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General Relativity
General relativity
In
physics, general relativity is the theory of gravitation
published by
Albert Einstein in
1915.
According to general relativity the force of
gravity is a manifestation of the local
geometry of
spacetime. Although the modern theory is due to Einstein, its origins go
back to the
axioms of
Euclidean geometry and the many attempts over the centuries to prove
Euclid's fifth postulate, that parallel lines remain always equidistant,
culminating with the realisation by
Lobachevsky,
Bolyai and
Gauss that this axiom need not be true. The general mathematics of
non-Euclidean geometries was developed by Gauss' student,
Riemann, but these were thought to be wholly inapplicable to the real world
until Einstein had developed his theory of relativity.

This image is misleading. Spacetime should not be thought of
as being embedded in a higher-dimensional flat space with the "weight" of
massive objects "stretching" the "trampoline-like spacetime fabric" and
trajectories around this "dent" being curved due to the pull of gravity in some
higher dimension due to the "slope" of the "trampoline"...
The
special theory of relativity (1905) modified the equations used in comparing
the measurements made by differently moving bodies, in view of the constant
value of the
speed of light, i.e. its observed
invariance in
reference frames moving uniformly relative to each other: this had the
consequence that physics could no longer treat
space and
time
separately, but only as a single four-dimensional system, "space-time," which
was divided into "time-like" and "space-like" directions differently depending
on the observer's motion. The general theory added to this that the presence of
matter "warped" the local space-time environment, so that apparently "straight"
lines through space and time have the properties we think of "curved" lines as
having.
On
May 29,
1919
observations by
Arthur Eddington of shifted star positions during a
solar eclipse confirmed the theory.
This section outlines the major experimental results and
mathematical advances that led to the formulation of General Relativity, and
also sketches the more limited Special Theory of Relativity.
Gauss had realised that there is no prior reason that the
geometry of space should be Euclidean. What this means is that if a physicist
holds up a stick, and a cartographer stands some distance away and measures its
length by a triangulation technique based on Euclidean geometry, then he is not
guaranteed to get the same answer as if the physicist brings the stick to him
and he measures its length directly. Of course for a stick he could not in
practice measure the difference between the two measurements, but there are
equivalent measurements which do detect the non-Euclidean geometry of space-time
directly; for example the Pound-Rebka experiment (1959)
detected the change in wavelength of light from a
cobalt source rising 22.5 meters against gravity in a shaft in the Jefferson
Physical Laboratory at
Harvard, and the rate of
atomic clocks in
GPS
satellites orbiting the Earth has to be corrected for the effect of gravity.
Newton's theory of gravity had assumed that objects did in
fact have absolute velocities: that some things really were at rest
while others really were in motion. He realized, and made clear, that
there was no way these absolutes could be measured. All the measurements one can
make provide only velocities relative to one's own velocity (positions relative
to one's own position, and so forth), and all the laws of mechanics would appear
to operate identically no matter how one was moving. Newton believed, however,
that the theory could not be made sense of without presupposing that there
are absolute values, even if they cannot be determined. In fact, Newtonian
mechanics can be made to work without this assumption: the outcome is rather
innocuous, and should not be confused with Einstein's relativity which further
requires the constancy of the speed of light.
In the nineteenth century Maxwell formulated a set of
equations--Maxwell's field equations--that demonstrated that light should behave
as a wave emitted by electromagnetic fields which would travel at a fixed
velocity through space. This appeared to provide a way around Newton's
relativity: by comparing one's own speed with the speed of light in one's
vicinity, one should be able to measure one's absolute speed--or, what is
practically the same, one's speed relative to a frame of reference that would be
the same for all observers.
The assumption was whatever medium light was travelling
through--whatever it was waves of--could be treated as a background
against which to make other measurements. This inspired a search to determine
the earth's velocity through this cosmic backdrop or "ether"--the "ether drift."
The speed of light measured from the surface of the earth should appear to be
greater when the earth was moving against the ether, slower when they were
moving in the same direction. (Since the earth was hurtling through space
and spinning, there should be at least some regularly changing measurements
here.) A test made by Michelson and Morley toward the end of the century had the
astonishing result that the speed of light appeared to be the same in every
direction.
(To get a sense of how strange this was, imagine a car is
driving down the highway. You want to see how fast it is going, so you and a
bunch of friends get in cars and drive after it at different speeds. You talk on
cell phones and each keep an eye on your speedometer and the other car. Some of
you will get closer to the other car; some will fall further behind. When one of
your friends--Bill--notices that he is neither gaining nor losing
distance on the other car, you can judge that the strange car's speed is the
same as Bill's. Michelson and Morley's result would be like you and all of your
friends discovering that you are each neither gaining nor losing time on the
strange car, even though you are all going different speeds.)
Einstein synthesized these various results in his 1905 paper
"On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies."
The fundamental idea in relativity is that we cannot talk of
the physical quantities of
velocity or
acceleration without first defining a reference frame, and that a reference
frame is defined by choosing particular matter as the basis for its definition.
