Title: Relativity and Black Holes
1Relativity and Black Holes
- Frank Hsia-San Shu
- National Tsing Hua University
- 8 October 2005
- Potential Physics Chemistry Majors
2Outline of Lecture
- The speed of light in a vacuum, c 300,000 km/s,
is the same no matter how fast an observer moves
with respect to the source of the light (special
relativity). - As a consequence, time appears dilated and
lengths seem to suffer (Lorentz) contraction for
moving objects. - As a further consequence, the
most famous equation in all of science. - Locally, it is not possible to distinguish
between gravitation and acceleration (general
relativity). - As a consequence, it is possible for gravity to
bend light and to warp spacetime. Indeed,
gravitation is warped spacetime. - Black holes represent regions where spacetime is
so warped that fundamental challenges are posed
to our understanding of physics.
3Einstein at 15 Racing at the Speed of Light
Violates Maxwells Equations
4Theory of Special RelativityTwo Basic Postulates
- Valid laws of physics are the same for all
inertial observers (people who move at constant
velocity, maybe zero, relative to the fixed
stars). - The speed of light, c 300,000 km/s, is the same
for all observers, independent of their motion
relative to the source of light.
5Time Dilation
6Proof
- One tick of light clock according to woman
- One tick of light clock according to man
- Relationship between time intervals
- Solving for , we get
- i.e., time passed for woman is factor
shorter than time passed for man.
7Lorentz Contraction
Twin paradox Cant woman regard herself to be at
rest? Wont she deduce that her brother ages
less quickly than she does?
8Relativistic Increase in Mass
- M and m have identical mass when they are at
rest with respect to each other. - Distance seen by A and A is unaffected by
motion of A in x-direction at - velocity chosen to equal , which is why
- Time for collision measured by A is
shorter than measured by A by a factor of
. This implies - But by momentum balance and symmetry
- Thus, by the inverse factor
- The reason is that as seen by A has
an extra component of velocity in the
x-direction compared to seen by the same
observer A. - In the limit when and go to zero,
go to the rest mass , and goes
to v, the total velocity. Therefore, we conclude
that the mass of a ball in motion at speed v
is larger than its rest mass by the factor
9Equivalence of Mass and Energy
- According to Newton, what a moving ball has extra
compared to a stationary ball of mass is - According to Einstein, what a moving ball has
extra compared to a nonmoving ball of mass
is more mass - Perhaps energy and mass are the same thing!
- In the above equation, E total energy. For v
ltlt c, -
- where the term is called the rest
energy and is the kinetic energy as
defined by Newton. More generally, - According to Newton, when a ball is placed in a
gravitational field (or more generally, any
attractive field of force), what it has is
(negative) potential energy. For Einstein, what
it has is less mass. According to Lavoisier when
hydrogen combines with oxygen to make water, mass
is conserved but heat is released. No, heat is
energy, and the water actually contains slightly
less mass than the original hydrogen and oxygen.
10Possibility of Converting Energy into Mass and
Vice-Versa
- Energy of putty balls before collision
- Energy of putty balls after collision
- Energy is conserved in process
- Rest mass after collision is greater than rest
mass before collision! There has been conversion
of energy into mass. (Not more putty molecules,
but putty weighs slightly more than it did at
rest.) - Conversion of mass into energy must also be
possible. - Basis of nuclear power. Although less well
known, also basis of chemical power indeed,
basis of all power.
11Newtons Greatest Achievement, Einsteins
Happiest Thought
- Nothing can travel faster than the speed of
light. How then can - Neither F ma nor F GMm/r2 are
relativistically correct. What can replace these
equations? - Maybe gravitation and acceleration are
indistinguishable locally. - Accept Galileos empirical finding, but not
Newtons theoretical explanation.
