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Title: Einstein's Theories of Relativity and Gravitation

Author: J. Malcolm Bird

Other: Albert Einstein

Release date: October 4, 2020 [eBook #63372]

Language: English

Original publication: United States: Scientific American Publishing Co., Munn & Co, 1921

Credits: Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Books project.)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EINSTEIN'S THEORIES OF RELATIVITY AND GRAVITATION ***

Dr. Albert Einstein, Originator of the Special and General Theories of Relativity

Dr. Albert Einstein,
Originator of the Special and General Theories of Relativity

Original Title Page.

Einstein’s Theories of Relativity and Gravitation
A SELECTION OF MATERIAL FROM THE ESSAYS SUBMITTED IN THE COMPETITION FOR THE EUGENE HIGGINS PRIZE OF $5,000
NEW YORK
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO.,
MUNN & CO.
1921

PREFACE

The obstacles which the layman finds to understanding Einstein’s relativity theories lie not so much in the inherent difficulty of these theories themselves as in the difficulty of preparing the mind for their reception. The theory is no more difficult than any scientific development of comparable depth; it is not so difficult as some of these. But it is a fact that for a decent understanding of it, a large background of scientific knowledge and scientific habit of thought is essential. The bulk of the writers who have attempted to explain Einstein to the general reader have not realized the great gulf which lies between the mental processes of the trained mathematician and those of the man in the street. They have not perceived that the lay reader must be personally conducted for a long distance from the vestibule of the temple of science before he comes to Einstein, and that he cannot by any possibility make this journey unaided. The result has been to pitchfork the reader into the intricacies of the subject without adequate preparation.

The present volume avoids this mistake with the utmost care. It avoids it, in fact, with such deliberation as to make it in order to say a word in explanation of what will at first glance seem an extraordinary arrangement of material. It was to be expected, doubtless, that this book would open with a brief statement of the genesis and the outcome of the Einstein Prize Essay Contest for the $5,000 prize offered by Mr. Eugene Higgins. It was doubtless to be expected that, after this had been dismissed, the winning essay would be given the post of honor in advance of all other material bearing actually on the Einstein theories. When the reader observes that this has not been done, he will by all means expect a word of explanation; and it is mainly for the purpose of giving this that we make these introductory remarks.

The essays submitted in the contest, and in particular the comments of a few disappointed readers upon Mr. Bolton’s prize essay, make quite plain what might have been anticipated—that in the small compass of 3,000 words it is not possible both to prepare the reader’s mind for a discussion of Relativity and to give a discussion that shall be adequate. Mr. Bolton himself, in replying to a protest that he had not done all this, has used the word “miracle”—we think it a well-advised one. No miracle was expected as a result of the contest, and none has been achieved. But in awarding the prize, the Judges had to decide whether it was the best preliminary exposition or the best discussion that was wanted. They decided, and rightly we believe, that the award should go to an actual statement of what the Einstein theories are and what they do, rather than to a mere introduction, however well conceived and well executed the latter might be. Nevertheless, we should be closing our eyes to a very obvious fact if we did not recognize that, without something in the way of preparation, the general reader is not going to pursue Mr. Bolton’s essay, or any other essay on this subject, with profit. It is in order the more forcefully to hold out inducements to him to subject himself to this preparation that we place at the head of the book the chapters designed to give it to him.

Chapter II. is intended so to bring the mind of the reader into contact with certain philosophical problems presented to us by our experiences with the external world and our efforts to learn the facts about it, that he may approach the subject of relativity with an appreciation of the place it occupies as a phase of human thought and a pillar of the scientific structure. Until the reader is aware of the existence of these problems and the directions taken by the efforts, successful and unsuccessful, to unravel them, he is not equipped to comprehend the doctrine of relativity at all; he is in much the same case as a child whose education had reached only the primer stage, if asked to read the masterpieces of literature. He lacks not alone the vocabulary, but equally the mental background on which the vocabulary is based.

It will be noted that in this and the chapters immediately following it, the Editor has supplied material freely. The obvious interpretation is that satisfactory material covering the desired ground was not found in any of the essays; for we are sure the scope and number of the credited excerpts will make it clear that all contributions were adequately scrutinized in search of available passages. This “inadequacy” of the competing essays has been severely commented upon by several correspondents, and the inference drawn that as a whole the offerings were not up to the mark. Such a viewpoint is wholly unjust to the contestants. The essays which paid serious attention to the business of paving the way to relativity necessarily did so at the expense of completeness in the later paragraphs where specific explanation of the Einstein theories was in order. Mr. Law, whose essay was by all means the best of those that gave much space to introductory remarks, found himself left with only 600 words in which to tell what it was that he had been introducing. The majority of the contestants appear to have faced the same question as to subject matter which the Judges faced, and to have reached the same decision. They accordingly devoted their attention toward the prize, rather than toward the production of an essay that would best supplement that of the winner. It is for this very reason that, in these preliminary chapters, so large a proportion of the material has had to be supplied by the Editor; and this very circumstance is a tribute to the good judgment of the competitors, rather than ground for criticism of their work.

