Lecture 16 GR Curved Spaces ASTR 340 Fall

  • Slides: 42
Download presentation
Lecture 16 GR – Curved Spaces ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos

Lecture 16 GR – Curved Spaces ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos

GR Framework

GR Framework

GR EFFECTS IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM • Orbit of Mercury:

GR EFFECTS IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM • Orbit of Mercury:

Mercury does not move in perfect ellipse but precesses-> Vulcan? sun

Mercury does not move in perfect ellipse but precesses-> Vulcan? sun

Mercury Precession • Effect called “precession of perihelion”. • Effect small - orbit twists

Mercury Precession • Effect called “precession of perihelion”. • Effect small - orbit twists by 5600 arc-seconds (1. 56 degrees) per century – With Newtonian gravity, can explain 5557 arc-seconds/century as due to • Gravitational effect of other planets, • deformation of the Sun, • non-inertial nature of Earth’s frame – But still leaves 43 arc-seconds per century unexplained… • Using GR, Einstein predicted (with no fiddling!) that Mercury should precess 43 arcseconds per century!

Gravitational Lensing

Gravitational Lensing

Gravitational Lensing

Gravitational Lensing

Also have light bending by distant galaxy clusters: “giant lenses” in the sky

Also have light bending by distant galaxy clusters: “giant lenses” in the sky

Gravitational micro-lensing • Individual stars can also make a gravitational lens… microlensing. • Suppose

Gravitational micro-lensing • Individual stars can also make a gravitational lens… microlensing. • Suppose we… – Look at a distant star in our galaxy – Another massive (but dark) star passes in front… From web site of Ned Wright (UCLA) – Causes apparent increases in brightness of stellar image

Gravitational time dilation has practical importance! • Global Positioning System (GPS) – System of

Gravitational time dilation has practical importance! • Global Positioning System (GPS) – System of satellites that emit timing signals – Detector on Earth receives signals – Can figure out position on Earth’s surface by measuring time delay between signals from different satellite (light travel time gives distance to satellite) – Need to measure time of signal from satellite very well! – Satellites are at varying heights; clocks run at varying rates • If GR effects were not included, computed GPS positions would drift from true position by kilometers per day!

Escape Speed r 1 0 RE

Escape Speed r 1 0 RE

Fig. 3 -25, p. 95

Fig. 3 -25, p. 95

Fig. 3 -26, p. 96

Fig. 3 -26, p. 96

Gravitational Redshift There is a ½ factor in error because we used classical arguments

Gravitational Redshift There is a ½ factor in error because we used classical arguments

Einstein’s tower • So far, we have ignored the effects of gravity on light.

Einstein’s tower • So far, we have ignored the effects of gravity on light. Is this really okay? ? • Consider another thought experiment, to test whether light can be unaffected by gravity. • Consider a tower on Earth – Shine a light ray from bottom to top – When light gets to top, turn its energy into mass. – Then drop mass to bottom of tower, in Earth’s gravity field – Then turn it back into energy

 • If we could do this, then we could get energy from nothing!

• If we could do this, then we could get energy from nothing! – Original energy in light beam = Estart – Thus, mass created at top is m=E/c 2 – Then drop mass… at bottom of tower it has picked up speed (and energy) due to the effects of gravitational field. – When we turn it back into energy, we have Eend=Estart+Egrav – But, we started off with only Estart – we have made energy! We’re rich!

