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- From: Jason W. Hinson <jason@physicsguy.com>
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- Subject: Relativity and FTL Travel--PART I (suggested reading)
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- =============================================================================
- Relativity and FTL Travel
-
- by Jason W. Hinson (hinson@physics.purdue.edu)
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Part I: Special Relativity
-
- =============================================================================
- Edition: 5.1
- Last Modified: April 8, 2003
- URL: http://www.physicsguy.com/ftl/
- FTP (text version): ftp://ftp.cc.umanitoba.ca/startrek/relativity/
-
-
-
- This is Part I of the "Relativity and FTL Travel" FAQ. It contains
- basic information about the theory of special relativity. In the FTL
- discussion (Part IV of this FAQ), it is assumed that the reader understands
- the concepts discussed below, while it is not assumed that the reader has
- read Parts II and IV of this FAQ as they are "optional reading". Therefore,
- if the reader is unfamiliar with special relativity in general (and
- especially if the reader is unfamiliar with space-time diagrams) then he or
- she should read this part of the FAQ to understand the FTL discussion in
- Part IV.
- For more information about this FAQ (including copyright information
- and a table of contents for all parts of the FAQ), see the Introduction to
- the FAQ portion which should be distributed with this document.
-
-
- Contents of Part I:
- Chapter 1: An Introduction to Special Relativity
- 1.1 Relativity Terminology
- 1.2 Reasoning for its Existence
- 1.3 Time Dilation and Length Contraction Effects
- 1.4 Introducing Gamma
- 1.5 Energy and Momentum Considerations
- 1.5.1 Rest Mass versus "Observed Mass"
- 1.5.2 The Energy and Momentum of a Photon (Where m = 0)
- 1.6 Experimental Support for the Theory
- Chapter 2: Space-Time Diagrams
- 2.1 What are Space-Time Diagrams?
- 2.2 Time as Another Dimension
- 2.3 Basic Information About the Diagrams we will Construct
- 2.4 Constructing One for a "Stationary" Observer
- 2.5 Constructing One for a "Moving" Observer
- 2.6 A Quick Comparison of the two Observers
- 2.7 Interchanging "Stationary" and "Moving"
- 2.8 "Future", "Past", and the Light Cone
-
-
-
-
-
- Chapter 1: An Introduction to Special Relativity
-
- The main goal of this introduction is to make relativity and its
- consequences feasible to those who have not seen them before. It should also
- reinforce such ideas for those who are already somewhat familiar with them.
- This introduction will not really follow the traditional way in which
- relativity came about, but it will try to explain the concepts through an
- easy to follow perspective. After discussing the basic terminology, the
- introduction will discuss points in the pre-Einstein view of relativity. It
- will then give some reasoning for why Einstein's view is plausible. This
- will lead to a discussion of some of the consequences this theory has, odd
- as they may seem. Finally, I want to mention some experimental evidence that
- supports the theory.
-
-
-
- 1.1 Relativity Terminology
-
- As we begin our discussion, I want to first introduce the reader to
- some terms which will be used. The first term to consider is the obvious
- one, "relativity". Why is this field of study called relativity? Well, it
- involves considering how an event or series of events would look to one
- observer given that you know how it looks to another observer who may be
- moving with respect to the first. This is called "transforming" the
- observation from one frame to another, and relativity tells us how to do
- that. Thus, we are concerned with the way something seems to one observer
- RELATIVE TO how it seems to another. Certain measurements or calculations
- will be the same regardless of your frame of reference. They are "frame
- independent" or "absolute" or "invariant" in nature. Other aspects of our
- universe depend greatly on your frame of reference, and they are thus "frame
- dependent" or "relative" in their nature. Relativity is thus study of the
- relative nature of things in our universe.
- In that last paragraph, I use the term "frame of reference," and I
- should take a moment to explain what it is I am talking about. By "frame of
- reference" I sort of mean the "point of view" of a particular observer.
- Essentially, your frame of reference is what decides your relative "view" of
- things, so observers in different reference frames will have different
- relative "views". In special relativity, moving with respect to another
- observer is what makes your frame of reference different from his. Note too
- that frames of reference are relative, so that what we are really concerned
- with is what one frame of reference is like with respect to another frame of
- reference. Thus, we would say that your frame of reference relative to
- another frame depends on your velocity in that other frame of reference.
- Now it is very easy for a newcomer to relativity to get mislead by this
- concept of frame of reference. The sticky phrase in the above explanation is
- "relative 'view' of things." You see, whenever I talk about when something
- occurs in some frame of reference, I DO NOT necessarily mean what the
- observer in that frame would actually see with their eyes. This is because
- the observer only sees the event after the light from the event reaches him.
- To figure out when the event actually occurred for that observer, one must
- account for the "signal delay". For example, an observer may see an event
- today, but if the event occurred on some star ten light-years away (the
- distance light would travel in 10 years) in this observer's frame, then we
- must realize that the event actually occurred ten years ago in this
- observer's frame of reference (because then light from the event would just
- be reaching the observer today). I mention this because it is sometimes
- tempting for newcomers of relativity to conclude that its odd effects (like
- time dilation--which we will discuss later in this chapter) are only
- illusions created by the fact that light from an event may reach one
- observer before it reaches another. However, here I am clearly stating that
- when we talk about when an event occurs in a frame of reference, we are
- talking about when it ACTUALLY OCCURRED in that frame after all light signal
- delays are taken into account.
- Similarly, if I say that event A and event B occur simultaneously in
- some frame of reference, I do not mean that an observer in that frame would
- necessarily see them occur at the same time, but rather that they actually
- happened at the same time. For example, if two explosions really happened at
- the same time in our frame of reference, and one occurred on the moon while
- the other occurred on the sun, then we would see the one from on the moon
- first (because it is closer). However, we must take into account the time it
- takes the light to get to us. We must note that it would take longer for the
- light from the explosion on the sun to get to us, and we can then understand
- why we saw the explosion on the moon first. Then, with the proper
- calculations, we could conclude that the explosions actually happened at the
- same time in our frame. It will be important to remember that this is what
- we mean as we talk about when and where events occur in different frames of
- reference (especially in Chapter 2).
- Now, with these terms and considerations in mind, we can go on to
- reason as to why the theory of relativity exists as it does today.
-
-
-
- 1.2 Reasoning for its Existence
-
- Before Einstein, there was Newton, and Newtonian physics had its own
- concept of relativity; however, it was incomplete. Remember that relativity
- involves figuring out what an observation would seem like to one observer
- once you knew what it looked like to another observer who is moving with
- respect to the first. Before Einstein, this transformation from one frame to
- another was not completely correct, but it seemed so in the realm of small
- speeds.
- Here is an example of the Newtonian idea of transforming from one frame
- of reference to another. Consider two observers, you and me, for example.
