suppose that
the man in the chest fixes a rope to the
inner side of the lid, and that he attaches
a body to the free end of the rope. The result
of this will be to stretch the rope so that
it will hang "vertically" downwards.
If we ask for an opinion of the cause of
tension in the rope, the man in the chest
will say: "The suspended body experiences
a downward force in the gravitational field,
and this is neutralised by the tension of
the rope; what determines the magnitude of
the tension of the rope is the gravitational
mass of the suspended body." On the
other hand, an observer who is poised freely
in space will interpret the condition of
things thus: "The rope must perforce
take part in the accelerated motion of the
chest, and it transmits this motion to the
body attached to it. The tension of the rope
is just large enough to effect the acceleration
of the body. That which determines the magnitude
of the tension of the rope is the inertial
mass of the body." Guided by this example,
we see that our extension of the principle
of relativity implies the necessity of the
law of the equality of inertial and gravitational
mass. Thus we have obtained a physical interpretation
of this law. 7 From our consideration of
the accelerated chest we see that a general
theory of relativity must yield important
results on the laws of gravitation. In point
of fact, the systematic pursuit of the general
idea of relativity has supplied the laws
satisfied by the gravitational field. Before
proceeding farther, however, I must warn
the reader against a misconception suggested
by these considerations. A gravitational
field exists for the man in the chest, despite
the fact that there was no such field for
the co-ordinate system first chosen. Now
we might easily suppose that the existence
of a gravitational field is always only an
apparent one. We might also think that, regardless
of the kind of gravitational field which
may be present, we could always choose another
reference-body such that no gravitational
field exists with reference to it. This is
by no means true for all gravitational fields,
but only for those of quite special form.
It is, for instance, impossible to choose
a body of reference such that, as judged
from it, the gravitational field of the earth
(in its entirety) vanishes. 8 We can now
appreciate why that argument is not convincing,
which we brought forward against the general
principle of relativity at the end of Section
XVIII. It is certainly true that the observer
in the railway carriage experiences a jerk
forwards as a result of the application of
the brake, and that he recognises in this
the non-uniformity of motion (retardation)
of the carriage. But he is compelled by nobody
to refer this jerk to a "real"
acceleration (retardation) of the carriage.
He might also interpret his experience thus:
"My body of reference (the carriage)
remains permanently at rest. With reference
to it, however, there exists (during the
period of application of the brakes) a gravitational
field which is directed forwards and which
is variable with respect to time. Under the
influence of this field, the embankment together
with the earth moves non-uniformly in such
a manner that their original velocity in
the backwards direction is continuously reduced."
9
XXI. In What Respects Are the Foundations
of Classical Mechanics
and of the Special Theory of Relativity Unsatisfactory?
WE have already stated several times that
classical mechanics starts out from the following
law: Material particles sufficiently far
removed from other material particles continue
to move uniformly in a straight line or continue
in a state of rest. We have also repeatedly
emphasised that this fundamental law can
only be valid for bodies of reference K which
possess certain unique states of motion,
and which are in uniform translational motion
relative to each other. Relative to other
reference-bodies K the law is not valid.
Both in classical mechanics and in the special
theory of relativity we therefore differentiate
between reference-bodies K relative to which
the recognised "laws of nature"
can be said to hold, and reference-bodies
K relative to which these laws do not hold.
1 But no person whose mode of thought is
logical can rest satisfied with this condition
of things. He asks: "How does it come
that certain reference-bodies (or their states
of motion) are given priority over other
reference-bodies
(or their states of motion)? What is the
reason for this preference? In order to show
clearly what I mean by this question, I shall
make use of a comparison. 2 I am standing
in front of a gas range. Standing alongside
of each other on the range are two pans so
much alike that one may be mistaken for the
other. Both are half full of water. I notice
that steam is being emitted continuously
from the one pan, but not from the other.
I am surprised at this, even if I have never
seen either a gas range or a pan before.
But if I now notice a luminous something
of bluish colour under the first pan but
not under the other, I cease to be astonished,
even if I have never before seen a gas flame.
For I can only say that this bluish something
will cause the emission of the steam, or
at least possibly it may do so. If, however,
I notice the bluish something in neither
case, and if I observe that the one continuously
emits steam whilst the other does not, then
I shall remain astonished and dissatisfied
until I have discovered some circumstance
to which I can attribute the different behaviour
of the two pans. 3 Analogously, I seek in
vain for a real something in classical mechanics
(or in the special theory of relativity)
to which I can attribute the different behaviour
of bodies considered with respect to the
reference-systems K and K'. 1 Newton saw
this objection and attempted to invalidate
it, but without success. But E. Mach recognised
it most clearly of all, and because of this
objection he claimed that mechanics must
be placed on a new basis. It can only be
got rid of by means of a physics which is
conformable to the general principle of relativity,
since the equations of such a theory hold
for every body of reference, whatever may
be its state of motion. 4
Note 1. The objection is of importance more
especially when the state of motion of the
reference-body is of such a nature that it
does not require any external agency for
its maintenance, e. g. in the case when the
reference-body is rotating uniformly
XXII. A Few Inferences from the General Theory
of Relativity
THE CONSIDERATIONS of Section XX show that
the general theory of relativity puts us
in a position to derive properties of the
gravitational field in a purely theoretical
manner. Let us suppose, for instance, that
we know the space-time "course"
for any natural process whatsoever, as regards
the manner in which it takes place in the
Galileian domain relative to a Galileian
body of reference K. By means of purely theoretical
operations (i. e. simply by calculation)
we are then able to find how this known natural
process appears, as seen from a reference-body
K' which is accelerated relatively to K.
But since a gravitational field exists with
respect to this new body of reference K',
our consideration also teaches us how the
gravitational field influences the process
studied. 1 For example, we learn that a body
which is in a state of uniform rectilinear
motion with respect to K (in accordance with
the law of Galilei) is executing an accelerated
and in general curvilinear motion with respect
to the accelerated reference-body K' (chest).
This acceleration or curvature corresponds
to the influence on the moving body of the
gravitational field prevailing relatively
to K'. It is known that a gravitational field
influences the movement of bodies in this
way, so that our consideration supplies us
with nothing essentially new. 2 However,
we obtain a new result of fundamental importance
when we carry out the analogous consideration
for a ray of light. With respect to the Galileian
reference-body K, such a ray of light is
transmitted rectilinearly with the velocity
c. It can easily be shown that the path of
the same ray of light is no longer a straight
line when we consider it with reference to
the accelerated chest (reference-body K').