The general introduction of Chapter II. out of the way, Chapters III. and IV. take up the business of leading the reader into the actual subject of relativity. The subject is here developed in what may be called the historical order—the order in which it took form in Einstein’s own mind. Both in and outside the contest of which this book is the outcome, a majority of those who have written on relativity have followed this order, which is indeed a very natural one and one well calculated to give to the rather surprising assumptions of relativity a reasonableness which they might well appear to the lay mind to lack if laid down more arbitrarily. In these two chapters no effort is made to carry the argument beyond the formulation of the Special Principle of the relativity of uniform motion, but this principle is developed in considerably more detail than would be the case if it were left entirely to the competing essayists. The reason for this is again that we are dealing with a phase of the subject which is of subordinate importance so far as a complete statement of the General Theory of Relativity is concerned, but which is of the greatest significance in connection with the effort of the layman to acquire the proper preliminary orientation toward the larger subject.

Chapter V. goes back again to general ground. Among the ideas which the competing essayists were forced to introduce into their text on a liberal scale is that of non-Euclidean geometry. The entire formulation of the General Theory of Relativity is in fact an exercise in this. The essayists—good, bad and indifferent alike—were quite unanimous in their decision that this was one thing which the reader would have to assume the responsibility of acquiring for himself. Certainly they were justified in this; for the Editor has been able to explain what non-Euclidean geometry is only by using up considerably more space than the contestants had for an entire essay. No effort has been made to set forth any of the details of any of the various non-Euclidean geometries; it has simply been the aim to draw the dividing line between Euclidean and non-Euclidean, and to make the existence of the latter appear reasonable, so that when the essayists come to talk about it the reader will not feel hopelessly at sea. In other words, this is another case of providing the mental background, but on such a scale that it has seemed necessary to give a separate chapter to it.

Chapter VI. completes the preliminary course in the fundamentals of relativity by tying up together the findings of Chapter V. and those of Chapters III. and IV. It represents more or less of a last-minute change of plan; for while it had been the Editor’s intent from the beginning to place the material of Chapters II.–V. in its present position, his preliminary impression would have been that the work of the present Chapter VI. would be adequately done by the essayists themselves. His reading of the essays, however, convinced him that it had not so been done—that with the possible exception of Mr. Francis, the essayists did not make either a serious or a successful effort to show the organic connection between the Special Theory of Relativity and the Minkowski space-time structure, or the utter futility of trying to reconcile ourselves to the results of the former without employing the ideas of the latter. So Chapter VI. was supplied to make good this deficiency, and to complete the mental equipment which the reader requires for his battle with the General Theory.

In laying down a set of general principles to govern the award of the prize, one of the first things considered by the Judges was the relative importance of the Special and the General Theories. It was their opinion that no essay could possibly qualify for the prize which did not very distinctly give to the General Theory the center of the stage; and that in fact discussion of the Special Theory was pertinent only so long as it contributed, in proportion to the space assigned it, to the attack upon the main subject. The same principle has been employed in selecting essays for complete or substantially complete reproduction in this volume. Writers who dealt with the Special Theory in any other sense than as a preliminary step toward the General Theory have been relegated to the introductory chapters, where such excerpts from their work have been used as were found usable. The distinction of publication under name and title is reserved for those who wrote consistently and specifically upon the larger subject—with the one exception of Dr. Russell, whose exposition of the Special Theory is so far the best of those submitted and at the same time so distinctive that we have concluded it will appear to better advantage by itself than as a part of Chapters III. and IV.

Following after Mr. Bolton’s essay we have tried to arrange the various contributions, not at all in any order of merit, but in the order that will make connected reading of the book most nearly possible and profitable. Each essay should be made easier of reading by the examination of those preceding it; at the same time each, by the choice of ground covered and by the emphasis on points not brought out sharply by its predecessors, should throw new light upon these predecessors.

The reader will find that no two of the essays given thus in full duplicate or even come close to duplicating one another. They have of course been selected with this in view; each represents the best of several essays of substantially the same character. Not all of them require comment here, but concerning some of them a word may well be said.

