Title: What is Gravity?
1What is Gravity?
"Colliding Black Holes"CreditNational Center
for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA)
- Fred Raab,
- LIGO Hanford Observatory
2Gravity in history
- Gravity is the phenomenon with which mankind has
the most experience. - Aristotle believed that gravity pulled down
heavier objects more than lighter ones because
heavier objects were more earthlike - Aristotelian thought dominated history until the
Renaissance
3Renaissance in gravity
- Galileo (1564-1642) made key discoveries in study
of gravity and motion - Discovery of relativity of motion concept that
motion can only be determined relative to a frame
of reference - Discovery that the motion of a falling object was
described by a simple mathematical rule that did
not depend on what was falling - Isaac Newton (1643-1727), the master of motion,
codified Galilean relativity into his laws of
mechanics - space and motion were defined relative to a
reference frame - time was an absolute quantity ? all clocks ticked
at the same rate - law of universal gravitation ? action at a
distance
4Fast Forward 200 Years
- About 100 years ago, Albert Einstein (1879-1955)
began to explore anew the concepts of space and
time - Only two forces were known at that time
electromagnetism gravity - Theory of electromagnetism had correctly
described motors, generators, radio and light
transmission - Newtons mechanics had correctly described motion
of neutral matter, including an accurate
description of how gravity acts, but not how it
arises - But the two theories were incompatible in the
description of rapidly moving electrical charges - Einstein eventually discovered that the
incompatibility was caused by the presence of
absolute time - Two travelers in relative motion, not only cannot
define who is moving, if they move fast enough
they also disagree on the time between events
5Special Relativity
- Einsteins Special Theory of Relativity (1904)
described motion of matter in the absence of
gravity - Everything is relative, except the speed of
light, which is absolute, in agreement with
electromagnetism - Speed of light is a property of space
- There is a special symmetry between space and
time, mass and energy - All observers in relative motion observe the same
laws of physics but they disagree on the
definitions of time and space used to describe
those laws - Theory was controversial at the time
- Nobel committee did not mention Relativity in
Einsteins Nobel Prize citation, which was for
the explanation of the photoelectric effect - Predictions
- Moving rulers contract
- Moving clocks tick slower
- Matter is just a frozen form of energy (e.g.,
nuclear power industry)
6The Dawn of General Relativity
- Einstein struggled another decade to discover how
to incorporate gravity into relativity - A big clue was known by Newton and has often been
observed by us since the dawn of the space age - Microgravity as we view it on video of
astronauts aboard the Space Shuttle or the Space
Station was predicted by Newtons law of
universal gravitation, which showed that all
objects fall exactly the same under gravitation,
and confirmed by Newtons pendulum experiments - Einstein eventually realized that these objects
all followed the same path through space and time
and that gravitation was the consequence of
geometrical properties of space and time
7The Essence of General Relativity
- Space and time are things, not concepts
- Space and time affect the motion of objects and
objects affect the character of space and time - Things move along the shortest path through the
four dimensions of space and time - The presence of matter (or energy) warps space
and time, changing their geometrical properties - The paths of all objects naturally follow the
curvature of space and time - In flat spacetime, General Relativity reduces to
Special Relativity
8Mass Warps Space, Affecting Paths of Objects and
Light
- Presence of mass gives space the appearance of
lumpy glass as evidenced by the bending of light - First observed during the solar eclipse of 1919
by Sir Arthur Eddington, when the Sun was
silhouetted against the Hyades star cluster
A massive object shifts apparent position of a
star
- Einstein Cross
- Photo credit NASA and ESA
9Was Einstein Right?
- Remarkably so, but it took time to appreciate how
right he was! - Checking relativity needed good rulers and
clocks, and measurements over large expanses of
space and time - Golden age of experimental relativity began in
late 1950s - Radar had become an excellent ruler
- Atomic timekeeping came of age
- Space flight allowed controlled measurements over
large distances - Dozens of new effects predicted by relativity
have been confirmed to accuracies between 0.1 to
0.0001 - No test of general relativity has ever found a
discrepancy!
