Read Coming of Age in the Milky Way Online
Authors: Timothy Ferris
Tags: #Science, #Philosophy, #Space and time, #Cosmology, #Science - History, #Astronomy, #Metaphysics, #History
I
n much the same way that Newton’s account of gravitation and inertia advanced physics to the point that it could embrace a moving Earth in a heliocentric solar system, Einstein’s
relativity enabled physics to deal with the much higher velocities, greater distances and more furious energies encountered in the wider universe of the galaxies. If Newton’s domain was that of the stars and planets, Einstein’s extended from the centers of stars to the geometry of the cosmos as a whole.
To bring about so great an expansion of the scope of science, Einstein was obliged to abandon Newton’s conceptions of space and time. Newtonian space and time were inflexible and inalterable; they formed a changeless proscenium arch within which all events took place and against which all could be unambiguously measured. “Absolute space, in its own nature, without relation to anything external, remains always similar and immovable,” Newton wrote. “… Absolute, true and mathematical time, of itself, and from its own nature, flows equably without relation to anything external.”
1
Einstein determined that this assumption was both superfluous and misleading. The special theory of relativity revealed that the rate at which time flows and the length of distances gauged across space vary, according to the relative velocities of those measuring them. The general theory of relativity went on to portray space as curved, and derived from spatial curvature the phenomena that Newtonian dynamics had attributed to the force of gravity.
Einstein grew up in an age when the classical conception of space, if not of time, was already coming unraveled. In order to explain how “absolute” space could have any reality—and, more to the point, how light and gravitational force could be conveyed across the empty space separating the stars and planets—Newton and his followers had postulated that space is pervaded by an invisible substance, an
aether
. The word was borrowed from Aristotle’s term for the celestial element of which the stars and planets were made, and like its namesake this new, updated aether was wonderful stuff. Lucid and friction-free, static and unchanging, it not only permitted the unimpeded motion of the planets and stars but actually wafted right through them—like a breeze through a grove of trees, as the English physicist Thomas Young put it.
*
The appealing idea that space is pervaded by an aether began to run into trouble once it became possible to make precise measurements
of the velocity of light. That light travels at a finite velocity had been appreciated since the 1670s, when the Danish astronomer Olaus Römer detected periodic variations in the time when Io, innermost of the four bright moons of Jupiter, went into eclipse: The eclipses came earlier than expected when Jupiter was relatively close to the earth and later when Jupiter was farther away. Römer realized that the discrepancy must be caused by the time it takes light to travel across the changing distance from Jupiter to Earth. From what was then known of the absolute distance of Jupiter, he was able to calculate the velocity of light to within about 30 percent of the accurate value (which is 186,272 miles per second).
Galileo had once tried to determine the velocity of light. He stationed two men with shuttered lanterns on hilltops about one mile apart, then timed the interval that elapsed between the instant when the first man opened his shutter and the second, responding to this signal, opened
his
shutter, sending a light beam back to the first. Römer’s finding made it clear why Galileo had failed; the interval he had attempted to measure (without a clock!) was less than a hundred thousandth of a second.
Römer’s result also suggested a way of measuring the velocity of the earth relative to absolute space: If light were propagated by a stationary aether, the absolute motion of the earth relative to the aether could be detected by measuring variations in the observed velocity of light. Imagine that the earth were a sailboat on an aether lake, and think of the light coming from two stars on opposite sides of the sky as ripples spreading from two stones dropped in the lake, one ahead of the boat and one behind. If we were standing on the deck of the boat and we measured the velocity of each set of ripples, we would find that those radiating from the stone dropped ahead would appear to be moving faster than those coming from behind. By measuring the difference in the observed velocity of the ripples coming from ahead and behind, we could calculate the speed of the boat. Similarly, it was assumed that the velocity of the earth’s motion could be determined by observing differences in the velocity of light waves coming through the stationary aether from stars ahead and behind.
*
To measure this “aether drift”—as it was called, though what
was thought to be drifting was not the aether but the earth—would of course be a delicate matter, since the velocity of the earth amounts to but a tiny fraction of the velocity of light. But by the latter part of the nineteenth century, technology had advanced to a sufficient degree of precision to make the task feasible. The critical experiment was conducted in the 1880s by the physicist Albert Michelson (who devoted his career to the study of light, he said, “because it’s so much fun”) and the chemist Edward Morley.
Aether drift theory held that if the velocity of light was constant relative to a stationary, all-pervading aether, then when the earth in its orbit was moving away from star
A
and toward star
B
, the observed speed of the light coming from star
?
would be higher than that of the light coming from star
A.
The Michelson-Morley apparatus, set up in a basement laboratory at Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, was based on the principle of interferometry. A beam of light was split and the two resulting light beams were reflected at right angles, then recombined and brought to a focus at an eyepiece. The idea
was that the earth’s motion through the stationary aether would show up as a change in the interference pattern produced when one of the light beams, the one that had to travel into the aether wind, was retarded relative to the other beam. As Michelson explained the principle to his young daughter Dorothy, “Two beams of light race against each other, like two swimmers, one struggling upstream and back, while the other, covering the same distance, just crosses and returns. The second swimmer will always win,
if there is any current in the river.”
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Since we know the earth is moving, there had to be some
current—provided that, as Michelson and most other physicists then believed, there was such a thing as an aether that delineated the frame of reference of absolute Newtonian space.