From this we conclude, that, in general,
rays of light are propagated curvilinearly
in gravitational fields. In two respects
this result is of great importance. 3 In
the first place, it can be compared with
the reality. Although a detailed examination
of the question shows that the curvature
of light rays required by the general theory
of relativity is only exceedingly small for
the gravitational fields at our disposal
in practice, its estimated magnitude for
light rays passing the sun at grazing incidence
is nevertheless
1.7 seconds of arc. This ought to manifest
itself in the following way. As seen from
the earth, certain fixed stars appear to
be in the neighbourhood of the sun, and are
thus capable of observation during a total
eclipse of the sun. At such times, these
stars ought to appear to be displaced outwards
from the sun by an amount indicated above,
as compared with their apparent position
in the sky when the sun is situated at another
part of the heavens. The examination of the
correctness or otherwise of this deduction
is a problem of the greatest importance,
the early solution of which is to be expected
of astronomers. 1 4 In the second place our
result shows that, according to the general
theory of relativity, the law of the constancy
of the velocity of light in vacuo, which
constitutes one of the two fundamental assumptions
in the special theory of relativity and to
which we have already frequently referred,
cannot claim any unlimited validity. A curvature
of rays of light can only take place when
the velocity of propagation of light varies
with position. Now we might think that as
a consequence of this, the special theory
of relativity and with it the whole theory
of relativity would be laid in the dust.
But in reality this is not the case. We can
only conclude that the special theory of
relativity cannot claim an unlimited domain
of validity; its result hold only so long
as we are able to disregard the influences
of gravitational fields on the phenomena
(e. g. of light). 5 Since it has often been
contended by opponents of the theory of relativity
that the special theory of relativity is
overthrown by the general theory of relativity
is overthrown by the general theory of relativity,
it is perhaps advisable to make the facts
of the case clearer by means of an appropriate
comparison. Before the development of electrodynamics
the laws of electrostatics and the laws of
electricity were regarded indiscriminately.
At the present time we know that electric
fields can be derived correctly from electrostatic
considerations only for the case, which is
never strictly realised, in which the electrical
masses are quite at rest relatively to each
other, and to the co-ordinate system. Should
we be justified in saying that for this reason
electrostatics is overthrown by the field-equations
of Maxwell in electrodynamics? Not in the
least. Electrostatics is contained in electrodynamics
as a limiting case; the laws of the latter
lead directly to those of the former for
the case in which the fields are invariable
with regard to time. No fairer destiny could
be allotted to any physical theory, than
that it should of itself point out the way
to the introduction of a more comprehensive
theory, in which it lives on as a limiting
case. 6 In the example of the transmission
of light just dealt with, we have seen that
the general theory of relativity enables
us to derive theoretically the influence
of a gravitational field on the course of
natural processes, the laws of which are
already known when a gravitational field
is absent. But the most attractive problem,
to the solution of which the general theory
of relativity supplies the key, concerns
the investigation of the laws satisfied by
the gravitational field itself. Let us consider
this for a moment. 7 We are acquainted with
space-time domains which behave
(approximately) in a "Galileian"
fashion under suitable choice of reference-body,
i. e. domains in which gravitational fields
are absent. If we now refer such a domain
to a reference-body K' possessing any kind
of motion, then relative to K' there exists
a gravitational field which is variable with
respect to space and time. 2 The character
of this field will of course depend on the
motion chosen for K'. According to the general
theory of relativity, the general law of
the gravitational field must be satisfied
for all gravitational fields obtainable in
this way. Even though by no means all gravitational
fields can be produced in this way, yet we
may entertain the hope that the general law
of gravitation will be derivable from such
gravitational fields of a special kind. This
hope has been realised in the most beautiful
manner. But between the clear vision of this
goal and its actual realisation it was necessary
to surmount a serious difficulty, and as
this lies deep at the root of things, I dare
not withhold it from the reader. We require
to extend our ideas of the space-time continuum
still farther. 8
Note 1. By means of the star photographs
of two expeditions equipped by a Joint Committee
of the Royal and Royal Astronomical Societies,
the existence of the deflection of light
demanded by theory was confirmed during the
solar eclipse of 29th May, 1919. (Cf. Appendix
III.) [back] Note 2. This follows from a
generalisation of the discussion in Section
XX
XXIII. Behaviour of Clocks and Measuring
Rods on a Rotating Body of Reference
HITHERTO I have purposely refrained from
speaking about the physical interpretation
of space- and time-data in the case of the
general theory of relativity. As a consequence,
I am guilty of a certain slovenliness of
treatment, which, as we know from the special
theory of relativity, is far from being unimportant
and pardonable. It is now high time that
we remedy this defect; but I would mention
at the outset, that this matter lays no small
claims on the patience and on the power of
abstraction of the reader. 1 We start off
again from quite special cases, which we
have frequently used before. Let us consider
a space-time domain in which no gravitational
fields exists relative to a reference-body
K whose state of motion has been suitably
chosen. K is then a Galileian reference-body
as regards the domain considered, and the
results of the special theory of relativity
hold relative to K. Let us suppose the same
domain referred to a second body of reference
K', which is rotating uniformly with respect
to K. In order to fix our ideas, we shall
imagine K' to be in the form of a plane circular
disc, which rotates uniformly in its own
plane about its centre. An observer who is
sitting eccentrically on the disc K' is sensible
of a force which acts outwards in a radial
direction, and which would be interpreted
as an effect of inertia (centrifugal force)
by an observer who was at rest with respect
to the original reference- body K. But the
observer on the disc may regard his disc
as a reference-body which is "at rest";
on the basis of the general principle of
relativity he is justified in doing this.
The force acting on himself, and in fact
on all other bodies which are at rest relative
to the disc, he regards as the effect of
a gravitational field. Nevertheless, the
space-distribution of this gravitational
field is of a kind that would not be possible
on Newton's theory of gravitation. 1 But
since the observer believes in the general
theory of relativity, this does not disturb
him; he is quite in the right when he believes
that a general law of gravitation can be
formulated-a law which not only explains
the motion of the stars correctly, but also
the field of force experienced by himself.
2 The observer performs experiments on his
circular disc with clocks and measuring-rods.
In doing so, it is his intention to arrive
at exact definitions for the signification
of time- and space-data with reference to
the circular disc K', these definitions being
based on his observations. What will be his
experience in this enterprise? 3 To start
with, he places one of two identically constructed
clocks at the centre of the circular disc,
and the other on the edge of the disc, so
that they are at rest relative to it. We
now ask ourselves whether both clocks go
at the same rate from the standpoint of the
non-rotating Galileian reference-body K.