Mr. Francis, we believe, has succeeded in packing more substance into his 3,000 words than any other competitor. Mr. Elliot has come closer than anybody else to really explaining relativity in terms familiar to everybody, without asking the reader to enlarge his vocabulary and with a minimum demand so far as enlarging his mental outlook is concerned. Were it not for certain conspicuous defects, his essay would probably have taken the prize. In justice to the Judges, we should state that we have taken the liberty of eliminating Mr. Elliot’s concluding paragraph, which was the most objectionable feature of his essay.

Dr. Dushman chose for his title the one which we adopted for this book. It became necessary, therefore, for us to find a new title for his essay; aside from this instance, the main titles appearing at the heads of the various complete essays are those of the authors. The subtitles have in practically every instance been supplied editorially.

Dr. Pickering submitted two essays, one written from the viewpoint of the physicist, the other from that of the astronomer. To make each complete, he naturally found it necessary to duplicate between them certain introductory and general material. We have run the two essays together into a single narrative, with the elimination of this duplicated material; aside from this blue-penciling no alteration has been made in Dr. Pickering’s text. This text however served as the basis of blue-penciling that of several other contestants, as indicated in the foot notes.

For the reader who is qualified or who can qualify to understand it, Dr. Murnaghan’s essay is perhaps the most illuminating of all. Even the reader who does not understand it all will realize that its author brings to the subject a freshness of viewpoint and an originality of treatment which are rather lacking in some of the published essays, and which it will readily be understood were conspicuously lacking in a good many of the unpublished ones. Dr. Murnaghan of all the competitors has come closest to making a contribution to science as well as to the semi-popular literature of science.

In the composite chapters, the brackets followed by reference numbers have been used as the most practicable means of identifying the various individual contributions. We believe that this part of the text can be read without allowing the frequent occurrence of these symbols to distract the eye. As to the references themselves, the asterisk marks the contributions of the Editor. The numbers are those attached to the essays in order of and at the time of their receipt; it has been more convenient to use these than to assign consecutive numbers to the quoted essays. The several numbers identify passages from the essays of the following contestants:

10: Frederick W. Shurlock, Derby, England.
18: L. L. Whyte, Cambridge, England.
24: Prof. Moritz Schlick, University of Rostock, Germany.
30: C. E. Rose, M.E., Little Rock, Ark.
33: H. Gartelmann, Bremen, Germany.
35: Prof. Joseph S. Ames, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
47: James O. G. Gibbons, East Orange. N. J.
82: Charles H. Burr, Philadelphia.
101: L. F. H. de Miffonis. B.A., C.E., Ottawa, Canada.
102: Charles A. Brunn, Kansas City.
106: J. Elias Fries, Fellow A.I.E.E., Birmingham, Ala.
114: Dean W. P. Graham, Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y.
115: Rev. George Thomas Manley, London.
116: Prof. J. A. Schouten, Delft, Netherlands.
121: Elwyn F. Burrill, Berkeley, Cal.
125: Dorothy Burr, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
130: C. W. Kanolt, Bureau of Standards, Washington.
135: Robert Stevenson, New York.
139: Leopold Schorsch, New York.
141: Dr. M. C. Mott-Smith, Los Angeles, Calif.
147: Edward A. Clarke, Columbus, O.
149: Edward A. Partridge, Philadelphia.
150: Col. John Millis, U. S. A., Chicago.
152: George F. Marsteller, Detroit.
156: D. B. Hall, Cincinnati.
165: Francis Farquhar, York, Pa.
178: Dr. George de Bothezat, Dayton, O.
179: Professor A. E. Caswell, University of Oregon, Eugene, Ore.
182: C. E. Dimick, New London, Conn.
186: Earl R. Evans, Washington, D. C.
188: Norman E. Gilbert, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N. H.
192: A. d’Abro. New York.
194: L. M. Alexander, Cincinnati.
197: Kenneth W. Reed, East Cleveland, O.
198: Prof. E. N. da C. Andrade, Ordnance College, Woolwich, England.
216: Professor Andrew H. Patterson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C.
220: Prof. Arthur Gordon Webster, Clark College, Worcester, Mass.
221: Walter van B. Roberts, Princeton University, N. J.
223: Paul M. Batchelder, Austin, Tex.
227: Prof. R. W. Wood, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
229: E. P. Fairbairn, M.C., B.Sc., Glasgow.
231: R. F. Deimel, Hoboken, N. J.
232: Lieut. W. Mark Angus, U. S. N., Philadelphia.
235: Edward Adams Richardson, Kansas City.
263: Prof. William Benjamin Smith, Tulane University, New Orleans.
264: James Rice, University of London, London.
267: William Hemmenway Pratt, Lynn, Mass.
272: R. Bruce Lindsay, New Bedford, Mass.
283: Frank E. Law, Montclair, N. J.

