Questions tagged [special-relativity]

The special theory of relativity describes the motion and dynamics of objects moving at significant fractions of the speed of light.

The special theory of relativity is an extension of that describes the motion and dynamics of objects moving at significant fractions of the speed of light.

In Einstein's original 1905 formulation, The postulates of Special Relativity are that

  • The Principle of Relativity is that the laws of physics are the same in every inertial reference frame (cf. ).

  • The Speed of Light is the same in every reference frame (cf. ).

In Special Relativity, the Galilean transformations are replaced with the Lorentz transformations, which form the Lorentz group (cf. ).

An alternative formulation of Special Relativity is that of Minkowski, which unifies space and time into a single (affine) vector space called . From the postulate that the spacetime interval between any two points is independent of the frame of reference, the Lorentz transformations can be derived.

Kinematics

The postulates of Special relativity, either in the form originally postulated by Einstein or in the geometric reformulation of Minkowski, have several consequences that usually challenge the intuition we have developed from our interaction with the non-relativistic world. Some prominent examples are

Dynamics

The equations of motion for point particles, analogous to Newton's equation, are postulated to be $$ \dot p^\mu=F^\mu, $$ where the dot denotes differentiation with respect to proper time.

From this equation, together with some kinematical considerations, one may derive, for example, the well-known equivalence principle.

The force $F^\mu$ in the equations of motion is a force field which may depend, in principle, on the position, momentum and proper time of the test body. One of the most important examples of such a force field is the one given by the laws of .

General relativity

The geometrical picture of spacetime admits a straightforward generalisation to curved manifolds. One readily discovers that such a formalism allows us to naturally introduce gravitation into the picture in a way that is manifestly independent of the observer and that respects the .

When the curvature of spacetime becomes dynamical, the resulting theory goes under the name of . It is, as of today, the most accurate description of gravitational phenomena that we know of. When the gravitational field is absent, it reduces to special relativity.

Quantum mechanics

It is possible to combine the postulates of special relativity with those of . The resulting framework called , is the most accurate one known to mankind. Examples of quantum field theories (and hence of applications of Special Relativity) include, but are not limited to, , , the of , among many others.

External resources

The following are questions about references in special relativity (taken from the overarching books question):

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Do we know why there is a speed limit in our universe?

This question is about why we have a universal speed limit (the speed of light in vacuum). Is there a more fundamental law that tells us why this is? I'm not asking why the speed limit is equal to $c$ and not something else, but why there is a limit…
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If photons have no mass, how can they have momentum?

As an explanation of why a large gravitational field (such as a black hole) can bend light, I have heard that light has momentum. This is given as a solution to the problem of only massive objects being affected by gravity. However, momentum is the…
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How do moving charges produce magnetic fields?

I'm tutoring high school students. I've always taught them that: A charged particle moving without acceleration produces an electric as well as a magnetic field. It produces an electric field because it's a charge particle. But when it is at rest,…
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A list of inconveniences between quantum mechanics and (general) relativity?

It is well known that quantum mechanics and (general) relativity do not fit well. I am wondering whether it is possible to make a list of contradictions or problems between them? E.g. relativity theory uses a space-time continuum, while quantum…
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Is temperature a Lorentz invariant in relativity?

If an observer starts moving at relativistic speeds will he observe the temperature of objects to change as compared to their rest temperatures? Suppose the rest temperature measured is $T$ and the observer starts moving with speed $v$. What will be…
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Can Maxwell's equations be derived from Coulomb's Law and Special Relativity?

As an exercise I sat down and derived the magnetic field produced by moving charges for a few contrived situations. I started out with Coulomb's Law and Special Relativity. For example, I derived the magnetic field produced by a current $I$ in an…
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Is it possible for information to be transmitted faster than light by using a rigid pole?

Is it possible for information (like 1 and 0s) to be transmitted faster than light? For instance, take a rigid pole of several AU in length. Now say you have a person on each end, and one of them starts pulling and pushing on his/her end. The…
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What conservation law corresponds to Lorentz boosts?

Noether's Theorem is used to relate the invariance of the action under certain continuous transformations to conserved currents. A common example is that translations in spacetime correspond to the conservation of four-momentum. In the case of…
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If all motion is relative, how does light have a finite speed?

I've often heard that Einstein shattered the notion of absolute motion (i.e. all things move relative to one another) and that he established the speed of light as being absolute. That sounds paradoxical to me; I cannot understand how the two…
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How can time dilation be symmetric?

Suppose we have two twins travelling away from each other, each twin moving at some speed $v$: Twin $A$ observes twin $B$’s time to be dilated so his clock runs faster than twin $B$’s clock. But twin $B$ observes twin $A$’s time to be dilated so…
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What do spacelike, timelike and lightlike spacetime interval really mean?

Suppose we have two events $(x_1,y_1,z_1,t_1)$ and $(x_2,y_2,z_2,t_2)$. Then we can define $$\Delta s^2 = -(c\Delta t)^2 + \Delta x^2 + \Delta y^2 + \Delta z^2,$$ which is called the spacetime interval. The first event occurs at the point with…
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What is the proper way to explain the twin paradox?

The paradox in the twin paradox is that the situation appears symmetrical so each twin should think the other has aged less, which is of course impossible. There are a thousand explanations out there for why this doesn't happen, but they all end up…
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What is time, does it flow, and if so what defines its direction?

This is an attempt to gather together the various questions about time that have been asked on this site and provide a single set of hopefully authoritative answers. Specifically we attempt to address issues such as: What do physicists mean by…
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How did Einstein know the speed of light was constant?

I often hear the story of how Einstein came up to the conclusion that time would slow down the faster you move, because the speed of light has to remain the same. My question is, how did Einstein know that measuring the speed of light wouldn't be…
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Why is there a controversy on whether mass increases with speed?

Some people say that mass increases with speed while others say that the mass of an object is independent of its speed. I understand how some (though not many) things in physics are a matter of interpretation based on one's definitions. But I can't…
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