As judged from this body, the clock at the
centre of the disc has no velocity, whereas
the clock at the edge of the disc is in motion
relative to K in consequence of the rotation.
According to a result obtained in Section
XII, it follows that the latter clock goes
at a rate permanently slower than that of
the clock at the centre of the circular disc,
i. e. as observed from K. It is obvious that
the same effect would be noted by an observer
whom we will imagine sitting alongside his
clock at the centre of the circular disc.
Thus on our circular disc, or, to make the
case more general, in every gravitational
field, a clock will go more quickly or less
quickly, according to the position in which
the clock is situated (at rest). For this
reason it is not possible to obtain a reasonable
definition of time with the aid of clocks
which are arranged at rest with respect to
the body of reference. A similar difficulty
presents itself when we attempt to apply
our earlier definition of simultaneously
in such a case, but I do not wish to go any
farther into this question. 4 Moreover, at
this stage the definition of the space co-ordinates
also presents unsurmountable difficulties.
If the observer applies his standard measuring-rod
(a rod which is short as compared with the
radius of the disc) tangentially to the edge
of the disc, then, as judged from the Galileian
system, the length of this rod will be less
than 1, since, according to Section XII,
moving bodies suffer a shortening in the
direction of the motion. On the other hand,
the measuring-rod will not experience a shortening
in length, as judged from K, if it is applied
to the disc in the direction of the radius.
If, then, the observer first measures the
circumference of the disc with his measuring-rod
and then the diameter of the disc, on dividing
the one by the other, he will not obtain
as quotient the familiar number = 3.14 .,
but a larger number, 2 whereas of course,
for a disc which is at rest with respect
to K, this operation would yield exactly.
This proves that the propositions of Euclidean
geometry cannot hold exactly on the rotating
disc, nor in general in a gravitational field,
at least if we attribute the length 1 to
the rod in all positions and in every orientation.
Hence the idea of a straight line also loses
its meaning. We are therefore not in a position
to define exactly the co- ordinates x, y,
z relative to the disc by means of the method
used in discussing the special theory, and
as long as the co-ordinates and times of
events have not been defined we cannot assign
an exact meaning to the natural laws in which
these occur. 5 Thus all our previous conclusions
based on general relativity would appear
to be called in question. In reality we must
make a subtle detour in order to be able
to apply the postulate of general relativity
exactly. I shall prepare the reader for this
in the following paragraphs. 6
Note 1. The field disappears at the centre
of the disc and increases proportionally
to the distance from the centre as we proceed
outwards. [back] Note 2. Throughout this
consideration we have to use the Galileian
(non-rotating) system K as reference-body,
since we may only assume the validity of
the results of the special theory of relativity
relative to K (relative to K' a gravitational
field prevails).
XXIV. Euclidean and Non-Euclidean Continuum
THE SURFACE of a marble table is spread out
in front of me. I can get from any one point
on this table to any other point by passing
continuously from one point to a " neighbouring"
one, and repeating this process a (large)
number of times, or, in other words, by going
from point to point without executing jumps."
I am sure the reader will appreciate with
sufficient clearness, what I mean here by
"neighbouring" and by "jumps"
(if he is not too pedantic). We express this
property of the surface by describing the
latter as a continuum. 1 Let us now imagine
that a large number of little rods of equal
length have been made, their lengths being
small compared with the dimensions of the
marble slab. When I say they are of equal
length, I mean that one can be laid on any
other without the ends overlapping. We next
lay four of these little rods on the marble
slab so that they constitute a quadrilateral
figure (a square), the diagonals of which
are equally long. To ensure the equality
of the diagonals, we make use of a little
testing-rod. To this square we add similar
ones, each of which has one rod in common
with the first. We proceed in like manner
with each of these squares until finally
the whole marble slab is laid out with squares.
The arrangement is such, that each side of
a square belongs to two squares and each
corner to four squares. 2 It is a veritable
wonder that we can carry our this business
without getting into the greatest difficulties.
We only need to think of the following. If
at any moment three squares meet at a corner,
then two sides of the fourth square are already
laid, and as a consequence, the arrangement
of the remaining two sides of the square
is already completely determined. But I am
now no longer able to adjust the quadrilateral
so that its diagonals may be equal. If they
are equal of their own accord, then this
is an especial favour of the marble slab
and of the little rods about which I can
only be thankfully surprised. We must needs
experience many such surprises if the construction
is to be successful. 3 If everything has
really gone smoothly, then I say that the
points of the marble slab constitute a Euclidean
continuum with respect to the little rod,
which has been used as a "distance"
(line-interval). By choosing one corner of
a square as "origin," I can characterise
every other corner of a square with reference
to this origin by means of two numbers. I
only need state how many rods I must pass
over when, starting from the origin, I proceed
towards the "right" and then "upwards,"
in order to arrive at the corner of the square
under consideration. These two numbers are
then the " Cartesian co-ordinates"
of this corner with reference to the "Cartesian
co-ordinate system" which is determined
by the arrangement of little rods. 4 By making
use of the following modification of this
abstract experiment, we recognise that there
must also be cases in which the experiment
would be unsuccessful. We shall suppose that
the rods "expand" by an amount
proportional to the increase of temperature.
We heat the central part of the marble slab,
but not the periphery, in which case two
of our little rods can still be brought into
coincidence at every position on the table.
But our construction of squares must necessarily
come into disorder during the heating, because
the little rods on the central region of
the table expand, whereas those on the outer
part do not. 5 With reference to our little
rods- defined as unit lengths-the marble
slab is no longer a Euclidean continuum,
and we are also no longer in the position
of defining Cartesian co-ordinates directly
with their aid, since the above construction
can no longer be carried out. But since there
are other things which are not influenced
in a similar manner to the little rods (or
perhaps not at all) by the temperature of
the table, it is possible quite naturally
to maintain the point of view that the marble
slab is a "Euclidean continuum."
This can be done in a satisfactory manner
by making a more subtle stipulation about
the measurement or the comparison of lengths.
