Title: 1ST CHAPTER Special theory of relativity
11ST CHAPTERSpecial theory of relativity
2ZCT 104/3E
- ENGLISH TEACHING
- 5 CHAPTERS WILL BE COVERED
- Special theory of relativity
- Wave nature of particles
- Particle nature of waves
- Introduction to Quantum Mechanics
- Atomic models
3LECTURE 1
- Failure of Newtonian mechanics
Newton
4Revision Still remember Newton's 3 law of
motion?
- An object at rest will always be in the wrong
place - An object in motion will always be headed in the
wrong direction - For every action, there is an equal and opposite
criticism - b, just joking
5Newtonian view of space and time
-
- Space and time are absolute
- Time flow independently of the state of motion of
any physical system in 3-D space - In essence, time and space do not mix. The state
of motion of a physical system does not affact
the rate of time flow within the system
6Inertial frames
- Inertial frames of reference is one in which an
object subject to no forcess moves in straight
line at constant speed - E.g. of inertial frames the lab frame and the
constant-speed car frame - Newtonian law of invariance (or called principle
of Newtonian relativity) All inertial frames are
equivalent, and the law of mechanics must be also
take the same methematical form for all observers
irrespective of their frame of references
7Example of inertial frames of reference
8Example of form invariance
- In the aeroplane with constant speed wrp to the
ground, Newton second law takes the form of F
m a - In the lab frame, Newton 2nd law is F ma
9The laws of mechanics must be the same in all
inertial frames of reference
- Although the ball path is different in both
inertial reference frames, both observers agree
on the validity of Newtons law, conservation of
energy and others physical principles
10Galilean transformation
- It relates the kinematical quantities, such as
position, velocity, acceleration between two
inertial frames - S stationary frame (uses x,y,z,t as their
coordinates) - S moving wrp to S with constant speed u away
from S (uses x,y,z,t as their coordinates) - Galilean transformation for the coordinates (in
1-D) - x x vt, y y, zz, t t
- Galilean addition law for velocity (in 1-D)
- vx vx - v
- Simply a daily experience
11Galilean transformation and Newtonian view goes
hand-in-hand
- Galilean transformation assumes the notion of
absolute space and time as hold by Newton, i.e.
the length is independent of the state of motion.
So is the flowing rate of time.
12Example
- Apply GT on th previous example
- The trajactories of the ball seen in the two
frames, S (van) and S (ground observer) is
related by GT as per
13Example
- Using Galilean transformation of corrdinates, one
can show that observer in S and S measure
different cordinates for the ends of a stick at
rest in S, they agree on the length of the stick.
Assume the stick has end coodintaes x a and x
a l in S.
- Doraemiyan (S) measure the end points of the
stick at the same time, t. - Using x x vt
- x(head) x(head) vt a - vt
- x(end) x(end) vt (al) - vt
- x(end) - x(head) x(end) - x(head) l
x(h) a
x(t) l a
14Galilean transformation when applied on light
means speed of light is not constant
Frame S travel with velocity v relative to S. If
light travels with the same speed in all
directions relative too S, then (according to the
classical Galilean velocity-addition) it should
have different speeds as seen from S.
15Maxwell theory of light is inconsistent with
Newtons law of invariance
- Consider a gadanken case in an inertial frame
moving at the speed of light, the electromagnetic
(EM) wave is frozen and not waving anymore - Maxwell theory of EM wave will fail in the
light-speed frame of reference - ? Galilean transformation is inconsistent with
Maxwell theory of light - ? Newtonian law of invariance fails for EM in the
light-speed frame - ? Galilean transformation is going to fail when v
is approaching the speed of light it has to be
supplanted by Lorentz transformation (to be
learned later)
16Ether and Michelson-Morley Experiments
- In early 19th century, its thought (incorrectly)
that - there exist an omi-pervasive medium called
Ether in which light propagates at a speed of
3x108m/s (analogue to sound propagate in the
mechanical medium of still air at speed 330m/s) - Thought to be the absolute frame of reference
that goes in accordance with Newtonian view of
absolute space and time - The effect of the ehter on speed of light can be
experimentally measured
17Ether and Michelson-Morley Experiments
- If exists, from the viewpoint of the light
source, the Ether wind appears to drift with a
relative speed of u wrp to Earth (One assumes
that ether frame is fixed wrp to the Sun, hence
one expects u 10-4c) - Consider a moving souce giving out two beams of
light in different direction (say, 90 degree to
each other) - Since the light source is moving through the
omi-perasive ehter medium, the different
directions of the two beams of light would mean
that these two beams will move with different
velocities when viewed in the frame of moving
source
18Experimental setup
- Both arms has same length L
- According to the ether wind concept
- For arm 1, the speed of light to is c-v as it
approaches M2, - cv as it is reflected from M2
v
c c - v
v
c
c c v
19Experimental setup
- For arm 2, the speed of light to-and-fro M1 is
v
c v (c2 - v2)
c
20- The two light beams start out in phase. When they
return and recombined by semi-transparent
mirror Mo interference pattern will be formed
due to their difference in phase, Df cDt /l,
where Dt t1 - t2 Lv2/c3 is the time
difference between the light beams when return to
Mo (figure a)
21- Now, when the whole set-up is rotated through
90?, arms 1 and 2 exchanges role - As a result, the interefence pattern will be
shifted as the time difference between the beams
after rotation now becomes 2Dt - The number of interefence fringes shifted can be
estimated via - no. of fringe shift 2cDt /l 2 Lv2/lc2 0.40
- (taking v 10-4c, L 11 m, l 500nm)
- Very precise experiment
22- Fig. (b) shows expected fringe shift after a
rotation of the interometer by 90 degree
23NULL result
- But MM sees only NULL result no change in the
interference pattern - How to interprete the null result?
- If Maxwell theory of light is right (as EM wave)
the notion of ether as an medium in which light
is propagating has to be discarded - Put simply ether is not shown to exist
- Einstein put it more strongly the absolute frame
of reference (i.e. the ether frame) has to be
discarded
24PYQ (past year question), KSCP 2003/04
- What were the consequences of the negative result
of the Michelson-Morley experiment? - I. It render untenable the hypothesis of the
ether - II. It suggests the speed of light in the free
space is the same everywhere, regardless of any
motion of source or observer - III. It implies the existence of a unique frame
of reference in which the speed of light in this
frame is equal to c - A. III only B. I,II C. I, III D. I, II, III
- E. Non of the above
-
Ans B
25Principle of special relativity
- Einstein believes that pure thought is sufficient
to understand the world - The most incomprehensive thing in the universe is
that the universe is comprehensible
26Classical EM theory is inconsistent with Galileao
transformation
- Their is inconsistency between EM and Newtonian
view of absolute space and time - Einstein proposed SR to restore the
inconsistency between the two based on two
postulates
27Postulates of SR
- The laws of physics are the same in all inertial
reference frames a generalisation of Newtons
relativity - The speed of light in vacuum is the same for all
observers independent of the motion of the source
constancy of the speed of light
28- Postulate 2 simply means that Galilean
transformation cannot be applied on light speed.
It also explains the Null result of the MM
experiment - Speed of light is always the same whether one is
moving or stationary wrp to the source its
speed doesnt increase or reduced when the light
source is moving
29Einsteins notion of space-time drastically
revolutionarizes that of Newtons
- The notion of absolute frame of reference is
- discarded
- The Newton notion that time is absolute and
- flows independently of the state of motion (or
- the frame of reference chosen) is radically
- modified the rate of time flow does depends
- on the frame of reference (or equivalently, the
- state of motion).
- This being so due to the logical consequence
- of the constancy of the speed of light in all
- inertial frame
30PYQ (past year question), Final 2003/04
- Which of the following statement(s) is (are)
true? - I. The assumption of the Ether frame is
inconsistent with the experimental observation - II. The speed of light is constant
- III. Maxwell theory of electromagnetic radiation
is inconsistent with the notion of the Ether
frame - IV Special relativity is inconsistent with the
notion of the Ether frame - A. III,IV B. I, II, III C. I, II, III,IV
- D. I, II E. I, II,IV
- ANS E, my own question
31Simultaneity is not an absolute concept but frame
dependent
- Simultaneity in one frame is not guaranteed in
another frame of reference (due to postulate 2) - Two lightning bolts strike the ends of a moving
boxcar. (a) The events appear to be simultaneous
to the stationary observer at O but (b) for the
observer at O, the front of the train is struck
before the rear
32Try to calculate it yourself
- The breakdown of simultaneity means that the two
lights from A and B are not arriving at O at
the same time. Can you calculate what is the time
lag, i.e. tA-tB, between the two lights arriving
at O? t is the time measured in the O frame.