Remember the tower… • Light beam must lose energy as it climbs up –

Remember the tower… • Light beam must lose energy as it climbs up – So…frequency must decrease – i. e. , light is redshifted. – Gravitational redshifting • Imagine a clock based on frequency of laser light… – 1 “tick” = time taken for fixed number of crests to pass – Gravitational redshifting slows down the clock. – Clocks in gravitational fields must run slowly

Tidal Effects Differences between accelerating and gravitational frames – Non locality

Tidal Effects Differences between accelerating and gravitational frames – Non locality

Time dilation in GR

Time dilation in GR

ACCELERATION AND TIME Slim and Jim compare their watches while Jim crawls slowly along

ACCELERATION AND TIME Slim and Jim compare their watches while Jim crawls slowly along the radius. Slim’s clock runs slower since he was always moving faster than Jim. Example of warped time, rate of passage differs from location to location

ACCELERATION AND WARPING OF SPACE/TIME Measure radius and circumference with no spin you find

ACCELERATION AND WARPING OF SPACE/TIME Measure radius and circumference with no spin you find their ratio equal circumf/radius= 2 p=6. 28. Do it again when the wheel is spinning. Radius the same but circumference longer Ratio> 6. 28

CURVED SPACE-TIME • Einstein pondered several things… – Success of Special Relativity showed that

CURVED SPACE-TIME • Einstein pondered several things… – Success of Special Relativity showed that space & time were closely interlinked – The “tower thought experiment” suggested that free-fall observers are (locally) free of effects of gravity: frequency of light they observe does not change as they accelerate – He wanted to say that gravity was an illusion caused by the fact that we live in an accelerating frame… – … but there is no single accelerating frame that works! Somehow, you need to stick together frames of reference that are accelerating in different directions

 • Einstein’s proposal – 4 -dimensional space-time is “curved, ” not flat •

• Einstein’s proposal – 4 -dimensional space-time is “curved, ” not flat • Example: surface of sphere is curved 2 D space; surface of football field is flat 2 D space – Free-falling objects move on “geodesics” through curved space-time (generalizations of straight lines in flat space). – The curvature (bending) of space-time is produced by matter and energy • What is a geodesic? – Shortest path between two points on a surface – E. G. path flown by an aircraft between cities on the globe – Geodesics that start parallel can converge or diverge (or even cross).

On Globe… • Constant-longitude lines (meridians) are geodesics • Constant-latitude lines (parallels) are not

On Globe… • Constant-longitude lines (meridians) are geodesics • Constant-latitude lines (parallels) are not

Geometry of space

Geometry of space

Geodesics on sphere and torus

Geodesics on sphere and torus

Hyperbolic space • Two-dimensional version of a hyperbola - a “saddle” • Geodesics diverge

Hyperbolic space • Two-dimensional version of a hyperbola - a “saddle” • Geodesics diverge

How does matter “warp” space? • Use two-dimensional space as an analogy: think of

How does matter “warp” space? • Use two-dimensional space as an analogy: think of how rubber sheet is affected by weights • Any weight causes sheet to sag locally • Amount that sheet sags depends on how heavy weight is From web site of UCSD

Effect of matter on coordinates • Lines that would be straight become curved (to

Effect of matter on coordinates • Lines that would be straight become curved (to external observer) when sheet is “weighted”

How are orbits affected? • Marble would follow straight line if weight were not

How are orbits affected? • Marble would follow straight line if weight were not there • Marble’s orbit becomes curved path because weight warps space Applied Mathematics Dept, Southampton University

Warping of space by Sun’s gravity • Light rays follow geodesics in warped space

Warping of space by Sun’s gravity • Light rays follow geodesics in warped space

THE GENERAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY • Within a free-falling frame, the Special Theory of

THE GENERAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY • Within a free-falling frame, the Special Theory of Relativity applies. • Free-falling particles/observers move on geodesics through curved space-time • The distribution of matter and energy determines how space-time is curved. “Space-time curvature tells matter/energy how to move. Matter/energy tells space-time how to curve. ”

 • Notes: – The Einstein curvature tensor “G” is mathematical object describing curvature

• Notes: – The Einstein curvature tensor “G” is mathematical object describing curvature of 4 -D space-time. – The Stress-Energy tensor “T” is mathematical object describing distribution of mass/energy. – Newton’s constant of gravitation “G” and the speed of light “c” appear as fundamental constants in this equation. – This is actually a horrendous set of 10 coupled non-linear partial differential equations!! • For weak gravitational fields, this gives Newton’s law of gravitation.