To minimize exterior vibrations, the interferometer floated on a pool of mercury. To alter its orientation relative to the motion of the earth, it rotated on its mercury pool. Michelson spent days peering through the slowly moving eyepiece of the interferometer, looking for the telltale change in the interference patterns that would betray the earth’s motion through the aether. To his intense disappointment, he saw no such change at all. The conclusion was as inescapable as it was repugnant to Michelson: There was no detectable “aether drift.”
At first, few theorists were prepared to abandon the aether hypothesis, and several tried to reconcile it with the null outcome of the Michelson-Morley experiment. Their efforts gave rise to the bizarre idea that the experimental apparatus—and, indeed, the entire earth—contracted in the direction of its motion by just enough to cancel the effects of their velocity through the aether. “The only way out of it that I can see,” said the Irish physicist George FitzGerald, “is that the equality of [light] paths must be inaccurate.”
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In other words, the two beams of light
seemed
to be of equal length, because their length was distorted by the very motion of the earth they were intended to detect. As FitzGerald put it, “The block of stone [holding the apparatus] must be distorted, put out of shape by its motion … the stone would have to shorten in the direction of motion and swell out in the other two directions.”
5
The Dutch physicist Hendrik Antoon Lorentz independently arrived at the same hypothesis, and worked it out in mathematical detail.
This, the “Lorentz contraction,” was to emerge in a different form as a key element in the special theory of relativity. The French physicist Henri Poincaré, one of the few leading scientists to take
the Lorentz contraction seriously, came close to developing it into a form that was mathematically equivalent to Einstein’s theory; Poincaré spoke presciently of “a principle of relativity” that would prescribe that no object could exceed the velocity of light.
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But most researchers found it odd to the point of desperation to suggest that the velocity of the earth causes the entire planet to contract, like an orange squashed between a titan’s hands, and Lorentz himself soon set the idea aside. “I think he must have been held back by fears,” the physicist Paul Dirac speculated, years later. “… I do not suppose that one can ever have great hopes without their being combined with great fears.”
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Enter Einstein. He was born in 1879, in Ulm, where Kepler had once wandered in search of a printer, the manuscript of the Rudolphine Tables under his arm. A strong-willed but dreamy boy, Einstein did not begin speaking until he was three years old, and he forever retained something of the brooding intensity owned by the silent child. Intuitively antiauthoritarian, he rebelled against outside discipline, a habit that infuriated many of his teachers. (Years later he would joke that “to punish me for my contempt for authority, Fate made me an authority myself.”)
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At the age of sixteen Einstein escaped from the confines of the Luitpold Gymnasium in Munich—where his Greek instructor told him, “You will never amount to anything,” thus unwittingly earning himself a place in history—by persuading a doctor to write a note stating that the school regimen was pushing him to the brink of a nervous breakdown.
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He failed his college entrance examination, spent a year in preparatory school, and was graduated from the Federal Polytechnic Institute in Zurich in 1900 with respectable but unexceptional marks, having habitually cut classes to play the violin, languish in the cafés, and idle on Lake Zurich aboard rented sailboats with his fiancée, Mileva Marie, one of the few female students at the Polytechnic.
Unable to get a job as a scientist or even as a high school science teacher, Einstein advertised himself as a tutor in mathematics and physics, appending the invitation, “Trial lessons free.”
10
The few who responded found him to be a bewildering teacher, cheerful and bright but inclined to romp down arcane avenues of inspiration with a fleetness that left them far behind. Eventually, Einstein found steady employment, as a “technical expert, third class,” in the Swiss patent office in Bern. He married Mileva in
1903 and they had a son, the first of two, in 1904. (Their first child, a daughter, was born out of wedlock and is thought to have died in infancy, perhaps of scarlet fever; no letters between Einstein and Mileva on this point have been found.) His hopes of getting a raise, the better to support his wife and family, were rewarded when in 1906 he was promoted to technical expert,
second
class.
With his mane of black hair, his limpid, penetrating gaze and his devotion to literature and music and philosophy, Einstein in those days resembled a poet as much as a scientist. Nor was he especially well informed about the progress of physics: His efforts to keep abreast of the scientific literature were impaired by the fact that the technical library generally was closed when he got off work. His technical writings, though occasionally interesting, were in general limited to the sort of speculations about infinity and entropy that may be found in the notebooks of a thousand other postgraduates.
Einstein was indifferent to convention and quick to laugh, a natural enemy of pomp and ceremony. When a friend prevailed upon him to attend festivities at the university in Geneva honoring the 350th anniversary of its founding by Calvin, he marched among the berobed professors in the academic procession wearing an old straw hat and rumpled suit, having no more suitable clothing, and recalled that at the banquet afterward he “said to a Genevan patrician who sat next to me, ‘Do you know what Calvin would have done if he were still here? … He would have had us all burned because of sinful gluttony.’ The man uttered not another word.”
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He was, in short, a Bohemian and a rebel and a high-spirited young man, but nobody’s candidate for scientific distinction.
Yet in 1905, Einstein’s thoughts began to crystallize, and in that year alone he wrote four epochal papers that transformed the scientific landscape. The first, published three days after his twenty-sixth birthday, would help to lay the foundations of quantum physics. Another was to alter the course of atomic theory and statistical mechanics. The other two enunciated what came to be known as the special theory of relativity. When Max Planck, the editorial director of the German
Annals of Physics
, looked up from reading the first relativity paper, he knew at once that the world had changed. The age of Newton was over, and a new science had arisen to replace it.