33Time dilation as a consequence of Einsteins
postulate
- In frames that are moving wrp to the stationary
frame, time runs slower - Gedanken experiment (thought experiment)
34Gedanken Experiment
- Since light speed c is invariant (i.e. the same
in all frames), it is used to measure time and
space - A mirror is fixed to a moving vehicle, and a
light pulse leaves O at rest in the vehicle. - (b) Relative to a stationery observe on Earth,
the mirror and O move with a speed v.
35Ligth triangle
- Consider the geometry of the triangle of the
light - We can calculate the relationship between Dt, Dt
and v - l 2 (cDt/2 )2
- d 2 (u Dt/2 )2
36Lorentz factor, g
- Due to constancy of light postulate, both
observer must agree on c - Speed of light total distance travelled divide
by time taken - For observer in O, c 2 d /Dt
- For observer in O, c 2 l / Dt, where
- l 2 d 2 (u Dt/2 )2
- Eliminating l and d, Dt gDt, where
- g (1 - u2/c2)-1/2
- Lorentz factor, always gt or equal 1, so that
- Dt gt Dt
37Proper time
- Try to discriminate between two kinds of time
interval - Dt , proper time that measures the time interval
of the two events at the same point in space
(e.g. light emitted and received at the same
point in the vehicle) - Proper time is the time measured by a clock that
is stationary wrp to the events that it measures - Note that proper time is always shorter
compared to improper time
38- The elapsed time Dt between the same events in
any other frame is dilated by a factor of g
compared to the proper time interval Dt - In other words, according to a stationary
observer, a moving clock runs slower than an
identical stationary clock - Chinese proverb
- 1 day in the heaven 10 years in the human plane
?????,?????
39Example
- The watch of a student in the class is running
at a rate different than that of a student
ponteng class to lumba motosikal haram. - The time of the student on the bikes is running
at a slower rate compared to that of the student
in the class - Onc can imagine that when the watch on the arms
of the motocyclist ticks once in a second (as is
concluded by the local, or rest, observer, i,e,
the motocyclist), the student in the class
(non-local observer) find the watch of the
motocyclist ticks at 1.000001 second per second.
40To recap
- Dt gDt proper time interval, Dt Dt
- The rate of time flowing in one frame is
different from the others (frames that are moving
with a constant speed relative to a give frame) - The relationship between the time intervals of
the two frames moving at an non-zero relatively
velocity are given by the time dilation formula - One must be aware of the subtle different between
which is the proper time and which is the
improper one
41Example
- When you are measuring the time interval between
your heartbeats (on your bed in you bedroom)
using your watch, you are measuring the proper
time interval - Say a doctor who is in a car traveling at some
constant speed with recpect to you is monitoring
your heartbeat by some remote device. The time
interval between the heartbeat measured by him,
is improper time because he is moving wrp to you
42PYQ, Semester Test I, 2003/04
- Suppose that you are travelling on board a
spacecraft that is moving with respect to the
Earth at a speed of 0.975c. You are breathing at
a rate of 8.0 breaths per minute. As monitored on
Earth, what is your breathing rate? - A. 13.3 B. 2.88 C.22.2
- D. 1.77 E. Non of the above
- ANS D, Cutnell, Q4, pg. 877
43Solution
- Suppose that you are travelling on board a
spacecraft that is moving with respect to the
Earth at a speed of 0.975c. You are breathing at
a rate of 8.0 breaths per minute. As monitored on
Earth, what is your breathing rate? - g 1/(1 u2/c2)1/2 1/(1 0.9752)1/2 4.5
- Use Dt gDt
- Given local interval between breaths Dt 1/8
0.125 min per breath (proper time interval) - ? Dt gDt 4.5 x 0.125 0.563 min per breath
- ? 1/ Dt 1.77 breath per min (as seen by the
spaccraft observer) - To an oberver on the spacecraft, you seem to
breath at a slower rate
44Example (read it yourself)
- A spacecraft is moving past the Earth at a
constant speed 0.92c. The astronaut measures the
time interval between successive ticks'' of the
spacecraft clock to be 1.0 s. What is the time
interval that an Earth observer measures between
ticks'' of the astronaut's clock?