In addition to the specific credit given by these references for specifically quoted passages, the Editor feels that he ought to acknowledge his general indebtedness to the competing essayists, collectively, for the many ideas which he has taken away from their text to clothe in his own words. This does not mean that the Editor has undertaken generally to improve upon the language of the competitors, but merely that the reading of all their essays has given him many ideas of such complex origin that he could not assign credit if he would.

Table of Contents

I.—The Einstein $5,000 Prize: How the Contest Came to be Held, and Some of the Details of Its Conduct. By the Editor        1

II.—The World—And Us: An Introductory Discussion of the Philosophy of Relativity, and of the Mechanism of our Contact with Time and Space. By various contributors and the Editor        19

III.—The Relativity of Uniform Motion: Classical Ideas on the Subject; the Ether and the Apparent Possibility of Absolute Motion; the Michelson-Morley Experiment and the Final Negation of this possibility. By various contributors and the Editor        47

IV.—The Special Theory of Relativity: What Einstein’s Study of Uniform Motion Tells Us About Time and Space and the Nature of the External Reality. By various contributors and the Editor        76

V.—That Parallel Postulate: Modern Geometric Methods; the Dividing Line Between Euclidean and Non-Euclidean; and the Significance of the Latter. By the Editor        111

VI.—The Space-Time Continuum: Minkowski’s World of Events, and the Way in Which It Fits Into Einstein’s Structure. By the Editor and a few contributors        141

VII.—Relativity: The Winning Essay in the Contest for the Eugene Higgins $5,000 Prize. By Lyndon Bolton, British Patent Office, London        169

VIII.—The New Concepts of Time and Space: The Essay in Behalf of Which the Greatest Number of Dissenting Opinions Have Been Recorded. By Montgomery Francis, New York        181

IX.—The Principle of Relativity: A Statement of What it is All About, in Ideas of One Syllable. By Hugh Elliot, Chislehurst, Kent, England        195

X.—Space, Time and Gravitation: An Outline of Einstein’s Theory of General Relativity. By W. de Sitter, University of Leyden        206

XI.—The Principle of General Relativity: How Einstein, to a Degree Never Before Equalled, Isolates the External Reality from the Observer’s Contribution. By E. T. Bell, University of Seattle        218

XII.—Force Vs. Geometry: How Einstein Has Substituted the Second for the First in Connection with the Cause of Gravitation. By Saul Dushman, Schenectady        230

XIII.—An Introduction to Relativity: A Treatment in which the Mathematical Connections of Einstein’s Work are Brought Out More Strongly and More Successfully than Usual in a Popular Explanation. By Harold T. Davis, University of Wisconsin        240

XIV.—New Concepts for Old: What the World Looks Like After Einstein Has Had His Way with It. By John G. McHardy, Commander R. N., London        251

XV.—The New World: A Universe in Which Geometry Takes the Place of Physics, and Curvature that of Force. By George Frederick Hemens, M.C., B.Sc., London        265

XVI.—The Quest of the Absolute: Modern Developments in Theoretical Physics, and the Climax Supplied by Einstein. By Dr. Francis D. Murnaghan, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore        276

XVII.—The Physical Side of Relativity: The Immediate Contacts between Einstein’s Theories and Current Physics and Astronomy. By Professor William H. Pickering, Harvard College Observatory, Mandeville, Jamaica        287

XVIII.—The Practical Significance of Relativity: The Best Discussion of the Special Theory Among All the Competing Essays. By Prof. Henry Norris Russell, Princeton University        306

XIX.—Einstein’s Theory of Relativity: A Simple Explanation of His Postulates and Their Consequences. By T. Royds, Kodaikanal Observatory, India        318

XX.—Einstein’s Theory of Gravitation: The Discussion of the General Theory and Its Most Important Application, from the Essay by Prof. W. F. G. Swann, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis        327

XXI.—The Equivalence Hypothesis: The Discussion of This, With Its Difficulties and the Manner in Which Einstein Has Resolved Them, from the Essay by Prof. E. N. da C. Andrade, Ordnance College, Woolwich, England        334

XXII.—The General Theory: Fragments of Particular Merit on This Phase of the Subject. By Various Contributors        338