- Let's say I am on a train (in some enclosed, see-through car--if you want to
- visualize the situation) that passes you at 30 miles per hour. I throw a
- ball in the direction the train is moving such that the ball moves at 10 mph
- in MY point of view. Now consider a mark on the train tracks which starts
- out ahead of the train. As I am holding the ball (before I throw it), you
- will see it moving along at the same speed I am moving (the speed of the
- train). When I throw the ball, you will see that the ball is able to reach
- the mark on the track before I do. So to you, the ball is moving even faster
- than I (and the train). Obviously, it seems as if the speed of the ball with
- respect to you is just the speed of the ball with respect to me plus the
- speed of me with respect to you. So, the speed of the ball with respect to
- you = 10 mph + 30 mph = 40 mph.
- This was the first, simple idea for transforming velocities from one
- frame of reference to another. It tries to explain a bit about observations
- of one observer relative to another observer's observations. In other words,
- this was part of the first concept of relativity, but it is incomplete.
-
- Now I introduce you to an important postulate that leads to the concept
- of relativity that we have today. I believe it will seem quite reasonable. I
- state it as it appears in a physics text by Serway: "the laws of physics are
- the same in every inertial frame of reference." (Note that by "inertial
- frame of reference" we basically mean a frame of reference which is not
- accelerating.) What the postulate means is that if two observers are moving
- at a constant speed with respect to one another, and one observes any
- physical laws for a given situation in their frame of reference, then the
- other observer must also agree that those physical laws apply to that
- situation.
- As an example, consider the conservation of momentum (which I will
- briefly explain here). Say that there are two balls coming straight at one
- another. They collide and go off in opposite directions. Conservation of
- momentum says that if you add up the total momentum (which for small
- velocities is given by the mass of the ball times its velocity) of both the
- balls before the collision and after the collision, then the two should be
- identical. Now, let this experiment be performed on a train where one ball
- is moving in the same direction as the train, and the other is moving in the
- opposite direction. An outside observer would say that the initial and final
- velocities of the balls are one thing, while an observer on the train would
- say they were something different. However, BOTH observers must agree that
- the total momentum is conserved. One will say that momentum was conserved
- because the total momentum before AND after the collision were both some
- number, A; while the other will say that momentum was conserved because the
- total momentum before AND after were both some other number, B. They will
- disagree on what the actual numbers are, but they will agree that the law
- holds. We should be able to apply this postulate to any physical law. If
- not, (i.e., if physical laws were different for different frames of
- reference) then we could change the laws of physics just by traveling in a
- particular reference frame.
- A very interesting result occurs when you apply this postulate to the
- laws of electrodynamics (the area of physics which deals with electricity
- and magnetism). What one finds is that in order for the laws of
- electrodynamics to be the same in all inertial reference frames, it must be
- true that the speed of electro-magnetic waves (such as light) is the same
- for all inertial observers. Perhaps the easiest way to explain why this is
- so is to discuss two constants used in basic electrodynamics. They are
- denoted as epsilon_0 and mu_0. Epsilon_0 is used in the basic equation which
- describes the attraction or repulsion between two electrically charged
- particles while mu_0 is used in the basic equation which describes the
- magnetic force on a charged particle. According to electrodynamics, these
- two constants are properties of the universe, and if any observer in any
- frame of reference does an electro-magnetic experiment to measure those
- constants, he or she must always come up with the same answers. However, it
- is also a property of electrodynamics that the speed (c) of an
- electro-magnetic wave (such as light) can be expressed in terms of those two
- constants: c = 1/sqrt(mu_0*epsilon_0). If epsilon_0 and mu_0 are constants
- for all inertial observers, then so is c.
- Thus, requiring the laws of electrodynamics to be the same for all
- inertial observers suggests that the speed of light should be the same for
- all inertial observers. Simply stating that may not make you think that
- there is anything that interesting about it, but it has amazing and
- far-reaching consequences. Consider letting a beam of light take the place
- of the ball in our earlier example (the one where I was on a train throwing
- a ball, and you were outside the train). If the train is moving at half the
- velocity of light (c), and I say that the light beam is traveling at the
- speed c with respect to me, wouldn't you expect the light beam to look as if
- it were traveling one and a half that speed with respect to you? Well,
- because of the postulate above, this is not the case, and the old ideas of
- relativity in Newton's day fail to explain the situation. All observers must
- agree that the speed of any light beam is c, regardless of their frame of
- reference. Thus, even though I measure the speed of the light beam to be c
- with respect to me, and you see me traveling past you and one half that
- speed, still, you must also agree that the light is traveling at the speed c
- with respect to you. This obviously seems odd at first glance, but time
- dilation and length contraction are what account for the peculiarity.
-
-
-
- 1.3 Time Dilation and Length Contraction Effects
-
- Now, I give an example of how time dilation can help explain a
- peculiarity that arises from the above concept. Again we consider a case
- where I am on a train and you are outside the train, but let's give the
- train a speed of 0.6 c with respect to you. (Note that c is generally used
- to denote the speed of light which is 300,000,000 meters per second. We can
- also write this as 3E8 m/s where "3E8" means 3 times 10 to the eighth). Now
- I (on the train) shine a small burst or pulse of light so that (to me) the
- light goes straight up, hits a mirror at the top of the train, and bounces
- back to the floor of the train where some instrument detects it. Now, in
- your point of view (outside the train), that pulse of light does not travel
- straight up and straight down, but makes an up-side-down "V" shape because
- of the motion of the train. This is not just some "illusion", but rather it
- is truly the way the light travels RELATIVE TO YOU, and thus this is truly
- the way the situation must be considered in your frame of reference. Below
- is a diagram of what occurs in your frame:
-
- Diagram 1-1
-
- /|\
- / | \
- / | \
- light pulse going up->/ | \<-light pulse on return trip
- / | \
- / | \
- / | \
- / | \
- ---------|---------->train's motion (v = 0.6 c)
-
-
- Let's say that the trip up takes 10 seconds in your frame of reference.
- The distance the train travels during that time is given by its velocity
- (0.6 c) multiplied by that time of 10 seconds:
-
- (Eq 1:1)
- (0.6 * 3E8 m/s) * 10 s = 18E8 m
-
- The distance that the light pulse travels on the way up (the slanted line to
- the left) must be given by its speed with respect to you (which MUST be c
- given our previous discussion) multiplied by the time of 10 seconds:
-
- (Eq 1:2)
- 3E8 m/s * 10s = 30E8 m
-
- Since the left side of the above figure is a right triangle, and we know the
- length of its hypotenuse (the path of the light pulse) and one of its sides
- (the distance the train traveled), we can now solve for the height of the
- train using the Pythagorean theorem. That theorem states that for a right
- triangle the length of the hypotenuse squared is equal to the length of one
- of the sides squared plus the length of the other side squared. We can thus
- write the following:
-
- (Eq 1:3)
- Height^2 + (18E8 m)^2 = (30E8 m)^2
- so
- Height = [(30E8 m)^2 - (18E8 m)^2]^0.5 = 24E8 m
-
- (It is a tall train because we said that it took the light 10 seconds to
- reach the top, but this IS just a thought experiment.) Now we consider my
- frame of reference (on the train). In my frame, the light is truly traveling
- straight up and straight back down to me. This is truly the way the light
- travels in my frame of reference, and so that's the way we must analyze the
- situation relative to me. Again, according to our previous discussion, the
- light MUST travel at 3E8 m/s as measured by me as well. Further the height
- of the train doesn't change because relativity doesn't affect lengths
- perpendicular to the direction of motion. Therefore, we can calculate how
- long it takes for the light to reach the top of the train in my frame of
- reference. That is given by the distance (the height of the train) divided
- by the speed of the light pulse (c):
-
- (Eq 1:4)
- 24E8 m / 3E8 (m/s) = 8 seconds,
-
- and there you have it. To you the event takes 10 seconds, while according to
- me it must take only 8 seconds. We measure time in different ways.