45Solution
- Dt 1.0 s is the proper time interval measured
by the astronaut - Earth observer measures a greater time interval,
Dt, than does the astronaut, who is at rest
relative to the clock - The Lorentz factor g 1/(1- u2/c2) -1/2 1/(1-
0.922)-1/2 2.6 - Hence, Dt gDt 2.6 x 1.0s 2.6 s
46Example Muon decay lifetime
- A muon is an unstable elementary particle which
has a lifetime t0 2.2 microsecond (proper
time, measured in the muon rest frame) and decays
into lighter particles. - Fast muons (say, travelling at v 99c) are
created in the interactions of very high-energy
particles as they enter the Earth's upper
atmosphere.
- Assume v 0.99c
- In the muon rest frame, the distance travelled by
muon before decay is - D (0.99c)t0
- 650 m
47- A muon travelling at 99 the speed of light.
- has a Lorentz factor g 7.09
- Hence, to an observer in the rest frame (e.g
Earth) the lifetime of the muon is no longer t0
2.2 ms but - t g x t0 7.09 x 2 microseconds 15.6 ms
- Thus the muon would appear to travel for 15.6
microseconds before it decays - The distance it traversed as seen from Earth
- is D (0.99c) x 15.6 ms 4,630 km (c.f. D
650 m )
48Muon are detected at a much lower altitude
- Observation has verified the relativistic effect
of time dilation muons are detected at a
distance of 4700 m below the atmospheric level in
which they are produced - Hence the dilated muon lifetime is confirmed
experimentally
49(No Transcript)
50Length contraction
- Length measured differs from frame to frame
another consequence of relativistic effect - Gedanken experiment again!
51- Two observers O on Earth, O traveling to and
fro from Earth and alpha centauri with speed u - Total distance between Earth - alpha centauri
Earth, according to O (Earth observer), L0 - O sees O return to Earth after Dt0
- Observer O in a spaceship is heading aC with
speed u and returns to Earth after Dt according
to his clock
52Use some simple logics
- In O 2L0 uDt0
- In O 2L0 uDt0
- Due to time dilation effect, Dt0 is shorter
than Dt0 , i.e. Dt0 gt Dt0 - Dt0 is related to Dt0 via a time dilation
effect, Dt0 Dt0 /g , hence - L0 / L0 Dt0 /Dt0 1 / g , or
53- L0 L0 / g
- L0 is defined as the proper length length of
object measured in the frame in which the object
(in this case, the distance btw Earth and aC) is
at rest - L0 is the length measured in the O frame, which
is moving wrp to the object here refer to the
distance between E- aC - The length of a moving objecte is measured to be
shorter than the proper length length
contraction
54- If an observer at rest wrp to an object measures
its length to be L0 , an observer moving with a
relative speed u wrp to the object will find the
object to be shorter than its rest length by a
foctor 1 / g .
55Example of moving ruler
- A stick moves to the right with a speed v (as
seen in a rest frame, O) - (a) The stick as viewed by a frame attached to
it (O frame, Lp proper length) - (b) The stick as seen by an observer in a frame
O. The length measured in the O frame (L) is
shorter than the proper length by a factor 1/ g
56Length contraction only happens along the
direction of motion
- Example A spaceship in the form of a triangle
flies by an oberver at rest wrp to the ship (see
fig (a)), the distance x and y are found to be
50.0 m and 25.0 m respectively. What is the shape
of the ship as seen by an observer who sees the
ship in motion along the direction shown in fig
(b)?
57Solution
- The observer sees the horizontal length of the
ship to be contracted to a length of - L Lp/g 50 mv(1 0.9502) 15.6 m
- The 25 m vertical height is unchanged because it
is perpendicular to the direction of relative
motion between the observer and the spaceship.
58Example
- An observer on Earth sees a spaceship at an
altitude of 435 moving downward toward the Earth
with a speed of 0.97c. What is the altitude of
the spaceship as measured by an observer in the
spaceship?
