Chapter S3 Spacetime
and Gravity
General Relativity
Introduction
Einstein 1915
There is no "superior reference frame" -- we cannot claim to know
who is accelerating.
We cannot tell the difference between (distinguish between) feeling weighty
and feeling accelerated
Room example
Spaceship example: part 1 part 2
Einstein's Equivalence Principle: "The effects of gravity
are exactly
equivalent to the effects of acceleration"
The laws of physics are the same in all reference frames
We will need to think in terms of Spacetime
There are 4 dimensions:
3 spatial dimensions (up-down, left-right, forward-backward)
+ 1 time dimension
We can only see the 3 spatial dimensions
So, it isn't surprising that different people (i.e. different perspectives)
"see" things differently (we think Jackie accelerates, and vice verse)
2 dimensional analogy
Plotting with a spacetime diagram:
It is hard to squish 4 dimensions into 2, but we will try
This daily life example
becomes this spacetime diagram
constant velocity => straight worldlines
acceleration velocity => curved worldlines
Here are more trajectories ("worldlines")
Einstein's Logic
Travelling at constant velocity, far from gravitional field => straight worldline
Cannot tell the difference between "" and being in free fall around a
massive object
So, being in free fall around a massive object => straight worldline, too
How can that work --:
It works even if spacetime is not flat, but is curved
Einstein suggests that the straight worldline business above still applies
except that now "straight" => straightest (shortest) possible path
So, a freely falling object will take the shortest, straightest possible
worldline path
If that path seems bent to us, it is because spacetime is curved
Diagram of curved spacetime near a massive object
Einstein's revolutionary thinking:
"What we perceive as gravity arises from the curvature of spacetime"
"Mass causes spacetime to curve, and the curvature of spacetime" "determines the paths of freely moving masses"
Some Effects
Light travels with constant velocity, so takes shortest, straightest path
So, from our point of view, light appears to bend around massive objects
Gravitational lensing: diagram,
image
More spectacular image
Close up of a similarly spectacular example
Time runs slower for things that are closer to a massive object
Do wormholes exist? (They haven't been ruled out)
Supplimental Material:
Rubber sheet views. 1
2
3 black
holes and event horizons.
Time dilation 1 2
Mercury’s orbital
precession
Gravitational lensing total solar eclipse
multiple images
2
Gravity
waves gravitational radiation
PSR
1913+16
Detection by LIGO