- You see, to you the distance the light travels is longer than the
- height of the train (see the diagram). So, the only way I (on the train)
- could say that the light traveled the height of the train while you say that
- the SAME light travels a longer distance is if we either (1) have different
- ideas for the speed of the light because we are in different frames of
- reference, or (2) we have different ideas for the time it takes the light to
- travel because we are in different frames of reference. Now, in Newton's
- days, they would believe that the former were true. The light would be no
- different from, say, a ball, and observers in different frames of reference
- can observer different speeds for a ball (remember our first "train" example
- in this introduction). However, with the principles of Einstein's
- relativity, we find that the speed of light is unlike other speeds in that
- it must always be the same regardless of your frame of reference. Thus, the
- second explanation must be the case, and in your frame of reference, my
- clock (on the fast moving train) is going slower than yours.
- As I mentioned in the last part of the previous section, length
- contraction is another consequence of relativity. Consider the same two
- travelers in our previous example, and let each of them hold a meter stick
- horizontally (so that the length of the stick is oriented in the direction
- of motion of the train). To the outside observer (you), the meter stick of
- the traveler on the train (me) will look as if it is shorter than a meter.
- One can actually derive this given the time dilation effect (which we have
- already derived), but I wont go through that explanation for the sake of
- time.
- Now, DON'T BE FOOLED! One of the first concepts which can get into the
- mind of a newcomer to relativity involves a statement like, "if you are
- moving, your clock slows down." However, the question of which clock is
- REALLY running slowly (yours or mine) has NO absolute answer! It is
- important to remember that all inertial motion is relative. That is, there
- is no such thing as absolute inertial motion. You cannot say that it is the
- train that is absolutely moving and that you are the one who is actually
- sitting still.
- Have you ever had the experience of sitting in a car, noticing that you
- seemed to be moving backwards, and then realizing that it was the car beside
- which was "actually" moving forward. Well, the only reason you say that
- "actually" the other car was moving forward is because you are considering
- the ground to be stationary, and it was the other car who was moving with
- respect to the ground rather than your car. Before you looked at the ground
- (or surrounding scenery) you had no way of knowing which of you was "really"
- moving. Now, if you did this in space (with space ships instead of cars),
- and there were no other objects around to reference to, and neither space
- ship was accelerating (they were moving at a constant speed with respect to
- one another) then what would be the difference in saying that your space
- ship was the one that was moving or saying that it was the other space ship
- that was moving? As long as neither of you is undergoing an acceleration
- (which would mean you were not in an inertial frame of reference) there is
- no absolute answer to the question of which one of you is moving and which
- of you is sitting still. You are moving with respect to him, but then again,
- he is moving with respect to you. All motion is relative, and all inertial
- frames are equivalent.
- So what does that mean for us in this "train" example. Well, from my
- point of view on the train, I am the one who is sitting still, while you zip
- past me at 0.6 c. Since I can apply the concepts of relativity just as you
- can (that's the postulate of relativity--all physical laws are the same for
- all inertial observers), and in my frame of reference you are the one who is
- in motion, that means that I will think that it is YOUR clock that is
- running slowly and that YOUR meter sticks are length contracted.
- So, there is NO absolute answer to the question of which of our clocks
- is REALLY running slower than the other and which of our meter sticks is
- REALLY length contracted smaller than the other. The only way to answer this
- question is relative to whose frame of reference you are considering. In my
- frame of reference your clock is running slower than mine, but in your frame
- of reference my clock is running slower than yours. This lends itself over
- to what seem to be paradoxes such as "the twin paradox" (doesn't it seem
- like a paradox that we each believe that the other person's clock is running
- slower than our own?). Understanding these paradoxes can be a key to really
- grasping some major concepts of special relativity. The explanation of these
- paradoxes will be given for the interested reader in Part II of this FAQ.
-
-
-
- 1.4 Introducing Gamma
-
- Now, the closer one gets to the speed of light with respect to an
- observer, the slower ones clock ticks and the shorter ones meter stick will
- be in the frame of reference of that observer. The factor which determines
- the amount of length contraction and time dilation is called gamma.
- Gamma for an object moving with speed v in your frame of reference is
- defined as
-
- (Eq 1:5)
- gamma = 1 / (1 - v^2/c^2)^0.5
-
- For our train (for which v = 0.6 c in your frame of reference), gamma is
- 1.25 in your frame. Lengths will be contracted and time dilated (as seen by
- you--the outside observer) by a factor of 1/gamma = 0.8. That is what we
- demonstrated in our example by showing that the difference in measured times
- was 10 seconds for you (off the train) and 8 seconds for me (on the train)
- in your point of view. Gamma is obviously an important number in relativity,
- and it will appear as we discuss other consequences of the theory (including
- the effects of special relativity on energy and momentum considerations).
-
-
-
- 1.5 Energy and Momentum Considerations
-
- Another consequence of relativity is a relationship between mass,
- energy, and momentum. Note that velocity involves the question of how far
- you go and how long it takes. Obviously, if relativity affects the way
- observers view lengths and times relative to one another, one could expect
- that any Newtonian concepts involving velocity might need to be re-thought.
- For example, because of relativity we can no longer simply add velocities to
- transform from one frame to another as we did with the ball and the train
- earlier. (However, for small velocities like we see every day, the
- differences which comes in because of relativity are much to small for us to
- notice).
- Further, consider momentum (which in Newtonian mechanics is defined as
- mass times velocity). With relativity, this value is no longer conserved in
- different reference frames when an interaction takes place. The quantity
- that is conserved is relativistic momentum which is defined as
-
- (Eq 1:6)
- p = gamma * m * v
-
- where gamma is defined in the previous section.
- By further considering conservation of momentum and energy as viewed
- from two frames of reference, one can find that the following equation must
- be true for the total energy of an unbound particle:
-
- (Eq 1:7)
- E^2 = p^2 * c^2 + m^2 * c^4
-
- Where E is energy, m is mass, and p is the relativistic momentum as defined
- above.
- Now, by manipulating the above equations, one can find another way to
- express the total energy as
-
- (Eq 1:8)
- E = gamma * m * c^2
-
- Notice that even when an object is at rest (gamma = 1) it still has an
- energy of
-
- (Eq 1:9)
- E = m * c^2
-
- Many of you have seen something like this stated in context with the theory
- of relativity ("E equals m c squared"). It says that because of the
- relationship between space and time for different observers as discovered by
- special relativity, we must conclude that an object possesses an internal
- energy contained in its mass--mass itself contains energy, or, to put it
- more eloquently, mass is simply a convenient form of energy.