6 But if rods of every kind (i. e. of every
material) were to behave in the same way
as regards the influence of temperature when
they are on the variably heated marble slab,
and if we had no other means of detecting
the effect of temperature than the geometrical
behaviour of our rods in experiments analogous
to the one described above, then our best
plan would be to assign the distance one
to two points on the slab, provided that
the ends of one of our rods could be made
to coincide with these two points; for how
else should we define the distance without
our proceeding being in the highest measure
grossly arbitrary? The method of Cartesian
co-ordinates must then be discarded, and
replaced by another which does not assume
the validity of Euclidean geometry for rigid
bodies. 1 The reader will notice that the
situation depicted here corresponds to the
one brought about by the general postulate
of relativity (Section XXIII). 7 NOTE:-Gauss
undertook the task of treating this two-
dimensional geometry from first principles,
without making use of the fact that the surface
belongs to a Euclidean continuum of three
dimensions. If we imagine constructions to
be made with rigid rods in the surface (similar
to that above with the marble slab), we should
find that different laws hold for these from
those resulting on the basis of Euclidean
plane geometry. The surface is not a Euclidean
continuum with respect to the rods, and we
cannot define Cartesian co-ordinates in the
surface. Gauss indicated the principles according
to which we can treat the geometrical relationships
in the surface, and thus pointed out the
way to the method of Riemann of treating
multi-dimensional, non-Euclidean continua.
Thus it is that mathematicians long ago solved
the formal problems to which we are led by
the general postulate of relativity. 8
Note 1. Mathematicians have been confronted
with our problem in the following form. If
we are given a surface (e. g. an ellipsoid)
in Euclidean three-dimensional space, then
there exists for this surface a two-dimensional
geometry, just as much as for a plane surface
XXV. Gaussian Co-ordinates
FIG. 4.
ACCORDING to Gauss, this combined analytical
and geometrical mode of handling the problem
can be arrived at in the following way. We
imagine a system of arbitrary curves (see
Fig. 4) drawn on the surface of the table.
These we designate asu-curves, and we indicate
each of them by means of a number. The curves
u = 1, u = 2 and u = 3 are drawn in the diagram.
Between the curves u = 1 and u = 2 we must
imagine an infinitely large number to be
drawn, all of which correspond to real numbers
lying between 1 and 2. We have then a system
of u-curves, and this "infinitely dense"
system covers the whole surface of the table.
These u-curves must not intersect each other,
and through each point of the surface one
and only one curve must pass. Thus a perfectly
definite value of u belongs to every point
on the surface of the marble slab. In like
manner we imagine a system of v-curves drawn
on the surface. These satisfy the same conditions
as the u-curves, they are provided with numbers
in a corresponding manner, and they may likewise
be of arbitrary shape. It follows that a
value of u and a value of v belong to every
point on the surface of the table. We call
these two numbers the co- ordinates of the
surface of the table (Gaussian co-ordinates).
For example, the point P in the diagram has
the Gaussian co-ordinates u=3, v=1. Two neighbouring
points P and P' on the surface then correspond
to the co-ordinates
P: u, v
P': u + du, v + dv,
where du and dv signify very small numbers.
In a similar manner we may indicate the distance
(line-interval) between P and P', as measured
with a little rod, by means of the very small
number ds. Then according to Gauss we have
where g11, g12, g22, are magnitudes which
depend in a perfectly definite way on u andv.
The magnitudes g11, g12 and g22 determine
the behaviour of the rods relative to theu-curves
and v-curves, and thus also relative to the
surface of the table. For the case in which
the points of the surface considered form
a Euclidean continuum with reference to the
measuring-rods, but only in this case, it
is possible to draw theu-curves and v-curves
and to attach numbers to them, in such a
manner, that we simply have:
ds2=du2+dv2
Under these conditions, the u-curves and
v-curves are straight lines in the sense
of Euclidean geometry, and they are perpendicular
to each other. Here the Gaussian co-ordinates
are simply Cartesian ones. It is clear that
Gauss co-ordinates are nothing more than
an association of two sets of numbers with
the points of the surface considered, of
such a nature that numerical values differing
very slightly from each other are associated
with neighbouring points "in space."
So far, these considerations hold for a continuum
of two dimensions. But the Gaussian method
can be applied also to a continuum of three,
four or more dimensions. If, for instance,
a continuum of four dimensions be supposed
available, we may represent it in the following
way. With every point of the continuum we
associate arbitrarily four numbers, x1, x2,
x3, x4, which are known as "co-ordinates."
Adjacent points correspond to adjacent values
of the co-ordinates. If a distance ds is
associated with the adjacent points P and
P', this distance being measurable and well-defined
from a physical point of view, then the following
formula holds:
where the magnitudes g11 etc., have values
which vary with the position in the continuum.
Only when the continuum is a Euclidean one
is it possible to associate the co-ordinates
x1. x4 with the points of the continuum so
that we have simply
In this case relations hold in the four-dimensional
continuum which are analogous to those holding
in our three-dimensional measurements.
However, the Gauss treatment for ds2 which
we have given above is not always possible.
It is only possible when sufficiently small
regions of the continuum under consideration
may be regarded as Euclidean continua. For
example, this obviously holds in the case
of the marble slab of the table and local
variation of temperature. The temperature
is practically constant for a small part
of the slab, and thus the geometrical behaviour
of the rods is almost as it ought to be according
to the rules of Euclidean geometry. Hence
the imperfections of the construction of
squares in the previous section do not show
themselves clearly until this construction
is extended over a considerable portion of
the surface of the table.
We can sum this up as follows: Gauss invented
a method for the mathematical treatment of
continua in general, in which "size-relations"
("distances" between neighbouring
points) are defined. To every point of a
continuum are assigned as many numbers (Gaussian
co-ordinates) as the continuum has dimensions.
This is done in such a way, that only one
meaning can be attached to the assignment,
and that numbers (Gaussian co-ordinates)
which differ by an indefinitely small amount
are assigned to adjacent points. The Gaussian
co-ordinate system is a logical generalisation
of the Cartesian co- ordinate system. It
is also applicable to non-Euclidean continua,
but only when, with respect to the defined
"size" or "distance,"
small parts of the continuum under consideration
behave more nearly like a Euclidean system,
the smaller the part of the continuum under
our notice.
XXVI. The Space-Time Continuum of the Special
Theory of Relativity Considered as a Euclidean
Continuum
WE are now in a position to formulate more
exactly the idea of Minkowski, which was
only vaguely indicated in Section XVII. In
accordance with the special theory of relativity,
certain co-ordinate systems are given preference
for the description of the four-dimensional,
space-time continuum. We called these "Galileian
co-ordinate systems." For these systems,
the four co-ordinates x, y, z, t, which determine
an event or-in other words-a point of the
four-dimensional continuum, are defined physically
in a simple manner, as set forth in detail
in the first part of this book. For the transition
from one Galileian system to another, which
is moving uniformly with reference to the
first, the equations of the Lorentz transformation
are valid. These last form the basis for
the derivation of deductions from the special
theory of relativity, and in themselves they
are nothing more than the expression of the
universal validity of the law of transmission
of light for all Galileian systems of reference.
