Relativity: The Special and General Theory
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Einstein Relativity
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- EXPERIENCE AND RELATIVITY 59
XVI
EXPERIENCE AND THE SPECIAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY O what extent is the special theory of rela- tivity supported by experience? This ques- tion is not easily answered for the reason already mentioned in connection with the funda- mental experiment of Fizeau. The special theory of relativity has crystallised out from the Maxwell- Lorentz theory of electromagnetic phenomena. Thus all facts of experience which support the electromagnetic theory also support the theory of relativity. As being of particular importance, I mention here the fact that the theory of relativity enables us to predict the effects produced on the light reaching us from the fixed stars. These results are obtained in an exceedingly simple manner, and the effects indicated, which are due to the relative motion of the earth with reference to those fixed stars, are found to be in accord with experience. We refer to the yearly move- ment of the apparent position of the fixed stars resulting from the motion of the earth round the sun (aberration), and to the influence of the radial 58 T EXPERIENCE AND RELATIVITY 59 components of the relative motions of the fixed stars with respect to the earth on the colour of the light reaching us from them. The latter effect manifests itself in a slight displacement of the spectral lines of the light transmitted to us from a fixed star, as compared with the position of the same spectral lines when they are produced by a terrestrial source of light (Doppler principle). The experimental arguments in favour of the Maxwell-Lorentz theory, which are at the same time arguments in favour of the theory of rela- tivity, are too numerous to be set forth here. In reality they limit the theoretical possibilities to such an extent, that no other theory than that of Maxwell and Lorentz has been able to hold its own when tested by experience. But there are two classes of experimental facts hitherto obtained which can be represented in the Maxwell-Lorentz theory only by the introduction of an auxiliary hypothesis, which in itself — i.e. without making use of the theory of relativity — appears extraneous. It is known that cathode rays and the so-called β -rays emitted by radioactive substances consist of negatively electrified particles (electrons) of very small inertia and large velocity. By examin- ing the deflection of these rays under the influence of electric and magnetic fields, we can study the law of motion of these particles very exactly. |
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