-
-
-
- 1.5.1 Rest Mass versus "Observed Mass"
-
- It is important to note that the mass, m, in the above equations has a
- special definition which we will now discuss (by "mass", we generally mean
- the property of an object that indicates (1) how much force is needed to
- cause the object to have a certain acceleration and (2) how much
- gravitational pull you will feel from that object in Newtonian gravitation).
- First, note what happens to the relativistic momentum (Equation 1:6) of an
- object as its speed approaches c with respect to some observer. In that
- observer's frame of reference, its momentum becomes very large (because
- gamma goes to infinity), especially compared to the old definition of
- momentum, p = m*v. However, if we define a property called "observed mass"
- as being gamma * m, then we see that the momentum can be written as
-
- (Eq 1:10)
- p = (observed mass) * v
-
- We see that the momentum can be written exactly as it was in Newtonian
- physics, except that it seems the mass of the object as seen by an outside
- observer is larger than its "rest mass" (m). Further, if we take the
- relativistic equation for the energy of an object, Equation 1:8, we see it
- too can be written as
-
- (Eq 1:11)
- E = (observed mass) * c^2
-
- This is like the energy of an object at rest (E = m*c^2) with the "observed
- mass" substituted in for the "rest mass."
- Thus, one way to interpret relativity's effect on our view of momentum
- and energy is to say that because of relativity, an observer sees an
- object's mass increase as the object approaches the speed of light in that
- observer's frame of reference. The mass (m) in our equations is thus the
- mass as measured when the object is at rest in our frame of reference (the
- rest mass), not the "observed mass" we have defined.
- However, this concept of observed mass doesn't really work for
- gravitational mass. In a relativistic setting, you can't figure out the
- gravitational effects of an object that is moving (in your frame) by simply
- figuring out what gravitational effects its mass would have at rest and
- replacing its mass with the observed mass in your frame of reference. For
- example, as the velocity of an object with respect to you approaches c, its
- "observed mass" approaches infinity. However, this does not mean that the
- object will eventually look like a black hole predicted by general
- relativity (as it would if the same object really did have a huge mass
- sitting at rest).
- Also, let's look at kinetic energy in relation to mass. Kinetic energy
- is energy of motion--it's the total energy of a free object minus the amount
- of that energy that is internal to the object:
-
- (Eq 1:12)
- E_kinetic = E_total - E_internal
- = gamma*m*c^2 - m*c^2
- = (gamma-1) *m*c^2
-
- As it turns out, when v is much smaller than c, the equation gamma-1 is
- approximately equal to (1/2)*v^2/c^2 such that E_kinetic is approximately
- (1/2)*m*v^2 (that's the Newtonian equation for kinetic energy which is
- approximately correct for non-relativistic speeds). But with relativistic
- velocities, the kinetic energy becomes much larger than we would have
- calculated it to be using the Newtonian equations. In that sense, there does
- seem to be some "extra energy" which could be considered as extra mass
- energy; however, you can't get the correct kinetic energy in relativity by
- simply plugging our expression for "observed mass" into the Newtonian
- equation for kinetic energy. The observed mass concept doesn't really work
- here, and we see that it's better to simply argue that the mass isn't really
- increasing, but rather the equations for energy and momentum are different
- than expressed by Newtonian physics.
- So, "observed mass" has its uses, but physicists today rarely use the
- concept in practice. Rather, an object is said to have a rest mass (which
- truly is its inherent internal energy) as well as an energy due to its
- motion with respect to an observer (kinetic energy) which come together to
- produce its total energy, E.
-
-
-
-
- 1.5.2 The Energy and Momentum of a Photon (Where m = 0)
-
- We should quickly note the case where the rest mass of an object is
- zero (such is the case for a photon--a particle of light). Given the
- equation for the energy in the form of Equation 1:8 (E = gamma*m*c^2), one
- might at first glance think that the energy was zero when m = 0. However,
- note that massless particles like the photon travel at the speed of light.
- Since gamma goes to infinity as the velocity of an object goes to c, the
- equation E = gamma*m*c^2 involves one part which goes to zero (m) and one
- part which goes to infinity (gamma). Thus, it is not obvious what the energy
- would be. However, if we use the energy equation in the form of Equation 1:7
- (E^2 = p^2*c^2 + m^2*c^4), then we can see that when m = 0 then the energy
- is given by E = p*c).
- Now, a photon has a momentum (it can "slam" into particles and change
- their motion, for example) which is determined by its wavelength (lambda) in
- the equation p = h/lambda (where h = 6.626E(-34) Joules is called Planck's
- constant). A photon of wavelength lambda thus has an energy given by E = p*c
- = h*c/lambda, even though it has no rest mass.
-
-
-
- 1.6 Experimental Support for the Theory
-
- These amazing consequences of relativity do have experimental
- foundations. For example, using atomic clocks and super-sonic jets, we have
- been able to confirm the effects of time dilation just as relativity
- predicts. Another experimental confirmation involves the creation of
- particles called muons by cosmic rays (from the sun) in the upper
- atmosphere. These muons then travel at very fast speeds towards the earth.
- In the rest frame of a muon, its life time is only about 2.2E-6 seconds.
- Even if the muon could travel at the speed of light, it could still go only
- about 660 meters during its life time. Because of that, they should not be
- able to reach the surface of the Earth. However, it has been observed that
- large numbers of them do reach the Earth. From our point of view, time in
- the muon's frame of reference is running slowly, since the muons are
- traveling very fast with respect to us. So the 2.2E-6 seconds are slowed
- down, and the muon has enough time to reach the earth.
- We must also be able to explain the result from the muon's frame of
- reference. In its point of view, it does have only 2.2E-6 seconds to live.
- However, the muon would say that it is the Earth which is speeding toward
- the muon. Therefore, the distance from the top of the atmosphere to the
- Earth's surface is length contracted. Thus, from the muon's point of view,
- it lives a very small amount of time, but it doesn't have that far to go.
- This is an interesting point of Relativity--the physical results (e.g. the
- muon reaches the Earth's surface) must be true for all observers; however,
- the explanation as to how it came about can be different for different
- frames of reference.
- Another verification of special relativity is found all the time in
- particle physics. In particle physics, large accelerators push particles to
- speeds very close to the speed of light, and experimenters then cause those
- particles to strike other particles. The results of such collisions can be
- understood only if one uses the momentum and energy equations which were
- predicted by relativity (for example, one must take the total energy of the
- particle to be E = gamma*m*c^2, which was predicted by relativity).
- These are only a few examples that give credibility to the theory of
- relativity. Its predictions have turned out to be true in many cases, and to
- date, no evidence exists that would tend to undermine the theory in the
- areas where it applies.
-
- In the above discussion of relativity's effects on space and time we
- have specifically mentioned length contraction and time dilation. However,
- there is a little more to it than that, and the next section attempts to
- explain this to some extent.
