サインイン

In 1905, Albert Einstein published his special theory of relativity. According to this theory, no matter in the universe can attain a speed greater than the speed of light in a vacuum, which thus serves as the speed limit of the universe.

This has been verified in many experiments. However, space and time are no longer absolute. Two observers moving relative to one another do not agree on the length of objects or the passage of time. The mechanics of objects based on Newton's laws of motion, although remarkably accurate even for speeds of many thousands of miles per second, begin to fail when the relative motion between objects approaches the speed of light in a vacuum. Moreover, the special theory of relativity reveals a fundamental limitation of Newton's laws.

According to Newton's laws of motion and Newton's law of gravitation, all actions happen instantaneously. Since Einstein's special theory of relativity states there is a speed limit in the universe, such instantaneous action happening over a finite distance is not fundamentally possible.

In 1915, Einstein proposed a solution to this problem in the general theory of relativity, in which he formalized the principle of equivalence in mathematical terms. According to the theory, gravitation is not a force between two objects; instead, it is an effect of the two objects on the space-time around them, which in turn determines their dynamics.

In the special and general theories of relativity, space and time are treated on an equal footing. The curvature is not of space alone but of the combined entity ‘space-time.'

For weak gravitational fields, the results of general relativity do not differ significantly from Newton's law of gravitation. However, for intense gravitational fields, the results diverge, and general relativity has been shown to predict the correct results. These effects have been observed in our Sun's relatively weak gravitational field at the distance of Mercury's orbit. Since the mid-1800s, Mercury's elliptical orbit has been carefully measured. However, although it is elliptical, its motion is complicated by the fact that the perihelion position of the ellipse slowly advances. Most of the advance is due to the gravitational pull of other planets, but a small portion of that advancement could not be accounted for by Newton's laws. There was even a search for a “companion” planet that would explain the discrepancy at one time. However, general relativity correctly predicts the measurements.

This text is adapted from Openstax, University Physics Volume 1, Section 13.7: Einstein's Theory of Gravity.

タグ

Space time CurvatureGeneral Theory Of RelativitySpecial Theory Of RelativityAlbert EinsteinSpeed Of LightNewton s LawsGravitational FieldsPrinciple Of EquivalenceGravitational PullMercury s OrbitElliptical OrbitDynamicsSpace time Equality

章から 14:

article

Now Playing

14.22 : Space-Time Curvature and the General Theory of Relativity

重力

2.6K 閲覧数

article

14.1 : 引力

重力

6.0K 閲覧数

article

14.2 : ニュートンの重力の法則

重力

10.9K 閲覧数

article

14.3 : 球対称質量間の引力

重力

794 閲覧数

article

14.4 : 球体間の重力

重力

8.1K 閲覧数

article

14.5 : 質量座標の縮小: 孤立した 2 体問題

重力

1.1K 閲覧数

article

14.6 : 地球上の重力による加速度

重力

10.3K 閲覧数

article

14.7 : 他の惑星の重力による加速

重力

4.0K 閲覧数

article

14.8 : 見かけの重量と地球の自転

重力

3.5K 閲覧数

article

14.9 : 地表付近の重力による加速度の変動

重力

2.3K 閲覧数

article

14.10 : 重力による位置エネルギー

重力

4.2K 閲覧数

article

14.11 : 重ね合わせの原理と重力場

重力

1.2K 閲覧数

article

14.12 : 脱出速度

重力

4.1K 閲覧数

article

14.13 : 衛星の円軌道と臨界速度

重力

2.8K 閲覧数

article

14.14 : 円軌道上の衛星のエネルギー

重力

2.1K 閲覧数

See More

JoVE Logo

個人情報保護方針

利用規約

一般データ保護規則

研究

教育

JoVEについて

Copyright © 2023 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved