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Relativity: The Special & the General Theory / A Popular Exposition, 3rd ed. cover

Relativity: The Special & the General Theory / A Popular Exposition, 3rd ed.

Chapter 17: XIV: THE HEURISTIC VALUE OF THE THEORY OF RELATIVITY
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About This Book

Aimed at readers with some mathematical background, the work explains the principles and consequences of both the special and general theories of relativity without heavy formalism. It reexamines space, time, simultaneity, and coordinate systems to introduce the Lorentz transformation and the resulting behavior of moving clocks and measuring rods, including velocity addition. It then develops the equivalence principle and presents gravity as a manifestation of spacetime geometry, outlines the qualitative form of the gravitational field equations, and surveys empirical tests and observable implications for light propagation and planetary motion, with diagrams and appendices to clarify key points.

XIV

THE HEURISTIC VALUE OF THE THEORY OF RELATIVITY

OUR train of thought in the foregoing pages can be epitomised in the following manner. Experience has led to the conviction that, on the one hand, the principle of relativity holds true, and that on the other hand the velocity of transmission of light in vacuo has to be considered equal to a constant . By uniting these two postulates we obtained the law of transformation for the rectangular co-ordinates , , and the time of the events which constitute the processes of nature. In this connection we did not obtain the Galilei transformation, but, differing from classical mechanics, the Lorentz transformation.

The law of transmission of light, the acceptance of which is justified by our actual knowledge, played an important part in this process of thought. Once in possession of the Lorentz transformation, however, we can combine this with the principle of relativity, and sum up the theory thus:

Every general law of nature must be so constituted that it is transformed into a law of exactly the same form when, instead of the space-time variables , , , of the original co-ordinate system , we introduce new space-time variables ', ', ', ' of a co-ordinate system '. In this connection the relation between the ordinary and the accented magnitudes is given by the Lorentz transformation. Or, in brief: General laws of nature are co-variant with respect to Lorentz transformations.

This is a definite mathematical condition that the theory of relativity demands of a natural law, and in virtue of this, the theory becomes a valuable heuristic aid in the search for general laws of nature. If a general law of nature were to be found which did not satisfy this condition, then at least one of the two fundamental assumptions of the theory would have been disproved. Let us now examine what general results the latter theory has hitherto evinced.