Title: General Relativity
1General Relativity Curved Space
- by
- Robert Nemiroff
- Michigan Tech
2Physics X About This Course
- Officially "Extraordinary Concepts in Physics"
- Being taught for credit at Michigan Tech
- Light on math, heavy on concepts
- Anyone anywhere is welcome
- No textbook required
- Wikipedia, web links, and lectures only
- Find all the lectures with Google at
- "Starship Asterisk" then "Physics X"
- http//bb.nightskylive.net/asterisk/viewforum.php?
f39
3General RelativityOverview
- GR Gravity is not a force
- It is a non-Euclidean geometry
- Very close to Newtonian gravity
- Tests
- precession of Mercury
- deflection of starlight
- Mechanism Actually -- none!
- "...there is no theory of gravity beyond the
mathematical form." - Richard Feynman
4General Relativity History
- Created by Einstein between 1905 and 1915.
- Published incorrect theory of gravity in 1912.
- Test of incorrect theory clouded out.
- Published GR in 1915.
- Key GR test passed in 1919.
- Remains our most accurate theory of gravity.
- Many scientists feel that SR would have
developed without Einstein, although Einstein got
there first, but GR would not have been developed
without Einstein.
5General Relativity Principles and Theorems
- "Local" effects are different than "global"
effects - Local very nearby
- Space near mass "curves"
- Time near mass "slows"
- Equivalence Principle
- All things fall together
- Birkhoff's Theorem
- Ignore symmetric outside stuff
- Gravitomagnetism
- is to G as B is to E.
6General Relativity Concept of Spacetime
- Spacetime
- Space and time combined into one coordinate
system - time like a fourth spatial dimension
- still three spatial dimensions
- lines represent coordinate system
7General Relativity Principles and Theorems
You are in a small elevator. Is it possible to
tell if you are accelerating downward without
gravity or near a gravitating mass? 1. No. 2.
Yes. 3. Only if the elevator eventually
stops.
8General Relativity Principles and Theorems
1. No. In GR, pure linear acceleration is
indistinguishable from gravity. This is a
statement of the equivalence principle.
9General Relativity Principles and Theorems
You are in a small elevator. Can you tell the
difference between being near a gravitating mass
or in a space station spinning to produce
"artificial gravity"? 1. No. 2. Yes. 3. Only
if "small elevator" is a euphemism for "physics
hell".
10General Relativity Principles and Theorems
2. Yes. The artificial "gravity" created by
rotation is inherently different than gravity,
although it may feel the same at first. One way
to tell the difference is to rapidly spin some
object. The object will try to maintain its
original spin axis. Therefore, if the object
precesses, you might be on a spinning space
station.
11General Relativity Equivalence Principle
A hammer and feather both fall at the same
speed. Youtube video of Astronaut showing this
12General Relativity Equivalence Principle
-
- "It is only when there is numerical equality
between the inertial and gravitational mass that
the acceleration is independent of the nature of
the body." - Einstein - Weak Equivalence Principle
- All objects fall the same in a vacuum.
13General Relativity Equivalence Principle
-
- Strong Equivalence Principle
- ALL experiments appear the same when done
- in a gravitational field, or
- in a linearly accelerating laboratory.
- G should be the same in the early universe.
14General Relativity Intervals
- Static, symmetric spacetime
- ds2 g11 dr2 g22 d?2 g33 dF2 g44 dt2
-
- ds2 0 is a "null path" where photons fly.
15General Relativity Spacetime Intervals
- Two events happen in spacetime. They are
separated in space by ?r and in time by ?t. -
- Time-like interval
- One event can affect the other
- c ?t gt ?r
- Space-like interval
- One event cannot affect the other
- c ?t lt ?r
- Light-like interval
- Light from one could affect the other
- c ?t ?r
-
16General Relativity Spacetime Motion
- Two events happen in spacetime. They are
separated in space by ?r and in time by ?t. -
- Closed timelike curve (?r 0 ?t lt 0)
- A curve that comes back to the same spatial point
at an earlier time (or later time) - backwards time travel allowed in GR
- need other physics to disallow?
- will cover time travel in other lectures
-
17General Relativity Energy Conditions
- Energy is conserved locally in GR.
- Consequence of time symmetry
- Consequence of Noether's theorem
- Energy is NOT conserved globally in GR.
- Example cosmological redshift -- where does the
energy go? - Potential energy is really just a bookkeeping
device. - Not defined generally in GR.
18General Relativity The Key Equation
- Principle Equation
- Guv is the Einstein tensor
- shows how spacetime curves
- guv is the metric tensor
- shows spacetime geometery
- Tuv is the Stress Energy tensor
- shows energy and energy flow
- G, c, ? are all constants
19General Relativity Curved Space
- Flat Space
- familiar Euclidean geometry holds
- circles have area p r2
- spheres have volume (4/3) p r3
- Space curved by energy in GR
- Euclidean geometry does NOT hold
- Open space
- Area gt p r2 Volume gt (4/3) p r3
- Closed space
- Area lt p r2 Volume lt (4/3) p r3
-
20General Relativity Curved Space
Example Triangles Top Triangle area is less
than Euclidean Middle Triangle area is more
than Euclidean Bottom "Flat." Triangle area
is exactly Euclidean.