1
Minkowski found that the Lorentz transformations
satisfy the following simple conditions.
Let us consider two neighbouring events,
the relative position of which in the four-dimensional
continuum is given with respect to a Galileian
reference-body K by the space co-ordinate
differences dx, dy, dz and the time-difference
dt. With reference to a second Galileian
system we shall suppose that the corresponding
differences for these two events are dx',
dy', dz', dt'. Then these magnitudes always
fulfil the condition. 1
2
The validity of the Lorentz transformation
follows from this condition. We can express
this as follows: The magnitude
ds2=dx2+dy2+dz2-c2dt2
which belongs to two adjacent points of the
four-dimensional space-time continuum, has
the same value for all selected (Galileian)
reference-bodies. If we replace x, y, z,
ct, by x1, x2, x3, x4, we also obtain the
result that
is independent of the choice of the body
of reference. We call the magnitude dsthe
"distance" apart of the two events
or four-dimensional points.
3
Thus, if we choose as time-variable the imaginary
variable
ct instead of the real quantity t, we can
regard the space-time continuum-in accordance
with the special theory of relativity-as
a "Euclidean" four-dimensional
continuum, a result which follows from the
considerations of the preceding section.
4
Note 1. Cf. Appendices I and II. The relations
which are derived there for the co-ordinates
themselves are valid also for co-ordinate
differences, and thus also for co-ordinate
differentials (indefinitely small differences).
XXVII. The Space-Time Continuum of the General
Theory of Relativity Is not a Euclidean Continuum
IN the first part of this book we were able
to make use of space-time co-ordinates which
allowed of a simple and direct physical interpretation,
and which, according to Section XXVI, can
be regarded as four-dimensional Cartesian
co-ordinates. This was possible on the basis
of the law of the constancy of the velocity
of light. But according to Section XXI, the
general theory of relativity cannot retain
this law. On the contrary, we arrived at
the result that according to this latter
theory the velocity of light must always
depend on the coordinates when a gravitational
field is present. In connection with a specific
illustration in Section XXIII, we found that
the presence of a gravitational field invalidates
the definition of the co-ordinates and the
time, which led us to our objective in the
special theory of relativity. 1 In view of
the results of these considerations we are
led to the conviction that, according to
the general principle of relativity, the
space-time continuum cannot be regarded as
a Euclidean one, but that here we have the
general case, corresponding to the marble
slab with local variations of temperature,
and with which we made acquaintance as an
example of a two-dimensional continuum. Just
as it was there impossible to construct a
Cartesian co-ordinate system from equal rods,
so here it is impossible to build up a system
(reference-body) from rigid bodies and clocks,
which shall be of such a nature that measuring-rods
and clocks, arranged rigidly with respect
to one another, shall indicate position and
time directly. Such was the essence of the
difficulty with which we were confronted
in Section XXIII. 2 But the considerations
of Sections XXV and XXVI show us the way
to surmount this difficulty. We refer the
four-dimensional space-time continuum in
an arbitrary manner to Gauss co-ordinates.
We assign to every point of the continuum
(event) four numbers, x1, x2, x3, x4 (co-ordinates),
which have not the least direct physical
significance, but only serve the purpose
of numbering the points of the continuum
in a definite but arbitrary manner. This
arrangement does not even need to be of such
a kind that we must regard x1, x2, x3 as
"space" co-ordinates and x4 as
a "time" co-ordinate. 3 The reader
may think that such a description of the
world would be quite inadequate. What does
it mean to assign to an event the particular
co-ordinates x1, x2, x3, x4, if in themselves
these co-ordinates have no significance?
More careful consideration shows, however,
that this anxiety is unfounded. Let us consider,
for instance, a material point with any kind
of motion. If this point had only a momentary
existence without duration, then it would
be described in space-time by a single system
of values x1, x2, x3, x4. Thus its permanent
existence must be characterised by an infinitely
large number of such systems of values, the
co-ordinate values of which are so close
together as to give continuity; corresponding
to the material point, we thus have a (uni-dimensional)
line in the four-dimensional continuum. In
the same way, any such lines in our continuum
correspond to many points in motion. The
only statements having regard to these points
which can claim a physical existence are
in reality the statements about their encounters.
In our mathematical treatment, such an encounter
is expressed in the fact that the two lines
which represent the motions of the points
in question have a particular system of co-ordinate
values, x1, x2, x3, x4, in common. After
mature consideration the reader will doubtless
admit that in reality such encounters constitute
the only actual evidence of a time-space
nature with which we meet in physical statements.
4 When we were describing the motion of a
material point relative to a body of reference,
we stated nothing more than the encounters
of this point with particular points of the
reference-body. We can also determine the
corresponding values of the time by the observation
of encounters of the body with clocks, in
conjunction with the observation of the encounter
of the hands of clocks with particular points
on the dials. It is just the same in the
case of space-measurements by means of measuring-rods,
as a little consideration will show. 5 The
following statements hold generally: Every
physical description resolves itself into
a number of statements, each of which refers
to the space-time coincidence of two events
A and B. In terms of Gaussian co-ordinates,
every such statement is expressed by the
agreement of their four co-ordinates x1,
x2, x3, x4. Thus in reality, the description
of the time-space continuum by means of Gauss
co-ordinates completely replaces the description
with the aid of a body of reference, without
suffering from the defects of the latter
mode of description; it is not tied down
to the Euclidean character of the continuum
which has to be represented. 6
XXVIII. Exact Formulation of the General
Principle of Relativity
WE are now in a position to replace the provisional
formulation of the general principle of relativity
given in Section XVIII by an exact formulation.
The form there used, "All bodies of
reference K, K', etc., are equivalent for
the description of natural phenomena (formulation
of the general laws of nature), whatever
may be their state of motion," cannot
be maintained, because the use of rigid reference-bodies,
in the sense of the method followed in the
special theory of relativity, is in general
not possible in space-time description. The
Gauss co-ordinate system has to take the
place of the body of reference. The following
statement corresponds to the fundamental
idea of the general principle of relativity:
"All Gaussian co-ordinate systems are
essentially equivalent for the formulation
of the general laws of nature."