59Draw the diagram yourself
- As a useful strategy to solve physics problem you
should always try to translate the problems from
text into diagramatical form with all the correct
labelling
60Solution
- One can consider the altitude see by
thestationary (Earth) observer as the proper
length (say, L'). The observer in the spaceship
should sees a contracted length, L, as compared
to the proper length. Hence the moving observer
in the ship finds the altitude to be - L L' / g 435 m x 1- (0.97)2-1/2 106 m
61PYQ, KSCP 03/04
- How fast does a rocket have to go for its length
to be contracted to 99 of its rest length? - Ans Rest length proper length LP length of
the rocket as seen by observer on the rocket
itself - L improper length length of the rocket as seen
from Earth oberver - Always remember that proper length is longer than
improper length
62Lorentz Transformation
- All inertial frames are equivalent
- Hence all physical processes analysed in one
frame can also be analysed in other inertial
frame and yield consistent results - A transformation law is required to related the
space and time coordinates from one frame to
another
63An event observed in two frames of reference must
yield consistant results related by transformatin
laws
64Different frame uses different notation for
coordinates (because their clocks and ruler are
different
- O' frame uses x',y',zt to denote the
coordinates of an event, whereas O frame uses
x,y,zt - How to related x',y',z',t to x,y,zt?
- In Newtonian mechanics, we use Galilean
transformation - However, as discussed, GT fails when u ? c
because the GT is not consistent with the
constancy of the light speed postulate - The relativistic version of the transformation
law is given by Lorentz transformation
65Two observers in two inertial frames with
relative motion
I measures the coordinates of M as x,t
O
66Derivation of Lorentz transformation
- Our purpose is to find the transformation that
relates x,t with x,t
67- Consider a rocket moving with a speed u (O'
frame) along the xx' direction wrp to the
stationary O frame - A light pulse is emitted at the instant t' t 0
- when the two origins of the two reference frames
coincide - The light signal travels as a spherical wave at a
constant speed c in both frames - After some times t, the origin of the wave
centered at O has a radius r ct, where - r 2 x2 y2 z2
68Methematical details
- From the view point of O', after some times t
the origin of the wave, centered at O' has a
radius - r' ct' , (r )2 (x)2 (y )2 (z )2
- y'y, z' z (because the motion of O' is along
the xx) axis no change for y,z coordinates
(condition A) - The transformation from x to x (and vice versa)
must be linear, i.e. x ? x (condition B) - Boundary condition (1) In the limit of v ?c,
from the viewpoint of O, the origin of O is
located on the wavefront (to the right of O)? x
0 must correspond to x ct - Boundary condition (2) In the same limit, from
the viewpoint of O, the origin of O is located
on the wavefront (to the left of O) ? x 0
corresponds to x -ct - Putting everything together we assume the form x
k(x - ct) to relate x to x,t as this is the
form that fulfill all the conditions (A,B) and
boundary consdition (1) (k some proportional
constant to be determined) - Likewise, we assume the form x k(x ct ) to
relate x to x ,t as this is the form that
fulfill all the conditions (A,B) and boundary
consdition (2)
69Finally, the transformation obtained
- Hence, with r ct , r ct , x k(x ct ),
x k(x - ct) we solve for x',t' in terms of
x,t to obtain the desired transformation law
(do it as an exercise)
70Space and time now becomes state-of-motion
dependent (via g)
- the constant k is identified as the Lorentz
factor, g - Note that, now, the length and time interval
measured become dependent of the state of motion
(in terms of g) in contrast to Newtons
viewpoint - Lorentz transformation reduces to Galilean
transformation when u ltlt c (show this yourself) - i.e. LT ? GT in the limit vltltc
71How to express x, t in terms of x, t
- We have related x',t' in terms of x,t as per
- Now, how do we express x, t in terms of x,
t
72O moving to the right with velocity u is
equivalent to O moving to the left with velocity
-u
The two transformations above are equivalent use
which is appropriate in a given question
73Length contraction can be recovered from the LT
- Consider the rest length of a ruler as measured
in frame O is L Dx x2 - x1 (proper
length) measured at the same instant in that
frame, hence t2 t1 - What is the length of the rule as measured by O?
- The length in O, according the LT is
- L Dx x2 - x1 g (x2 - x1) u(t2
-t1) - The length of the ruler in O is simply the
distance btw x2 and x1 measured at the same
instant in that frame, hence t2 t1, hence L
g L
74 - Similarly, how would you recover time dilation
from the LT? - Do it as homework
75Lorentz velocity transformation
- How to relate the velocity of the object M as
seen in the O (ux) frame to that seen in the O
frame (ux)?