Thus all motion is defined and quantified relative to other matter. In the
special theory of relativity it is assumed that reference frames can be extended
indefinitely in all directions in space and time. The theory of special
relativity concerns itself with inertial (non-accelerating) frames while general
relativity deals with all frames of reference. In the general theory it is
recognised that we can only define local frames to given accuracy for finite
time periods and finite regions of space (similarly we can draw flat maps of
regions of the surface of the earth but we cannot extend them to cover the whole
surface without distortion). In general relativity
Newton's laws are assumed to hold in local reference frames. In particular
free particles travel in straight lines in local inertial (Lorentz) frames. When
these lines are extended they do not appear straight, and are known as
geodesics. Thus Newton's first law is replaced by the law of geodesic
motion.
We distinguish inertial reference frames, in which bodies
maintain a uniform state of motion unless acted upon by another body, from
non-inertial frames in which freely moving bodies have an acceleration deriving
from the reference frame itself. In non-inertial frames there is a perceived
force which is accounted for by the acceleration of the frame, not by the direct
influence of other matter. Thus we feel g-forces when cornering on the roads
when we use a car as the physical base of our reference frame. Similarly there
are
coriolis and
centrifugal forces when we define reference frames based on rotating matter
(such as the
Earth or a child's roundabout). The principle of equivalence in general
relativity states that there is no local experiment to distinguish non-rotating
free fall in a gravitational field from uniform motion in the absence of a
gravitational field. In short there is no gravity in a reference frame in free
fall. From this perspective the observed gravity at the surface of the Earth is
the force observed in a reference frame defined from matter at the surface which
is not free, but is acted on from below by the matter within the Earth, and is
analogous to the g-forces felt in a car.
Mathematically, Einstein models space-time by a
four-dimensional pseudo-Riemannian
manifold, and his field equation states that the manifold's curvature at a
point is directly related to the stress energy
tensor at that point; the latter tensor being a measure of the density of
matter and energy. Curvature tells matter how to move, and matter tells space
how to curve.
The field equation is not uniquely proven, and there is room
for other models, provided that they do not contradict observation. General
relativity is distinguished from other theories of gravity by the simplicity of
the coupling between matter and curvature, although we still await the
unification of general relativity and
quantum mechanics and the replacement of the field equation with a deeper
quantum law. Few physicists doubt that such a
theory of everything will give general relativity in the appropriate limit,
just as general relativity predicts Newton's law of gravity in the
non-relativistic limit.
Einstein's field equation contains a parameter called the "cosmological
constant" Λ which was originally introduced by Einstein to allow for a
static universe (ie one that is not expanding or contracting). This effort was
unsuccessful for two reasons: the static universe described by this theory was
unstable, and observations by
Hubble a decade later confirmed that our universe is in fact not static but
expanding. So Λ was abandoned, but quite recently, improved
astronomical techniques have found that a non-zero value of Λ is needed
to explain some observations.
The field equation reads as follows:
-
where Rik is the
Ricci curvature tensor, R is the
Ricci curvature scalar, gik is the
metric tensor, Λ is the
cosmological constant, Tik is the
stress-energy tensor, π is
pi,
c is the
speed of light and G is the
gravitational constant which also occurs in
Newton's law of gravity. gik describes the metric
of the manifold and is a
symmetric 4 x 4 tensor, so it has 10 independent components. Given the
freedom of choice of the four spacetime coordinates, the independent equations
reduce to 6.
The study of the solutions of this equation is one of the
activities of a branch of astronomy named
cosmology. It leads to the prediction of
black holes and to the different models of evolution of the
universe.
This is an alternative equivalent formulation of general
relativity using four reference
vector fields, called a
vierbein or tetrad. We have four
vector fields, ea, a=0,1,2,3 such that g(ea,eb)=ηab
where
-
.
See
sign convention. One thing to note is that we can perform an independent
orthochronous, proper
Lorentz transformation at each point (subject to
smoothness, of course) and still get a valid
tetrad. So, the tetrad formulation of GR is a
gauge theory, but with a
noncompact
gauge group
SO(3,1). It is also
diffeomorphic invariant.
-
Sean M. Carroll,
introduction to general relativity, prerequisite knowledge includes
linear algebra (matrices) and
calculus
-
Lewis Caroll Epstein: Relativity Visualized.
Requires no mathematical background. Actually *explains* general relativity,
rather than merely hinting at it with a few metaphors.
-
Kip Thorne,
Stephen Hawking: Black Holes and Time Warps, Papermac (1995).
A recent popular account, by a leading expert.
-
Misner, Thorne, Wheeler: Gravitation, Freeman (1973)
ISBN 0716703440 . A classic graduate level text book, which, if somewhat
long winded, pays more attention to the geometrical basis and the development
of ideas in general relativity than some more modern approaches.
-
Ray D'Inverno: Introducing Einstein's Relativity,
Oxford University
Press (1993).
A modern undergraduate level text.
-
Herman Bondi: Relativity and Common Sense, Heinemann (1964).
A school level introduction to the principle of relativity by a renowned
scientist.
-
W. Perret and G.B. Jeffrey, trans.: The Principle of
Relativity: A Collection of Original Memoirs on the Special and General Theory
of Relativity, New York Dover (1923).
-
MIT 8.962 Course Notes Notes and handouts from the MIT 8.962 course on
General Relativity
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