1 We can state this general principle of
relativity in still another form, which renders
it yet more clearly intelligible than it
is when in the form of the natural extension
of the special principle of relativity. According
to the special theory of relativity, the
equations which express the general laws
of nature pass over into equations of the
same form when, by making use of the Lorentz
transformation, we replace the space-time
variables x, y, z, t, of a (Galileian) reference-body
K by the space-time variables x', y', z',
t', of a new reference-body K'. According
to the general theory of relativity, on the
other hand, by application of arbitrary substitutions
of the Gauss variables x1, x2, x3, x4, the
equations must pass over into equations of
the same form; for every transformation (not
only the Lorentz transformation) corresponds
to the transition of one Gauss co-ordinate
system into another. 2 If we desire to adhere
to our "old-time" three-dimensional
view of things, then we can characterise
the development which is being undergone
by the fundamental idea of the general theory
of relativity as follows: The special theory
of relativity has reference to Galileian
domains, i. e. to those in which no gravitational
field exists. In this connection a Galileian
reference-body serves as body of reference,
i. e. a rigid body the state of motion of
which is so chosen that the Galileian law
of the uniform rectilinear motion of "isolated"
material points holds relatively to it. 3
Certain considerations suggest that we should
refer the same Galileian domains to non-Galileian
reference-bodies also. A gravitational field
of a special kind is then present with respect
to these bodies (cf. Sections XX and XXIII).
4 In gravitational fields there are no such
things as rigid bodies with Euclidean properties;
thus the fictitious rigid body of reference
is of no avail in the general theory of relativity.
The motion of clocks is also influenced by
gravitational fields, and in such a way that
a physical definition of time which is made
directly with the aid of clocks has by no
means the same degree of plausibility as
in the special theory of relativity. 5 For
this reason non-rigid reference-bodies are
used which are as a whole not only moving
in any way whatsoever, but which also suffer
alterations in form ad lib. during their
motion. Clocks, for which the law of motion
is any kind, however irregular, serve for
the definition of time. We have to imagine
each of these clocks fixed at a point on
the non-rigid reference-body. These clocks
satisfy only the one condition, that the
"readings" which are observed simultaneously
on adjacent clocks (in space) differ from
each other by an indefinitely small amount.
This non-rigid reference-body, which might
appropriately be termed a "reference-mollusk,"
is in the main equivalent to a Gaussian four-dimensional
co-ordinate system chosen arbitrarily. That
which gives the "mollusk" a certain
comprehensibleness as compared with the Gauss
co-ordinate system is the (really unqualified)
formal retention of the separate existence
of the space co-ordinate. Every point on
the mollusk is treated as a space-point,
and every material point which is at rest
relatively to it as at rest, so long as the
mollusk is considered as reference-body.
The general principle of relativity requires
that all these mollusks can be used as reference-bodies
with equal right and equal success in the
formulation of the general laws of nature;
the laws themselves must be quite independent
of the choice of mollusk. 6 The great power
possessed by the general principle of relativity
lies in the comprehensive limitation which
is imposed on the laws of nature in consequence
of what we have seen above. 7
XXIX. The Solution of the Problem of Gravitation
on the Basis of the General Principle of
Relativity
IF the reader has followed all our previous
considerations, he will have no further difficulty
in understanding the methods leading to the
solution of the problem of gravitation.
1 We start off from a consideration of a
Galileian domain, i. e. a domain in which
there is no gravitational field relative
to the Galileian reference-body K. The behaviour
of measuring-rods and clocks with reference
to K is known from the special theory of
relativity, likewise the behaviour of "isolated"
material points; the latter move uniformly
and in straight lines. 2 Now let us refer
this domain to a random Gauss co-ordinate
system or to a "mollusk" as reference-body
K'. Then with respect to K' there is a gravitational
field G (of a particular kind). We learn
the behaviour of measuring-rods and clocks
and also of freely-moving material points
with reference to K' simply by mathematical
transformation. We interpret this behaviour
as the behaviour of measuring-rods, clocks
and material points under the influence of
the gravitational field G. Hereupon we introduce
a hypothesis: that the influence of the gravitational
field on measuring-rods, clocks and freely-moving
material points continues to take place according
to the same laws, even in the case when the
prevailing gravitational field is not derivable
from the Galileian special case, simply by
means of a transformation of co-ordinates.
3 The next step is to investigate the space-time
behaviour of the gravitational field G, which
was derived from the Galileian special case
simply by transformation of the co-ordinates.
This behaviour is formulated in a law, which
is always valid, no matter how the reference-body
(mollusk) used in the description may be
chosen. 4 This law is not yet the general
law of the gravitational field, since the
gravitational field under consideration is
of a special kind. In order to find out the
general law-of-field of gravitation we still
require to obtain a generalisation of the
law as found above. This can be obtained
without caprice, however, by taking into
consideration the following demands: The
required generalisation must likewise satisfy
the general postulate of relativity. If there
is any matter in the domain under consideration,
only its inertial mass, and thus according
to Section XV only its energy is of importance
for its effect in exciting a field. Gravitational
field and matter together must satisfy the
law of the conservation of energy (and of
impulse).
5 Finally, the general principle of relativity
permits us to determine the influence of
the gravitational field on the course of
all those processes which take place according
to known laws when a gravitational field
is absent, i. e. which have already been
fitted into the frame of the special theory
of relativity. In this connection we proceed
in principle according to the method which
has already been explained for measuring-rods,
clocks and freely-moving material points.
6 The theory of gravitation derived in this
way from the general postulate of relativity
excels not only in its beauty; nor in removing
the defect attaching to classical mechanics
which was brought to light in Section XXI;
nor in interpreting the empirical law of
the equality of inertial and gravitational
mass; but it has also already explained a
result of observation in astronomy, against
which classical mechanics is powerless. 7
If we confine the application of the theory
to the case where the gravitational fields
can be regarded as being weak, and in which
all masses move with respect to the co-ordinate
system with velocities which are small compared
with the velocity of light, we then obtain
as a first approximation the Newtonian theory.
Thus the latter theory is obtained here without
any particular assumption, whereas Newton
had to introduce the hypothesis that the
force of attraction between mutually attracting
material points is inversely proportional
to the square of the distance between them.
If we increase the accuracy of the calculation,
deviations from the theory of Newton make
their appearance, practically all of which
must nevertheless escape the test of observation
owing to their smallness. 8 We must draw
attention here to one of these deviations.