-
-
-
-
-
- Chapter 2: Space-Time Diagrams
-
- In this section we examine certain constructions known as space-time
- diagrams. After a short look at why we need to discuss these diagrams, I
- will explain what they are and what purpose they serve. Next we will
- construct a space-time diagram for a particular observer. Then, using the
- same techniques, we will construct a second diagram to represent the
- coordinate system for a second observer who is moving with respect to the
- first observer. This second diagram will show the second observer's frame of
- reference with respect to the first observer; however, we will also switch
- around the diagram to show what the first observer's frame of reference
- looks like with respect to the second observer. Finally, we will compare the
- concepts these two observers have of future and past, which will make it
- necessary to first discuss a diagram known as a light cone.
-
-
-
- 2.1 What are Space-Time Diagrams?
-
- In the previous section we talked about the major consequences of
- special relativity, but now I want to concentrate more specifically on how
- relativity causes a transformation of space and time. Relativity causes a
- little more than can be understood by simple notions of length contraction
- and time dilation. It actually results in two different observers having two
- different space-time coordinate systems. The coordinates transform from one
- frame to the other through what is known as a Lorentz Transformation.
- Without getting deep into the math, much can be understood about such
- transforms by considering space-time diagrams.
-
-
-
- 2.2 Time as Another Dimension
-
- One of the first points to make as we begin discussing space-time
- diagrams is that we are treating time as another dimension along with the
- three dimensions of space. Generally, people aren't used to thinking of time
- as just another dimension, but doing so allows us to truly understand how
- relativity works. So, how do we represent time as just another dimension?
- Obviously we can't actually picture four dimensions all at once (three
- of space and one of time). Our minds are limited to picturing the three
- dimensions of space that we are used to dealing with. However, we can
- consider one or two dimensions of space and then use another dimension of
- space to represent time.
- To see how this can work, consider Diagram 2-1. There you see a film
- strip on which each frame represents a moment in time. As you watch a film,
- you see each moment in time presented one right after another, and this
- gives the impression of seeing time pass. If we cut the film up into frames
- then we can stack the frames flat, evenly spaced, and one on top of the
- other (as shown in the diagram). Then each frame is a two dimensional
- representation of space and as you move through the third dimension you go
- up the stack, and each frame you pass represents another point in time.
- Thus, we have a three dimensional stack which represents two dimensions of
- space and the third dimension represents time.
-
- Diagram 2-1
-
- |o|---------|o|
- |o|* |o| ___________
- |o| |o| ^ /* /
- |o| |o| 5 | / /
- |o| |o| | / / 5
- |o| |o| | / /
- |o|---------|o| | /__________/
- |o| |o| | ___________
- |o| * |o| | / /
- |o| |o| 4 | / * /
- |o| |o| T | / / 4
- |o| |o| | / /
- |o|---------|o| I | /__________/
- |o| |o| | ___________
- |o| |o| M | / /
- |o| * |o| 3 | / /
- |o| |o| E | / * / 3
- |o| |o| | / /
- |o|---------|o| | /__________/
- |o| |o| | ___________
- |o| |o| | / /
- |o| |o| 2 | / /
- |o| * |o| | / / 2
- |o| |o| | / * /
- |o|---------|o| | /__________/
- |o| |o| | ___________
- |o| |o| | / /
- |o| |o| 1 | / /
- |o| |o| | / / 1
- |o| *|o| | / /
- |o|---------|o| /_________*/
- Film
-
-
- Note too that in the diagram the film shows a ball moving from one
- corner of the screen to the other. However, in the three dimensional stack,
- the ball now follows a three dimensional path through space-time. In four
- dimensional space-time, objects which we see moving in time through three
- dimensional space are following a four-dimensional path through space-time.
- On space-time diagrams, paths you draw represent objects moving through
- space as time passes, but we'll see more about that later in the chapter.
- Further, consider an event such as "the ball reaches the far corner of
- the screen." That is a single event--it occurs at one moment in time and at
- one particular place in space. On our diagram, it is a single point (it is a
- spot represented by the ball which is on the upper most frame in the stack).
- Any single event which occurs is represented by a single point on a
- space-time diagram.
- And so, a space-time diagram gives us a means of representing events
- which occur at different locations and at different times. Every event is
- portrayed as a point somewhere on the space-time diagram.
- Now, because of relativity, different observers which are moving
- relative to one another will have different coordinates for any given event.
- However, with space-time diagrams, we can picture these different coordinate
- systems on the same diagram, and this allows us to understand how they are
- related to one another.
-
-
-
- 2.3 Basic Information About the Diagrams we will Construct
-
- In Diagram 2-1 we saw how one can use three dimensions to represent two
- dimensions of space and one of time, but for simplicity the diagrams we use
- will be two dimensional--one of space and one of time. We will consider the
- one dimension of space to be the x direction. So, the space-time diagram
- consists of a coordinate system with one axis to represent space (the x
- direction) and another to represent time. Where these two principal axes
- meet is the origin. This is simply a point in space that we have defined as
- x = 0 and a moment in time that we have defined as t = 0. In Diagram 2-2
- (below) I have drawn these two axes and marked the origin with an o.
- For certain reasons we want to define the units that we will use for
- distances and times in a very specific way. Let's define the unit for time
- to be the second. This means that moving one unit up the time axis will
- represent waiting one second of time. We then want to define the unit for
- distance to be a light second (the distance light travels in one second). So
- if you move one unit to the right on the x axis, you will be considering a
- point in space that is one light second away from your previous location. In
- Diagram 2-2, I have marked the locations of the different space and time
- units (Note: In my ASCII diagrams, I am using four spaces to represent one
- unit along the x axis and two character heights to represent one unit on the
- time axis).
- With these units, it is interesting to note how a beam of light is
- represented in our diagram. Consider a beam of light leaving the origin and
- traveling to the right. One second later, it will have traveled one light
- second away. Two seconds after it leaves it will have traveled two light
- seconds away, and so on. So a beam of light will always make a line at an
- angle of 45 degrees to the x and t axes. I have drawn such a light beam in
- Diagram 2-3.
-
- Diagram 2-2 Diagram 2-3
-
- t t
- ^ ^
- | | light
- + + /
- | | /
- + + /
- | | /
- -+---+---o---+---+---> x -+---+---o---+---+-> x
- | |
- + +
- | |
- + +
- | |
-
-
-
-
-
- 2.4 Constructing One for a "Stationary" Observer
-
- At this point, we want to decide exactly how to represent events on
- this coordinate system for a particular observer. First note that it is
- convenient to think of any particular space-time diagram as being
- specifically drawn for one particular observer. For Diagram 2-2, that
- particular observer (let's call him the O observer) is the one whose
- coordinate system has the vertical time axis and horizontal space axis shown
- in that diagram. Now, other frames of reference (which don't follow those
- axes) can also be represented on this same diagram (as we will see).
- However, because we are used to seeing coordinate systems with horizontal
- and vertical axes, it is natural to think of this space-time diagram as
- being drawn specifically with the O observer in mind. In fact, we could say
- that in this space-time diagram, the O observer is considered to be "at
- rest".
- So if the O observer starts at the origin, then one second later he is
- still at x = 0 (because he isn't moving in this coordinate system). Two
- seconds later he is still at x = 0, etc. If we look at the diagram, we see
- that this means he is always on the time axis in our representation.