76Derivation
- By definition, ux dx/dt, ux dx/dt
- The velocity in the O frame can be obtained by
taking the differentials of the Lorentz
transformation,
77Combining
- where we have made used of the definition ux
dx/dt
78Comparing the LT of velocity with that of GT
Lorentz transformation of velocity
Galilean transformation of velocity
GT reduces to LT in the limit u ltlt c
79- Please try to understand the definition of ux ,
ux , u so that you wont get confused
80LT is consistent with the constancy of speed of
light
- in either O or O frame, the speed of light seen
must be the same, c - Say object M is moving with speed of light as
seen by O, i.e. ux c - According to LT, the speed of M as seen by O is
81- That is, in either frame, both observers agree
that the speed of light they measure is the same,
c 3 x 108m/s - In contrast, according to GT, the speed of light
seen by O would be
Which is inconsistent with constancy of speed of
light postulate
82To recap
- the LT given in the previous analysis relates ux
to ux in which O is moving with u wrp to O,
83From the view point of O
- To express ux in terms of ux simply perform the
similar derivation from the view point of O such
that O is moving in the u direction .
84Recap Lorentz transformation relates x,t ??
x,t ux ??ux
85Example
- A boy is slapped twice on the face by his old
girlfriend. This is happening in a hotel room (a
rest frame we call O).
O
The two slapping occurs at t1 , t2 such that Dt
t2- t1 1 s, and Dx 0.
86The time t as seen by O in terms of t is simply
related by
Hence the time interval as measured by his new
girlfriend in O, Dt in terms of Dt is simply
This is nothing but just the time dilation effect
calculated using LT approach
87Example (relativistic velocity addition)
- Rocket 1 is approaching rocket 2 on a
- head-on collision course. Each is moving at
velocity 4c/5 relative to an independent observer
midway between the two. With what velocity does
rocket 2 approaches rocket 1?
88Diagramatical translation of the question in text
- C.f. In GT, their relative speed would just be
4c/5 4c/5 1.6 c which violates constancy of
speed of light postulate. See how LT handle this
situation
89- Choose the observer in the middle as in the
stationary frame, O - Choose rocket 1 as the moving frame O
- Call the velocity of rocket 2 as seen from rocket
1 ux. This is the quantity we are interested in - Frame O' is moving in the ve direction as seen
in O, so u 4c/5 - The velocity of rocket 2 as seen from O is in the
- -ve direction, so ux - 4c/5
- Now, what is the velocity of rocket 2 as seen
from frame O', u x ? (intuitively, u x must
be in the negative direction)
90i.e. the velocity of rocket 2 as seen from rocket
1 (the moving frame, O) is 40c/41, which means
that O sees rocket 2 moving in the ve direction
(to the left in the picture), as expected.
91PYQ, KSCP 2003/04
- A man in a spaceship moving at a velocity of 0.9c
with respect to the Earth shines a light beam in
the same direction in which the spaceship is
travelling. Compute the velocity of the light
beam relative to Earth using (i) Galilean
approach (ii) special relativity approach 6
marks. Please define clearly all the symbols
used in - your working.
- Ans
- O is the moving frame travelling at v 0.9c
with respect to the Earth. Speed of the light
beam as seen in the frame O is u c. O is the
Earth frame. We wish to find the speed of the
light beam as seen from frame O, u. - (i) According to Galilean transformation, u u
v c 0.9c 1.9c.(ii) Use
92Relativistic Dynamics
- By Einsteins postulate, the onservational law of
linear momentum must also hold true in all frames
of reference
Conservation of linear momentum classically means
m1u1 m2u2 m1v1 m2v2
93Modification of expression of linear momentum
- Classically, p mu. In the other frame, p m
u the mass m (as seen in frame O) is the
same as m (as seen in O frame) this is
according to Newtons mechanics - However, simple consideration will reveal that in
order to preserver the consistency between
conservation of momentum and the LT, the
definition of momentum has to be modified such
that m is not equal to m. - That is, the mass of an moving object, m, is
different from its value when its at rest, m0
94In other words
- In order to preserve the consistency between
Lorentz transformation of velocity and
conservation of linear momentum, the definition
of 1-D linear momentum, classically defined as
pclassical mu, has to be modified to - psr mu gm0u (where the relativisitic mass m
gm0 is not the same the rest mass m0 - Read up the text for a more rigorous illustration
why the definition of classical momentum is
inconsistent with LT
95Grafically
96Two kinds of mass
- Differentiate two kinds of mass rest mass and
relativistic mass - m0 rest mass the mass measured in a frame
where the object is at rest. The rest mass of an
object must be the same in all frames (not only
in its rest frame). - Relativisitic mass m g m0 of an object changes
depends on its speed
97Behaviour of pSR as compared to pclassic
- Classical momentum is constant in mass, pclassic
m0v - Relativisitic momentum is pSR m0gv
- pSR / pclassic g ? ? as v ? c
- In the other limit, pSR / pclassic 1 as v ltlt c
98Example
- The rest mass of an electron is m0 9.11 x
10-31kg.
