Einstein’s special theory of relativity (cf. Part 10) was followed by his general theory of relativity (1907-1915), which addresses the issue of gravity. He showed that, contrary to Newton’s assumption, gravitational waves, which mediate gravitational attraction between any two bodies, travel at a finite speed, namely the speed of light. The theory explained gravitational interaction in terms of a DISTORTION OF SPACETIME by every object. The larger the mass of an object, the more is this distortion. When one object distorts spacetime, the effect is felt by every other object; this is how gravitational attraction between any two objects occurs.
Newton's second law of motion says that the acceleration (a)
produced by a force F acting on an object of mass m is equal to F/m;
i.e., F = ma. The mass m that enters this equation is called
the 'inertial' mass. To understand why, let us recall Newton's first law of
motion, which says that a body continues to be in a state of rest or uniform
motion, unless acted upon by a force. Thus, the body exhibits inertia to any
change of its state of rest or uniform motion; it resists a change in its
state, and the resistance or inertia is proportional to its mass, the
'inertial' mass.
Next, let us consider Newton's law of gravitation. Consider
any two bodies or objects, having masses m1 and m2,
and a distance r apart. The law says that the gravitational force of
attraction between them is F = G(m1m2)/(r2);
here G is the 'Gravitational constant', a fundamental parameter of
Nature in our universe. [Some other such fundamental parameters are the speed
of light c, and the Planck constant, h.] The mass that enters the
gravitation-law equation is 'gravitational' mass.
The big question was: Is inertial mass the same as
gravitational mass? Newton (and also Galileo) asserted that it is so, and that
it is a happy coincidence that it is so. Einstein agreed that the two kinds of
mass are the same, but he created a trail-blazing theory of gravity out of this
'happy coincidence', namely the general theory of relativity. The sameness or
equivalence of the two kinds of mass goes by the name of EQUIVALENCE PRINCIPLE,
an essential ingredient of Einstein's theory.
Einstein argued that the experience of
being pulled downwards by the gravitational force on the surface of the Earth
is equivalent to being inside a spaceship (far from any sources of gravity)
that is being accelerated by its engines.
From this, Einstein deduced that free-fall is actually 'inertial motion' (i.e., constant-speed
motion). An object in free-fall really does not accelerate, but rather the closer
it gets to an object such as the Earth, the more the time scale becomes
stretched due to spacetime distortion around the planetary object. As it approaches the planetary object the
time scale stretches at an accelerated rate, giving the appearance that
it is accelerating towards the planetary object. An accelerometer in free-fall
does not register any acceleration.
When an observer detects the local
presence of a force that acts on all objects in proportion to the inertial mass
of the object, the observer can be taken to be experiencing an accelerated
frame of reference. Imagine two reference frames, K and K'. K has a uniform
gravitational field, whereas K' has no gravitational field but is uniformly accelerated by such an amount that objects in the two frames experience identical forces:
'We arrive at a very satisfactory interpretation of this law of experience, if we assume that the systems K and K' are physically exactly equivalent; that is, if we assume that we may just as well regard the system K as being in a space free from gravitational fields, if we then regard K as uniformly accelerated. This assumption of exact physical equivalence makes it impossible for us to speak of the absolute acceleration of the system of reference, just as the usual (i.e. special) theory of relativity forbids us to talk of the absolute velocity of a system; and it makes the equal falling of all bodies in a gravitational field seem a matter of course' (Einstein 1911).
Einstein went further than that:
'As long as we restrict ourselves to purely mechanical processes in the realm where Newton's mechanics holds sway, we are certain of the equivalence of the systems K and K'. But this view of ours will not have any deeper significance unless the systems K and K' are equivalent with respect to all physical processes, that is, unless the laws of Nature with respect to K are in entire agreement with those with respect to K'. By assuming this to be so, we arrive at a principle which, if it is really true, has great heuristic importance. For by theoretical consideration of processes which take place relatively to a system of reference with uniform acceleration, we obtain information as to the career of processes in a homogeneous gravitational field' (Einstein, 1911).
He combined
the equivalence principle with special relativity theory to predict, among other things, that clocks run
at different rates in a gravitational field,
and that light rays bend in
a gravitational field ('gravitational lensing effect'). This and many other
predictions of the theory have been confirmed by experiment.
The central
idea of Einstein's theory is that the presence of matter distorts or curves
spacetime. Thus gravity is interpreted as not a force, but rather a curvature
in the fabric of spacetime, and objects respond to gravity by following (or
free-falling along) the curvature of spacetime in the vicinity of an object.
This idea has shaped modern cosmology. It also marked a major inroad of
geometry into physics.
This video by Richard Feynman (on the character of physical law) is a treat to watch:
This video by Richard Feynman (on the character of physical law) is a treat to watch:
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