- Similarly, any lines drawn parallel to the t axis (in this case, vertical
- lines) will represent lines of constant position. If a second observer is
- not moving with respect to the first, and this second observer starts at a
- position two light seconds away to the right of the first, then as time
- progresses he will stay on the vertical line that runs through x = 2.
- Next we want to figure out how to represent lines of constant time. We
- might first find a point on our diagram that represents an event which
- occurs at the same time as, say, the origin (t = 0). To do this we will use
- a method that Einstein used. First we choose a point on the t axis which
- occurred prior to t = 0. Let's use an example where this point occurs at t =
- -3 seconds. At that time we send out a beam of light in the positive x
- direction. If the beam bounces off of a distant mirror at t = 0 and heads
- back toward the t axis, then it will come back to the us at t = 3 seconds.
- We know this because (1) it will have traveled for three seconds away from
- us, (2) it will have the same distance to travel back to us in our frame of
- reference, and (3) according to relativity it must travel at the same speed,
- c, going AND coming back. Thus, it must take three seconds to get back to us
- as well which means it reaches as at the time t = 3 seconds. So, if we send
- out a beam at t = -3 seconds and it returns at t = 3 seconds, then the event
- "it bounced off the mirror" occurred simultaneously with the time t = 0 at
- the origin.
- To use this on our diagram, we first pick the two points on the t axis
- that mark t = -3 and t = 3 (let's call these points A and B respectively).
- We then draw one light beam leaving from A in the positive x direction. Next
- we draw a light beam coming to B in the negative x direction. Where these
- two beams meet (let's call this point C) marks the point where the original
- beam bounces off the mirror. Thus the event marked by C is simultaneous with
- t = 0 (the origin). A line drawn through C and o will thus be a line of
- constant time. All lines parallel to this line will also be lines of
- constant time. So any two events that lie along one of these lines truly
- occur at the same time in this frame of reference. I have drawn this
- procedure in Diagram 2-4, and you can see that the x axis is the line
- through both o and C which is a line of simultaneity (as one might have
- expected).
- Note that the event marked by C is not seen by the O observer (who,
- remember, is represented by the t axes because he sits at x = 0) at the
- moment it happens (t = 0) but it is seen once light from C reaches the O
- observer (which is the point marked B). However, because of the way we did
- the experiment, we know that in this frame of reference, C truly did happen
- simultaneously with the origin, o. This just goes to illustrate, as
- discussed in Section 1.1, that when I say that two events happened
- simultaneously in some frame of reference, I am not talking about when they
- are seen by some observer in that frame. Rather, I am talking about when
- they actually occur in that frame of reference. On our diagrams, events are
- represented at their actual space-time locations relative to one another,
- and in a particular frame of reference that means that we show exactly when
- and where the event occurred (not "observed" but truly occurred) in that
- frame.
- Now, by constructing a set of simultaneous time lines and constant
- position lines we will have a grid on our space-time diagram. Any event has
- a specific location on the grid which tells where and when it occurs in this
- frame of reference. In Diagram 2-5 I have drawn one of these grids and
- marked an event (@) that occurred 3 light seconds away to the left of the
- origin (x = -3) and 1 second before the origin (t = -1).
-
- Diagram 2-4 Diagram 2-5
-
- t
- |
- B t
- | \ | | | | | |
- + \ ---+---+---+---+---+---+---
- | \ | | | | | |
- + \ ---+---+---+---+---+---+---
- | \ | | | | | |
- -+---+---o---+---+---C- x ---+---+---+---o---+---+--- x
- | / | | | | | |
- + / ---@---+---+---+---+---+---
- | / | | | | | |
- + / ---+---+---+---+---+---+---
- | / | | | | | |
- A
- |
-
-
-
-
-
- 2.5 Constructing One for a "Moving" Observer
-
- Now comes an important addition to our discussion of space-time
- diagrams. The coordinate system we have drawn will work fine for any
- observer who is not moving with respect to the O observer. Now we want to
- construct a coordinate system for an observer who IS traveling with respect
- to the O observer. The trajectories of two such observers have been drawn in
- Diagram 2-6 and Diagram 2-7. Notice that in our discussion we will usually
- consider moving observers who pass by the O observer at the time t = 0 and
- at the position x = 0. Thus, the origin will mark the event "the two
- observers pass by one another".
- Now, the traveler in Diagram 2-6 is moving slower than the one in
- Diagram 2-7. You can see this because in a given amount of time (distance
- along the t axis), the Diagram 2-7 traveler has moved further away from the
- time axis than the Diagram 2-6 traveler. So the faster a traveler moves, the
- more slanted this line becomes.
-
- Diagram 2-6 Diagram 2-7
-
- t t
- | / | /
- + + /
- | / | /
- + + /
- |` |/
- -+---+---o---+---+--- x -+---+---o---+---+- x
- ,| /|
- + / +
- / | / |
- + / +
- / | / |
-
-
- What does this line actually represent? Well, remember that the line
- marks the position of our observer at different times on our diagram. But,
- also, consider an object sitting right next to our moving observer. If a few
- seconds later the object is still sitting right next to him (practically on
- that line), then, in his point of view, the object has not moved. So, the
- line is a line of constant position for the moving observer. Nothing on that
- line is moving with respect to him. But that means that this line represents
- the same thing for the moving observer as the t axis represented for the O
- observer; and in fact, this line becomes the moving observer's new time
- axis. We will mark this new time axis as t' (t-prime). All lines parallel to
- this slanted line will also be lines of constant position for our moving
- observer.
- Now, just as we did for the O observer, we want to construct lines of
- constant time for our traveling observer. To do this, we will use the same
- method that we did for the O observer. The moving observer will send out a
- light beam at some time t'= -T, and the beam will bounce off some mirror so
- that it returns to him at time t'= +T. Now remember, light travels at the
- same speed in any direction for ALL observers, so our traveling observer
- must conclude that the light beam took the same amount of time traveling out
- as it did coming back in his frame of reference. If in his frame the light
- left at t'= -T and returned at t'= +T, then the point at which the beam
- bounces off the mirror must have occurred simultaneously with the origin,
- where t'= t = 0, in the frame of reference of our moving observer.
- There is a very important point to note here. What if instead of light,
- we wanted to throw a ball at 0.5 c, have it bounce off some wall, and then
- return at the same speed (0.5 c). The problem with this is that to find a
- line of constant time for the moving observer, the ball must travel at 0.5 c
- BOTH WAYS in the reference frame of the MOVING observer. But we have not yet
- defined the coordinate system for the moving observer, so we do not know
- what a ball moving at 0.5 c with respect to him will look like on our
- diagram. However, because of relativity, we know that the speed of light
- itself CANNOT change from one observer to the next. In that case, a beam of
- light traveling at c in the frame of the moving observer will also be
- traveling at c for the O observer. So, a line which makes a 45 degree angle
- with respect to the x and t axes will ALWAYS represent a beam of light
- traveling at speed c for ANY observer in ANY frame of reference.