If it moves with u 0.75 c, what is its
relativistic momentum?
Compare it with that calculated with classical
definition.
99Solution
- The Lorentz factor is g 1-(u/c)2 -1/2
1-(0.75c/c)2 -1/21.51 - Hence the relativistic momentum is simply
- p g x m0 x 0.75c
- 1.51 x 9.11 x 10-31kg x 0.75 x 3 x 108 m/s
3.1 x 10-22 kg m/s Ns
In comparison, classical momentum gives
pclassical m0 x 0.75c 2.5 x 10-22 Ns about
34 lesser than the relativistic value
100Work-Kinetic energy theorem
- Recall the law of conservation of mechanical
energy
Work done by external force on a system, W
the change in kinetic energy of the system, DK
101Conservation of mechanical energy W DK
The total energy of the object, E K U.
Ignoring potential energy, E of the object is
solely in the form of kinetic energy. If K1 0,
then E K2. But in general, U also needs to be
taken into account for E.
102- In classical mechanics, mechanical energy
(kinetic potential) of an object is closely
related to its momentum and mass - Since in SR we have redefined the classical mass
and momentum to that of relativistic version - mclass(cosnt) ? mSR m0g
- pclass mclass u ? pSR (m0g)u
- we must also modify the relation btw work and
energy so that the law conservation of energy is
consistent with SR
- E.g, in classical mechanics, K p2/2m 2mu2/2.
However, this relationship has to be supplanted
by the relativistic version K mu2/2 ? K E
m0c2 mc2 - m0c2
- We will like to derive K in SR in the following
slides
103Force, work and kinetic energy
- When a force is acting on an object with rest
mass m0, it will get accelerated (say from rest)
to some speed (say u) and increase in kinetic
energy from 0 to K
K as a function of u can be derived from first
principle based on the definition of
work done, W F dx,
and conservation of mechanical energy, DK W
104Derivation of relativistic kinetic energy
where, by definition,
is the velocity of the object
105Explicitly, p gm0u,
- Hence, dp/du d/du(gm0u)
- m0 u (dg/du) g
- m0 g (u2/c2) g3 m0 (1-u2/c2)-3/2
in which we have inserted the relation
106- E mc2 is the total relativistic energy of an
moving object
107- Or in other words, the total relativistic energy
of a moving object is the sum of its rest energy
and its relativistic kinetic energy
- The mass of an moving object m is larger than its
rest mass m0 due to the contribution from its
relativistic kinetic energy this is a pure
relativistic effect not possible in classical
mechanics - E mc2 relates the mass of an object to the
total energy released when the object is
converted into pure energy
108- Example, 10 kg of mass, if converted into pure
energy, it will be equivalent to - E mc2 10 x (3 x108) 2 J 9 x1017J
- equivalent to a few tons of TNT explosive
109PYQ, KSCP 2003/04
- (i) What is the rest mass of a proton in terms of
MeV? - Ans
- (i) 1.67 x 10-27kg x (3x108 m/s)2 1.503x10-10J
(1.503 x10-10/1.6x10-19) eV 939.4 MeV
110PYQ, KSCP 2003/04
- What is the relativistic mass of a proton whose
kinetic energy is 1 GeV? - Ans rest mass of proton, mp 939.4 MeV
111Reduction of relativistic kinetic energy to the
classical limit
- The expression of the relativistic kinetic energy
- must reduce to that of classical one in the limit
u ? 0 when compared with c, i.e.