Table of Contents

PREFACE iii
Table of Contents xiii
I. THE EINSTEIN $5,000 PRIZE 1
The Donor and the Prize 2
The Judges 5
Three Thousand Words 7
The Competing Essays 9
Looking for the Winner 12
The Winner of the Prize 16
II. THE WORLD—AND US 19
Getting Away from the Greek Ideas 21
Relativism and Reality 23
Laws of Nature 26
Concepts and Realities 29
The Concepts of Space and Time 33
The Reference Frame for Space 36
Time and the Coordinate System 38
The Choice of a Coordinate Frame 41
III. THE RELATIVITY OF UNIFORM MOTION 46
Who Is Moving? 48
Mechanical Relativity 50
The Search for the Absolute 52
The Ether and Absolute Motion 55
The Earth and the Ether 57
A Journey Upstream and Back 58
The Michelson-Morley Experiment 60
The Verdict 63
The “Contraction” Hypothesis 65
Taking the Bull by the Horns 68
Questions of Common Sense 71
Shifting the Mental Gears 72
IV. THE SPECIAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY 76
Light and the Ether 78
The Measurement of Time and Space 80
The Problem of Communication 83
An Einsteinian Experiment 86
Who Is Right? 89
The Relativity of Time and Space 91
Relativity and Reality 95
Time and Space in a Single Package 98
Some Further Consequences 100
Assumption and Consequence 104
Relativity and the Layman 106
Physics vs. Metaphysics 109
V. THAT PARALLEL POSTULATE 111
Terms We Cannot Define 113
Laying the Foundation 115
The Rôle of Geometry 119
What May We Take for Granted? 122
And What Is It All About? 124
Euclid’s Geometry 126
Axioms Made to Order 128
Locating the Discrepancy 130
What the Postulate Really Does 132
The Geometry of Surfaces 133
Euclidean or Non-Euclidean 137
VI. THE SPACE-TIME CONTINUUM 141
The Four-Dimensional World of Events 144
A Continuum of Points 146
The Continuum in General 148
Euclidean and Non-Euclidean Continua 150
Our World of Four Dimensions 155
The Curvature of Space-Time 158
The Question of Visualization 162
What It All Leads To 165
VII. RELATIVITY 169
The Mechanical Principle of Relativity 170
The Special Principle of Relativity 171
The Four Dimensional Continuum 173
Gravitation and Acceleration 174
The General Principle of Relativity 177
VIII. THE NEW CONCEPTS OF TIME AND SPACE 181
A World of Points 183
The Four-Dimensional World of Events 185
Successive Steps Toward Generality 187
Gravitation and Acceleration 189
Einstein’s Time-Space World 191
The Layman’s Last Doubt 193
IX. THE PRINCIPLE OF RELATIVITY 195
The Behavior of Light 197
Space and Time 198
The World of Reality 201
Accelerated Motion 203
X. SPACE, TIME AND GRAVITATION 206
The External World and its Geometry 208
Gravitation and its Place in the Universe 211
Gravitation and Space-Time 214
XI. THE PRINCIPLE OF GENERAL RELATIVITY 218
Gravitation and Acceleration 220
Paths Through the World of Four Dimensions 223
The Universe of Space-Time 225
XII. FORCE VS. GEOMETRY 230
The Relativity of Uniform Motion 233
Universal Relativity 235
The Geometry of Gravitation 237
XIII. AN INTRODUCTION TO RELATIVITY 240
The Electromagnetic Theory of Light 241
The Michelson-Morley Experiment 243
The Lorentz Transformation 245
The First Theory of Relativity 246
The Inclusion of Gravitation 248
XIV. NEW CONCEPTS FOR OLD 251
The World-Frame 253
The World-Fabric 257
Einstein’s Results 261
XV. THE NEW WORLD 265
The World Geometry 267
The Genesis of the Theory 270
The Time Diagram 273
XVI. THE QUEST OF THE ABSOLUTE 276
The Gravitational Hypothesis 281
The Special Relativity Theory 284
XVII. THE PHYSICAL SIDE OF RELATIVITY 287
XVIII. THE PRACTICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF RELATIVITY 306
The Special Theory and Its Surprising Consequences 309
The Generalization 313
The Tests 315
XIX. EINSTEIN’S THEORY OF RELATIVITY 318
XX. EINSTEIN’S THEORY OF GRAVITATION 327
XXI. THE EQUIVALENCE HYPOTHESIS 334
XXII. THE GENERAL THEORY 338