- In Diagram 2-8, I have labeled a point A' on the t' axes which occurs
- some amount of time before t'= 0 and a point B' which occurs the same amount
- of time after t'= 0. I then drew the two light rays (remember, these are "45
- degree angle" lines) as before--one leaving from A and going to the right,
- and one moving to the left and coming in to B. I then found the point where
- they would meet (C') which marks the point where the ray from A' would have
- had to bounce in order to get back to the moving observer at B'. Thus, C'
- and o occur at the same time in the frame of the moving observer. Notice
- that for the O observer, C' is above his line of simultaneity at o (the x
- axis). So while the moving O' observer says that C' occurs when the two
- observers pass (at the origin), the O observer says that C' occurs after the
- two observers have passed by one another. We will further discuss this
- difference in the concepts of future and past in Section 2.8.
- In Diagram 2-9, I have drawn a line passing through C' and o. This line
- represents the same thing for our moving observer as the x axis did for the
- O observer. So we label this line x'.
-
- Diagram 2-8 Diagram 2-9
-
- t t t'
- | / | /
- + B' + /
- | / \ | / __--x'
- + / C' + / __C'-
- |/ / |/__--
- -+---+---+---o---/---+---+- x -+---+---+-__o---+---+---+- x
- /| / * __-- /|
- / / __-- / +
- // | -- / |
- A' + / +
- / | / |
-
-
- From the geometry involved in finding this x' axis, we can state a
- general rule for finding the x' axis for any moving observer. First recall
- that the t' axis is the line that represents the moving observer's position
- on the space-time diagram. The faster O' is moving with respect to O, the
- greater the angle between the t axis and the t' axis. So the t' axis is
- rotated away from the t axis at some angle (either clockwise or
- counterclockwise, depending on the direction O' is going--right or left).
- The x' axis is then a line rotated at the same angle away from the x axis,
- but in the opposite direction (counterclockwise or clockwise).
- Now, x' is a line of constant time for O', and any line drawn parallel
- to x' is also a line of constant time. Such lines, along with the lines of
- constant position, form a grid of the space-time coordinates for the O'
- observer. I have tried my best to draw such a grid in Diagram 2-10. If you
- squint your eyes while looking at that diagram, you can see the skewed
- squares of the coordinate grid. You can see that if you pick a point on the
- space-time diagram, the two observers with their two different coordinate
- systems will disagree on when and where the event occurs.
-
- Diagram 2-10
-
- t'
- +-----------------/-------+
- | / /_-/""/ /__/-"/ / _|
- |/-"/ / _/--/" / /_-/""/|
- | /_-/""/ /__/-"/ / _/-->x'
- |"/ / _/--/" / /_-/""/ |
- |/_-/""/ /__o-"/ / _/--/|
- | / _/--/" / /_-/""/ /_|
- |-/""/ /__/-"/ / _/--/" |
- |/ _/--/" / /_-/""/ /__/|
- |""/ /__/-"/ / _/--/" / |
- +-------------------------+
-
-
- As a final note about this procedure, think back to what really made
- these two coordinate systems look differently. Well, the only thing we
- assumed in creating these systems is that the speed of light is the same for
- all observers. In fact, this is the only reason that the two coordinate
- systems look the way they do.
-
-
-
- 2.6 A Quick Comparison of the two Observers
-
- For a moment, I want to go back and compare the two observers in
- Diagram 2-8. Consider how the O observer would explain the experiment done
- by the O' observer. First note that in the coordinate system used by the O
- observer, the point marked C' is above the x axis. This means that in the O
- observer's frame of reference, C' happens after the origin (when the two
- observers pass by one another). However, we concluded that for O' the C'
- event happens at the same time as the two observers are passing one another.
- What does that mean?
- Look at the parts of the experiment O' did (including the actions of O'
- and the events A', B', and C') as they appear in the O observer's frame. In
- that frame, O' sends out a light signal when his own clock reads t' = -T,
- but note also that he is moving along with that signal (according to O). The
- distance between them changes slowly at the beginning according to O because
- O' is moving along with the signal in the same direction. Then, according to
- O, the two observers pass by one another. Next, the C' event happens and the
- light bounces back toward the two observers. In the frame of the O observer,
- the O' observer is now racing towards the light beam, and so the distance
- between them is changing very quickly. Finally, the light beam reaches O' as
- his clock is ticking t' = +T.
- So, we see that in the O frame of reference, because O' is moving along
- with the light before C' and is moving towards the light after C' that means
- C' has to happen after the "half way point" (when the two observers pass one
- another).
- HOWEVER, relativity says that O' cannot agree with that analysis. In
- the frame of O', it is the O observer who is moving. Further, O' cannot
- agree that the distance between him and the light is changing slowly before
- C' and quickly after C'. Why can't he agree? Well, because then he would
- measure the speed of the light in his frame of reference and find it to be
- different going away from him than it is coming back to him. As discussed in
- Section 1.2, relativity dictates that for ANY inertial observer, when he
- measures the speed of light he MUST find the speed to be c--ALWAYS, and in
- ALL directions. If O' has to find that the light is traveling at the same
- speed going and coming back, then O' also has to conclude that in his frame
- C' really, truly happens at the same time as the origin (when and where the
- two observers pass one another). O' thus has a different coordinate system
- than O, and he measure space and time differently.
- And so, in one frame of reference C' really, truly happens after the
- two observers pass one another, but in another frame of reference C' really,
- truly happens and the same time the two observer's pass. We find that the
- notion of simultaneity is relative, and we will discuss this further in just
- a bit.
- Next, though, I want to address a possibility you might be thinking
- right now. That is, why can't it simply be that O' is just wrong in
- interpreting things as he does and that O is correct. One might want to
- claim that the reason O' is confused is that he is moving while O is not.
- But next we will see that we can interchange the two observers, and it
- becomes obvious that there is no absolute way to claim that one of them is
- the "correct" observer.
-
-
-
- 2.7 Interchanging "Stationary" and "Moving"
-
- In our understanding of space-time diagrams, we need to incorporate the
- idea that all reference frames that are not accelerating are considered
- equivalent and that all motion is relative. By this I mean that O was
- considered as the stationary observer only because we defined him as such.
- Remember? We said that this it is natural to think of the diagram being
- drawn specifically for the observer whose coordinate system is drawn with
- vertical and horizontal axes. We then said that we can think of that
- observer (O) to be considered "at rest" in this diagram. Then, when I called
- O' the moving observer, I meant that he was moving with respect to O.
- However, we should just as easily be able to define O' as the
- stationary observer. Then, to him, O is moving away from him to the left.
- Then, we should be able to draw the t' and x' axes as the vertical and
- horizontal lines, while the t and x axes become the rotated lines. I have
- done this in Diagram 2-11. By examining this diagram, you can confirm that
- it makes sense to you in light of our discussion thus far. (For example,
- picture grabbing the x' and t' axes in Diagram 2-9 and rotating them around
- the origin until they are horizontal and vertical lines. If x and t follow
- your rotation, then you can see how they would end up as they are drawn in
- Diagram 2-11.)