112Expand g with binomial expansion
- For u ltlt c, we can always expand g in terms of
(u/c)2 as
i.e., the relativistic kinetic energy reduces to
classical expression in the u ltlt c limit
113Example
- An electron moves with speed u 0.85c. Find its
total energy and kinetic energy in eV. - CERNs picture the circular accelerator
accelerates electron almost the speed of light
114Solution
- Due to mass-energy equivalence, sometimes we
express the mass of an object in unit of energy - Electron has rest mass m0 9.1 x 10-31kg
- The rest mass of the electron can be expressed as
energy equivalent, via - m0c2 9.1 x 10-31kg x (3 x 108m/s)2
- 8.19 x 10-14 J
- 8.19 x 10-14 x (1.6x10-19)-1 eV
- 511.88 x 103 eV 0.511 MeV
115Solution
- First, find the Lorentz factor, g 1.89
- The rest mass of electron, m0c2, is
- 0.5 MeV
- Hence the total energy is
- E mc2 g (m0c2) 1.89 x 0.5 MeV 0.97 MeV
- Kinetic energy is the difference between the
total relativistic energy and the rest mass, K
E - m0c2 (0.97 0.51)MeV 0.46 MeV
116Conservation of Kinetic energy in relativistic
collision
- Calculate (i) the kinetic energy of the system
and (ii) mass increase for a completely inelastic
head-on of two balls (with rest mass m0 each)
moving toward the other at speed u/c 1.5x10-6
(the speed of a jet plane). M is the resultant
mass after collision, assumed at rest.
M
u
u
m0
m0
117Solution
- (i) K 2mc2 - 2m0c2 2(g-1)m0c2
- (ii) Ebefore Eafter ? 2g m0c2 Mc2 ? M 2g
m0 - Mass increase DM M - 2m0 2(g -1)m0
- Approximation u/c 1.5x10-6 ? g 1 ½ u2/c2
(binomail expansion) ? M 2(1 ½ u2/c2)m0 - Mass increase DM M - 2m0
-
(u2/c2)m0 1.5x10-6m0 - Comparing K with DMc2 the kinetic energy is not
lost in relativistic inelastic collision but is
converted into the mass of the final composite
object, i.e. kinetic energy is conserved - In contrast, in classical mechanics, momentum is
conserved but kinetic energy is not in an
inelastic collision
118In terms of relativistic momentum, the
relativistic total energy can be expressed as
followed
Relativistic momentum and relativisitc Energy
119In SR, both relativistic mass-energy and momentum
are always conserved in a collision (in contrast
to classical mechanics in which KE is not
conserved in inelastic collision)
120Example measuring pion mass using conservation
of momentum-energy
- pi meson decays into a muon massless neutrino
- If the mass of the muon is known to be 106
MeV/c2, and the kinetik energy of the muon is
measured to be 4.6 MeV, find the mass of the pion
121Solution
122(No Transcript)
123Binding energy
- The nucleus of a deuterium comprises of one
neutron and one proton. Both nucleons are bounded
within the deuterium nucleus
Initially, the total Energy (mn mn)c2
Nuclear fusion
After fusion, the total energy mdc2 U
Analogous to exothermic process in chemistry
124- U is the energy that will be released when a
proton and a neutron is fused in a nuclear
reaction. The same amount of energy is required
if we want to separate the proton from the
neutron in a deuterium nucleus - U is called the binding energy
125- U can be explained in terms energy-mass
equivalence relation, as followed - For the following argument, we will ignore KE for
simplicity sake - Experimentally, we finds that mn mp gt md
- By conservation of energy-momentum,
- E(before) E(after)
- mnc2 mpc2 0 mdc2 U
- Hence, U (mp mn)c2 - mdc2 Dmc2
- The difference in mass between deuterium and the
sum of (mn mn)c2 is converted into the binding
energy that binds the proton to the neutron
together
126Example
- mn 1.008665u mp 1.007276u
- md 2.013553u
- u standard atomic unit mass of 1/12 of the
mass of a 12C nucleus - 1.66 x 10-27kg
- 1.66 x 10-27 x c2 J 1.494 x 10-10 J
- 1.494 x 10-10/(1.6x10-19) eV
- 933.75 x 106 eV 933.75 x MeV
- Hence the binding energy
- U Dmc2 (mp mn)c2 - mdc2
- 0.002388u 2.23 MeV
127Fission
- Such as
- The reverse of nuclear fusion is nuclear fission
- An parent nuclide M disintegrates into daughter
nuclides such that their total mass ?mi lt M. - The energy of the mass deficit equivalent,
- Q (M - ?mi)c2 Dmc2 called disintegration
energy will be released
128SR finishes here