- Apple (and everything else) falls to Earth at g
9.8 m/s2 (Galileo). - Moon falls about Earth with centripetal
acceleration (Huygens) v2/r 0.0029 m/s2
g/3600. - Moon is 60 times farther away from center of
Earth than apple (Erastothenes). 602 3600. - Maybe gravitation
- Then 2nd and 3rd laws imply
- independent of any property of m.
12Two Views of Gravitation
- Newton
- Gravity is a force which pulls on all things with
mass. - Mass acts as the source that generates the force
of gravitation. - Einstein
- There is no such thing as the force of gravity.
Gravitation arises when spacetime has curvature
indeed gravitation is spacetime curvature. - Mass-energy and stress (e.g., pressure) act as
the sources that generate spacetime curvature.
13Theory of General Relativity Two Basic
Postulates
- The concepts of special relativity apply to local
phenomena. - Locally, there is no way to distinguish
physically between gravitation and acceleration.
14Bending of Light
15Gravitational Bending of Light
16Ant Analogy for Bending of Light
17Lensing of Background Galaxies by Galaxy Cluster
18Event Horizon of Black Hole
19Flight Circles about a Black Hole
- 9 km for a 3 solar-mass BH.
- Start with flight circle of circumference 2p90
km. - You deduce youre 90 km radially from BH. Dont
jump to conclusions. - Lower yourself inward radially by 32 km.
- Fly around measure circumference 2p60 km. (?)
- Lower yourself inward radially by another 33.75
km. - Fly around measure circumference 2p30 km.
(??) - Lower yourself inward radially by another 19.8
km. - You compute 3233.7519.8 85.55. Subtracted
from 90, wont this bring you inside 9
km? (!) - Dont worry lower yourself by 19.8 km as we
requested. - Fly around measure circumference 2p15 km.
Whew! - All flight circles are in a single plane.
Clearly, presence of a 3 solar-mass point-mass at
center has warped our usual (Euclidean) sense of
geometry.
20Black Holes Are Punctures in Fabric of Spacetime
21Behavior Near Event Horizon
22Reversal of Space and Time Across Event Horizon
of a Black Hole
- Outside event horizon, by exerting enough force
on the rope, I can hold your position stationary
with respect to center of BH. But there is
nothing I can do to stop the forward progression
of time for you (or, for that matter, for
myself). - As I lower you toward event horizon, your
perception of stars begin to change and blur.
Are you getting a sinking feeling? - When you get close enough to the event horizon,
no rope no matter how strong can stand the
strain. It will snap and break, and you will
begin an inexorable fall toward the black hole. - For you, it takes only a few milliseconds for you
to reach and cross the event horizon of the BH.
But for me, it seems that you formally take an
eternity to reach the event horizon. - In other words, as you draw near to the event
horizon, there is nothing I can do to stop your
forward progression through space. But for me,
time seems to have stopped moving for you! In
some sense, for me on the outside, time and space
seem to reverse roles as you approach the event
horizon. When you cross it, you will reach a
different space and time than the one that we on
the outside occupy. Some people speculate that
BHs may be portals to other spacetimes and other
universes!
23Optical Jet Emanating from Nucleus of M87, an
Elliptical Galaxy
24Formation of Magnetized Black Hole in
Self-similar Gravitational Collapse
Cai Shu (2005)
25Speculation 1-- Wormholes Shortcuts through
Space?
26Speculation 2 -- Wormholes Machines through Time?
27Speculation 3 Evaporation of BHs?
- Currently popular theoretical view Proton is a
long-lived, but ultimately unstable particle,
which will decay into positron plus other
particles in some years or so. - Even BHs may ultimately evaporate completely
away. According to Hawking, (nonrotating) BHs
of a mass M have a nonzero surface temperature T
given by the formula - This formula has been recently been recovered by
the methods of superstring theory, which is the
attempt to reconcile general relativity with
quantum mechanics.
- Heisenberg uncertainty principle
28Physics as a Community
- An unbroken thread from the beginning of
modern science to the present age.
29Thank you everyone!