According to Newton's theory, a planet moves
round the sun in an ellipse, which would
permanently maintain its position with respect
to the fixed stars, if we could disregard
the motion of the fixed stars, themselves
and the action of the other planets under
consideration. Thus, if we correct the observed
motion of the planets for these two influences,
and if Newton's theory be strictly correct,
we ought to obtain for the orbit of the planet
an ellipse, which is fixed with reference
to the fixed stars. This deduction, which
can be tested with great accuracy, has been
confirmed for all the planets save one, with
the precision that is capable of being obtained
by the delicacy of observation attainable
at the present time. The sole exception is
Mercury, the planet which lies nearest the
sun. Since the time Leverrier, it has been
known that the ellipse corresponding to the
orbit of Mercury, after it has been corrected
for the influences mentioned above, is not
stationary with respect to the fixed stars,
but that it rotates exceedingly slowly in
the plane of the orbit and in the sense of
the orbital motion. The value obtained for
this rotary movement of the orbital ellipse
was 43 seconds of arc per century, an amount
ensured to be correct to within a few seconds
of arc. This effect can be explained by means
of classical mechanics only on the assumption
of hypotheses which have little probability,
and which were devised solely for this purpose.
9 On the basis of the general theory of relativity,
it is found that the ellipse of every planet
round the sun must necessarily rotate in
the manner indicated above; that for all
the planets, with the exception of Mercury,
this rotation is too small to be detected
with the delicacy of observation possible
at the present time; but that in the case
of Mercury it must amount to 43 seconds of
arc per century, a result which is strictly
in agreement with observation. 10 Apart from
this one, it has hitherto been possible to
make only two deductions from the theory
which admit of being tested by observation,
to wit, the curvature of light rays by the
gravitational field of the sun, 1 and a displacement
of the spectral lines of light reaching us
from large stars, as compared with the corresponding
lines for light produced in an analogous
manner terrestrially (i. e. by the same kind
of molecule). I do not doubt that these deductions
from the theory will be confirmed also. 11
Note 1. Observed by Eddington and others
in 1919. (Cf. Appendix III.)
Part III: Considerations on the Universe
as a Whole
XXX. Cosmological Difficulties of Newton's
Theory
APART from the difficulty discussed in Section
XXI, there is a second fundamental difficulty
attending classical celestial mechanics,
which, to the best of my knowledge, was first
discussed in detail by the astronomer Seeliger.
If we ponder over the question as to how
the universe, considered as a whole, is to
be regarded, the first answer that suggests
itself to us is surely this: As regards space
(and time) the universe is infinite. There
are stars everywhere, so that the density
of matter, although very variable in detail,
is nevertheless on the average everywhere
the same. In other words: However far we
might travel through space, we should find
everywhere an attenuated swarm of fixed stars
of approximately the same kind and density.
1 This view is not in harmony with the theory
of Newton. The latter theory rather requires
that the universe should have a kind of centre
in which the density of the stars is a maximum,
and that as we proceed outwards from this
centre the group-density of the stars should
diminish, until finally, at great distances,
it is succeeded by an infinite region of
emptiness. The stellar universe ought to
be a finite island in the infinite ocean
of space. 1 2 This conception is in itself
not very satisfactory. It is still less satisfactory
because it leads to the result that the light
emitted by the stars and also individual
stars of the stellar system are perpetually
passing out into infinite space, never to
return, and without ever again coming into
interaction with other objects of nature.
Such a finite material universe would be
destined to become gradually but systematically
impoverished. 3 In order to escape this dilemma,
Seeliger suggested a modification of Newton's
law, in which he assumes that for great distances
the force of attraction between two masses
diminishes more rapidly than would result
from the inverse square law. In this way
it is possible for the mean density of matter
to be constant everywhere, even to infinity,
without infinitely large gravitational fields
being produced. We thus free ourselves from
the distasteful conception that the material
universe ought to possess something of the
nature of centre. Of course we purchase our
emancipation from the fundamental difficulties
mentioned, at the cost of a modification
and complication of Newton's law which has
neither empirical nor theoretical foundation.
We can imagine innumerable laws which would
serve the same purpose, without our being
able to state a reason why one of them is
to be preferred to the others; for any one
of these laws would be founded just as little
on more general theoretical principles as
is the law of Newton. 4
Note 1. Proof.-According to the theory of
Newton, the number of "lines of force"
which come from infinity and terminate in
a mass m is proportional to the mass m. If,
on the average, the mass-density P0 is constant
throughout the universe, then a sphere of
volume V will enclose the average mass P0V.
Thus the number of lines of force passing
through the surface F of the sphere into
its interior is proportional to P0V. For
unit area of the surface of the sphere the
number of lines of force which enters the
sphere is thus proportional to P0 · v/F}
or P0R. Hence the intensity of the field
at the surface would ultimately become infinite
with increasing radius R of the sphere, which
is impossible.
XXXI. The Possibility of a "Finite"
and Yet "Unbounded" Universe
BUT speculations on the structure of the
universe also move in quite another direction.
The development of non-Euclidean geometry
led to the recognition of the fact, that
we can cast doubt on the infiniteness of
our space without coming into conflict with
the laws of thought or with experience (Riemann,
Helmholtz). These questions have already
been treated in detail and with unsurpassable
lucidity by Helmholtz and Poincaré, whereas
I can only touch on them briefly here. 1
In the first place, we imagine an existence
in two-dimensional space. Flat beings with
flat implements, and in particular flat rigid
measuring-rods, are free to move in a plane.
For them nothing exists outside of this plane:
that which they observe to happen to themselves
and to their flat "things" is the
all-inclusive reality of their plane. In
particular, the constructions of plane Euclidean
geometry can be carried out by means of the
rods, e. g. the lattice construction, considered
in Section XXIV. In contrast to ours, the
universe of these beings is two-dimensional;
but, like ours, it extends to infinity. In
their universe there is room for an infinite
number of identical squares made up of rods,
i. e. its volume (surface) is infinite. If
these beings say their universe is "plane,"
there is sense in the statement, because
they mean that they can perform the constructions
of plane Euclidean geometry with their rods.
In this connection the individual rods always
represent the same distance, independently
of their position. 2 Let us consider now
a second two-dimensional existence, but this
time on a spherical surface instead of on
a plane. The flat beings with their measuring-rods
and other objects fit exactly on this surface
and they are unable to leave it. Their whole
universe of observation extends exclusively
over the surface of the sphere. Are these
beings able to regard the geometry of their
universe as being plane geometry and their
rods withal as the realisation of "distance"?
They cannot do this. For if they attempt
to realise a straight line, they will obtain
a curve, which we "three-dimensional
beings" designate as a great circle,
i. e. a self-contained line of definite finite
length, which can be measured up by means
of a measuring-rod. Similarly, this universe
has a finite area, that can be compared with
the area of a square constructed with rods.