-
- Diagram 2-11
-
- t'
- |
- t B'
- \ | \
- \ + \
- \ | \
- \ + \
- \| \
- ---+---+---o---+---+---C'- x'
- | ""__ /
- + ""--
- | / ""_C
- + / ""--x
- | /
- A'
- |
-
-
- I have also included in Diagram 2-11 the experiment that O' did in
- which he decided how to draw the x' axis, and you can see that it now looks
- just like the experiment O did when his x and t axes were the horizontal and
- vertical lines. Further in Diagram 2-11 you can see that the experiment done
- by the O observer now looks like the one which has incorrectly concluded
- that C occurs at the same time the two observers are passing one another.
- Thus, you can see that we can completely interchange the concept of
- which observer is moving and which is sitting still, and as a result we must
- conclude that neither frame of reference is any "better" than the other.
- When O concludes that C occurs simultaneous with o, he is REALLY, TRULY
- correct for his frame of reference. Also, when O' concludes that it is C'
- which occurs simultaneous with o, he is also REALLY, TRULY correct for his
- frame of reference. The notion of simultaneity is not absolute, but REALLY,
- TRULY depends on your frame of reference. To understand why this doesn't
- cause contradictions, we go to the next section in which we discuss the
- notion of future and past with relativity in mind.
-
-
-
- 2.8 "Future", "Past", and the Light Cone
-
- For the later FTL discussions, it will be important to understand the
- way different observers have different notions concerning the future and the
- past. This difference comes about because of the way the different
- coordinate systems of the two observers compare to one another.
- First, let me note that with what we have discussed we cannot make a
- complete comparison of the two observers' coordinate systems. You see, we
- have not seen how the lengths which represents one unit of space and time in
- the reference frame of O compare with the lengths representing the same
- units in O'. This will be covered in the Part II: More on Special Relativity
- (which is "optional" for those of you just interested in the faster than
- light discussions). We can, however, compare the observers' notions of
- future and past.
- Back on Diagram 2-9, in addition to the O and O' space and time axes, I
- also marked a particular event with a star, "*". Recall that for O, any
- event on the x axis occurs at the same time as the origin (the place and
- time that the two observers pass each other). Since the marked event appears
- under the x axis, then O must find that the event occurs before the
- observers pass each other in his frame. Also recall that for O', those
- events on the x' axis are the ones that occur at the same time the observers
- are passing. Since the marked event appears above the x' axis, O' must find
- that the event occurs after the observers pass each other in his frame. So,
- when and where events occur with respect to other events is completely
- dependent on ones frame of reference. Note that this is not a question of
- when the events are seen to happen in different frames of reference, but it
- is a question of when they really do happen in the different frames (recall
- our discussion of reference frames in Section 1.1). So, how can this make
- sense? How can one event be both in the future for one observer and in the
- past for another observer. To better understand why this situation doesn't
- contradict itself, we need to look at one other construction typically shown
- on a space-time diagram.
- In Diagram 2-12 I have drawn two light rays, one which travels in the
- +x direction and another which travels in the -x direction. At some negative
- time, the two rays were headed towards x = 0. At t = 0, the two rays finally
- get to x = 0 and cross paths (at the origin). As time progresses, the two
- then speed away from x = 0. This construction is known as a light cone.
-
- Diagram 2-12
-
- t
- ^
- | light
- \ + /
- \ inside /
- \ + /
- outside \ | / outside
- ---+---+---o---+---+---> x
- / | \
- / + \
- / inside \
- / + \
- |
-
-
- A light cone divides a space-time diagram into two major sections: the
- area inside the cone and the area outside the cone (as shown in Diagram 2-12
- ). (Let me mention here that I will specifically call the cone I have drawn
- "a light cone centered at the origin", because that is where the two beams
- meet.) Now, consider an observer who has been sitting at x = 0 (like our O
- observer) and is receiving and sending signals at the moment marked by x =
- 0, t = 0 (at the origin). Obviously, if he sends out a signal, it proceeds
- away from x = 0 into the future, and the event marked by someone receiving
- the signal would be above the x axis (in his future). Also, if he is
- receiving signals at t = 0 , then the event marked by someone sending the
- signal would have to be under the x axis (in his past). Now, if it is
- impossible for anything to travel faster than light, then the only events
- occurring before t = 0 that the observer can know about at the moment are
- those that are inside the light cone. Also, the only future events (those
- occurring after t = 0) that he can influence are, again, those inside the
- light cone.
- Now, one of the most important things to note about a light cone is
- that its position is the same for all observers (because the speed of light
- is the same for all observers). For example, picture taking the skewed
- coordinate system of the moving observer and superimposing it on the light
- cone I have drawn (note: a diagram which shows this view will be given in
- Part II: More on Special Relativity). If you were to move one unit "down"
- the x' axis (a distance that represents one light second for our moving
- observer), and you move one unit "up" the t' axes (one second for our moving
- observer), then the point you end up at should lie somewhere on the light
- cone. In effect, a light cone will always look the same on our diagram
- regardless of which observer is drawing the cone.
- This fact has great importance. Consider different observers who are
- all passing by one another at some point in space and time. In general, they
- will disagree with each other on when and where different events had and
- will occur. However, if you draw a light cone centered at the point where
- they are passing each other, then they will ALL agree as to which events are
- inside the light cone and which events are outside the light cone. So,
- regardless of the coordinate system for any of these observers, the
- following facts remain: The only events that any of these observers can ever
- hope to influence are those which lie inside the upper half of the light
- cone. Similarly, the only events that any of these observers can know about
- as they pass by one another are those which lie inside the lower half of the
- cone. Since the light cone is the same for all the observers, then they all
- agree as to which events can be known about as they are passing and which
- can be influenced at some point after they pass.
- Now let's apply this to the observers and event in Diagram 2-9. As you
- can see, the marked event is indeed outside the light cone. Because of this,
- even though the event is in one observer's past at the time in question (t =
- t'= 0), he cannot know about the event at the time. Also, even though the
- event is in the other observer's future at the time, he can never have an
- effect on the event after. In essence, the event (when it happens, where it
- happens, how it happens, etc.) is of absolutely no consequence for these two
- observers at the time in question. As it turns out, anytime you find two
- observers who are passing by one another and an event which one observer's
- coordinate system places in the past and the other observer's coordinate
- system places in the future, then the event will always be outside of the
- light cone centered at the point where the observers pass.
- But doesn't this relativistic picture of the universe still present an
- ambiguity in the concepts of past and future? Perhaps philosophically it
- does, but not physically. You see, the only time you can see these
- ambiguities is when you are looking at the whole space-time picture at once.
- If you were one of the observers who is actually viewing space and time,
- then as the other observer passes by you, your whole picture of space and
- time can only be constructed from events that are inside the lower half of
- the light cone. If you wait for a while, then eventually you can get all of
- the information from all of the events that were happening around the time
- you were passing the other observer. From this information, you can draw the
- whole space-time diagram, and then you can see the ambiguity. But by that
- time, the ambiguity that you are considering no longer exists. So the
- ambiguity can never actually play a part in any physical situation. Finally,
- remember that this is only true if nothing can travel faster than the speed
- of light.
-
- Well, that concludes our introduction to special relativity and
- space-time diagrams. The next section deals with these concepts with more
- detail; however, if the reader wishes to skip to the FTL discussion, the
- information provided in the above sections should be enough to follow that
- discussion.
-
-
-