10The Frontier of Relativity Gravitational Waves
- Gravitational waves are ripples in space when it
is stirred up by rapid motions of large
concentrations of matter or energy
- Rendering of space stirred by two orbiting black
holes
11Emission of Energy by Gravitational Waves Has
Been Observed
Emission of gravitational waves
- Neutron Binary System Hulse Taylor
- PSR 1913 16 -- Timing of pulsars
17 / sec
8 hr
- Neutron Binary System
- separated by 106 miles
- m1 1.4m? m2 1.36m? e 0.617
- Prediction from general relativity
- spiral in by 3 mm/orbit
- rate of change orbital period
Hulse, Taylor receive Nobel Prize
12Basic Signature of Gravitational Waves for All
Detectors
13The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave
Observatory
LIGO (Washington)
LIGO (Louisiana)
Brought to you by the National Science
Foundation operated by Caltech and MIT the
research focus for more than 500 LIGO Scientific
Collaboration members worldwide.
14Is General Relativity the final word on gravity?
No!
15What was going on in the subatomic world
- Spurred on by Einsteins early work, quantum
mechanics happened - Einstein confirmed reality of atoms
- Einstein confirmed that energy could only be
exchanged in units of quanta - Quantum mechanics was birthed (principally due to
the work of others) from these basic ideas - Quantum mechanics explains the structure of
atoms, the emission and absorption of light and
the stability of matter - New forces (nuclear force, weak force) are
discovered - Eventually all forces (electromagnetism, nuclear
and weak) are shown to obey quantum laws and it
becomes understood that they were all of
comparable strength in the conditions that exited
in the early universe
16What is not talked about in polite company
- General Relativity gives a beautiful and accurate
description of the universe on scales extending
from macroscopic objects to the edge of the
visible universe and back to the age when atoms
first formed - GR has passed many experimental and observational
tests and never failed - Quantum Mechanics gives an extremely accurate
description of the universe on scales comparable
to and smaller than an atom - QM has passed many experimental tests of
incredible accuracy (up to 12 decimal places!)
without failure - Unfortunately these two theories are incompatible
17Incompatibilities of GR and QM
- QM describes an indeterminate world ruled by
chance whereas GR is determinate - QM objects can only have discrete energy levels
and exchange quanta of energy GR objects have a
continuum of energy levels and can exchange
energy smoothly - In the early universe and in the interiors of
black holes, the subatomic and the cosmic scales
become the same, so a single set of laws must
apply GR and QM must be approximations that
apply as the universe evolves
18A popular contender string theory
- Basic idea is that the objects we call particles
and the exchange particles that mediate the
forces of nature are actually made up of tiny
vibrating strings - By making particles of strings (which have some
spatial extent) rather than of points, one avoids
the troublesome infinities that crop up - The same pieces of string can emulate different
particles depending on how they vibrate - To have the mathematics reproduce the richness of
particles, forces and symmetries in nature
requires that the strings be able to vibrate in
many dimensions
19Extra dimensions? What extra dimensions?
- The most popular variants of string theory
require at least 10 spatial dimensions - But if there are 10 spatial dimensions how come
we only see 3? - One possibility is that the extra dimensions are
small and rolled up think about a human hair - Another possibility is intriguing
- Suppose the electrical, weak and strong forces
only act in 3 spatial dimensions, but gravity can
leak out into the extra dimensions - Since almost all our information about the
universe has come from electromagnetic signals,
why would we know about the other dimensions? - Furthermore, the leakage of gravity into the
other dimensions might explain why gravity is
weak compared to the other 3 phenomena
20Should we believe in string theory?
No!
- A scientific theory must make falsifiable
predictions, subject to experimental or
observational testing! - Until string theory makes unique, falsifiable
predictions that are confirmed, it is merely a
mathematical model, not science. - A few predictions from string theory that might
be observable - Sparticles might produced in the next generation
of high energy colliders - Cosmic strings might be detectable by
gravitational wave detectors like LIGO
21Recommended Reading
- Was Einstein Right, by Clifford Will. A bit
ancient (more than 10 years old) accounting of
progress in verifying Einsteins theory. - Black Holes and Time Warps Einsteins
Outrageous Legacy, by Kip Thorne. From basics to
time travel in a long, but rewarding read. - Black Holes, Wormholes and Time Machines, by
Jim Al-Khalili. Some of the most challenging
concepts of modern physics described in a
humorous and plain-spoken style. - Einsteins Unfinished Symphony, by Marcia
Bartusiak. A highly readable account of the
search for gravitational waves.