The great charm resulting from this consideration
lies in the recognition of the fact that
the universe of these beings is finite and
yet has no limits. 3 But the spherical-surface
beings do not need to go on a world-tour
in order to perceive that they are not living
in a Euclidean universe. They can convince
themselves of this on every part of their
"world," provided they do not use
too small a piece of it. Starting from a
point, they draw "straight lines"
(arcs of circles as judged in three-dimensional
space) of equal length in all directions.
They will call the line joining the free
ends of these lines a "circle."
For a plane surface, the ratio of the circumference
of a circle to its diameter, both lengths
being measured with the same rod, is, according
to Euclidean geometry of the plane, equal
to a constant value , which is independent
of the diameter of the circle. On their spherical
surface our flat beings would find for this
ratio the value
i. e. a smaller value than , the difference
being the more considerable, the greater
is the radius of the circle in comparison
with the radius R of the "world-sphere."
By means of this relation the spherical beings
can determine the radius of their universe
("world"), even when only a relatively
small part of their world-sphere is available
for their measurements. But if this part
is very small indeed, they will no longer
be able to demonstrate that they are on a
spherical "world" and not on a
Euclidean plane, for a small part of a spherical
surface differs only slightly from a piece
of a plane of the same size. 4 Thus if the
spherical-surface beings are living on a
planet of which the solar system occupies
only a negligibly small part of the spherical
universe, they have no means of determining
whether they are living in a finite or in
an infinite universe, because the "piece
of universe" to which they have access
is in both cases practically plane, or Euclidean.
It follows directly from this discussion,
that for our sphere-beings the circumference
of a circle first increases with the radius
until the "circumference of the universe"
is reached, and that it thenceforward gradually
decreases to zero for still further increasing
values of the radius. During this process
the area of the circle continues to increase
more and more, until finally it becomes equal
to the total area of the whole "world-sphere."
5 Perhaps the reader will wonder why we have
placed our "beings" on a sphere
rather than on another closed surface. But
this choice has its justification in the
fact that, of all closed surfaces, the sphere
is unique in possessing the property that
all points on it are equivalent. I admit
that the ratio of the circumference c of
a circle to its radius r depends on r, but
for a given value of r it is the same for
all points of the "world-sphere";
in other words, the "world-sphere"
is a "surface of constant curvature."
6 To this two-dimensional sphere-universe
there is a three-dimensional analogy, namely,
the three-dimensional spherical space which
was discovered by Riemann. Its points are
likewise all equivalent. It possesses a finite
volume, which is determined by its "radius"
(22R3). Is it possible to imagine a spherical
space? To imagine a space means nothing else
than that we imagine an epitome of our "space"
experience, i. e. of experience that we can
have in the movement of "rigid"
bodies. In this sense we can imagine a spherical
space. 7 Suppose we draw lines or stretch
strings in all directions from a point, and
mark off from each of these the distance
r with a measuring-rod. All the free end-points
of these lengths lie on a spherical surface.
We can specially measure up the area (F)
of this surface by means of a square made
up of measuring-rods. If the universe is
Euclidean, then F = 4r2; if it is spherical,
then F is always less than 4r2. With increasing
values of r, F increases from zero up to
a maximum value which is determined by the
"world-radius," but for still further
increasing values of r, the area gradually
diminishes to zero. At first, the straight
lines which radiate from the starting point
diverge farther and farther from one another,
but later they approach each other, and finally
they run together again at a "counter-point"
to the starting point. Under such conditions
they have traversed the whole spherical space.
It is easily seen that the three-dimensional
spherical space is quite analogous to the
two-dimensional spherical surface. It is
finite (i. e. of finite volume), and has
no bounds. 8 It may be mentioned that there
is yet another kind of curved space: "elliptical
space." It can be regarded as a curved
space in which the two "counter-points"
are identical (indistinguishable from each
other). An elliptical universe can thus be
considered to some extent as a curved universe
possessing central symmetry. 9 It follows
from what has been said, that closed spaces
without limits are conceivable. From amongst
these, the spherical space (and the elliptical)
excels in its simplicity, since all points
on it are equivalent. As a result of this
discussion, a most interesting question arises
for astronomers and physicists, and that
is whether the universe in which we live
is infinite, or whether it is finite in the
manner of the spherical universe. Our experience
is far from being sufficient to enable us
to answer this question. But the general
theory of relativity permits of our answering
it with a moderate degree of certainty, and
in this connection the difficulty mentioned
in Section XXX finds its solution.
XXXII. The Structure of Space According to
the General Theory of Relativity
ACCORDING to the general theory of relativity,
the geometrical properties of space are not
independent, but they are determined by matter.
Thus we can draw conclusions about the geometrical
structure of the universe only if we base
our considerations on the state of the matter
as being something that is known. We know
from experience that, for a suitably chosen
co-ordinate system, the velocities of the
stars are small as compared with the velocity
of transmission of light. We can thus as
a rough approximation arrive at a conclusion
as to the nature of the universe as a whole,
if we treat the matter as being at rest.
1 We already know from our previous discussion
that the behaviour of measuring-rods and
clocks is influenced by gravitational fields,
i. e. by the distribution of matter. This
in itself is sufficient to exclude the possibility
of the exact validity of Euclidean geometry
in our universe. But it is conceivable that
our universe differs only slightly from a
Euclidean one, and this notion seems all
the more probable, since calculations show
that the metrics of surrounding space is
influenced only to an exceedingly small extent
by masses even of the magnitude of our sun.
We might imagine that, as regards geometry,
our universe behaves analogously to a surface
which is irregularly curved in its individual
parts, but which nowhere departs appreciably
from a plane: something like the rippled
surface of a lake. Such a universe might
fittingly be called a quasi-Euclidean universe.
As regards its space it would be infinite.
But calculation shows that in a quasi-Euclidean
universe the average density of matter would
necessarily be nil. Thus such a universe
could not be inhabited by matter everywhere;
it would present to us that unsatisfactory
picture which we portrayed in Section XXX.
2 If we are to have in the universe an average
density of matter which differs from zero,
however small may be that difference, then
the universe cannot be quasi-Euclidean. On
the contrary, the results of calculation
indicate that if matter be distributed uniformly,
the universe would necessarily be spherical
(or elliptical). Since in reality the detailed
distribution of matter is not uniform, the
real universe will deviate in individual
parts from the spherical, i. e. the universe
will be quasi-spherical. But it will be necessarily
finite. In fact, the theory supplies us with
a simple connection 1 between the space-expanse
of the universe and the average density of
matter in it. 3
Note 1. For the "radius" R of the
universe we obtain the equation The use of
the C. G. S. system in this equation gives
is the average density of the matter and
k is a constant connected with the Newtonian
constant of gravitation.
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