"The most precise experiments have proved the correctness of the Einsteinian laws of mechanics and...Bucherer's experiment proving the increase in mass of an electron in rapid motion is a case in point. Very important differences distinguish the theory of Einstein from that of Lorentz. Lorentz also had deduced from his theory that the mass of the electron should increase and grow infinite when its speed neared that of light; but the speed in question was the speed of the electron through the stagnant ether; whereas in Einstein's theory it is merely the speed with respect to the observer. According to Lorentz, the increase in mass of the moving electron was due to its deformation or Fitzgerald contraction. The contraction modified the lay of the electromagnetic field round the electron; and it was from this modification that the increase in mass observed by Bucherer was assumed to arise. In Einstein's theory, however, the increase in mass is absolutely general and need not be ascribed to the electromagnetic field of the electron in motion. An ordinary unelectrified lump of matter like a grain of sand would have increased in mass in exactly the same proportion; and no knowledge of the microscopic constitution of matter is necessary in order to predict these effects, which result directly from the space and time transformations themselves. Furthermore, the fact that this increase in mass of matter in motion is now due to relative motion and not to motion through the stagnant ether, as in Lorentz's theory, changes the entire outlook considerably. According to Lorentz, the electron really increased in mass, since its motion through the ether remained a reality. According to Einstein, the electron increases in mass only in so far as it is in relative motion with respect to the observer. Were the observer to be attached to the flying electron no increase in mass would exist; it would be the electron left behind which would now appear to have suffered the increase. Thus mass follows distance, duration and electromagnetic field in being a relative and having no definite magnitude of itself and being essentially dependent on the conditions of observation. Owing to the general validity of the Lorentz-Einstein transformations, it becomes permissible to apply them to all manner of phenomena.. ...temperature, pressure and many other physical magnitudes turned out to be relatives. ...entropy, electric charge and the velocity of light in vacuo were absolutes transcending the observer's motion. ...a number of other entities are found to be absolutes, the most important of which is that abstract mathematical quantity called the Einsteinian interval, which plays so important a part in the fabric of the new objective world of science, the world of four-dimensional space-time."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Force_field_(physics)
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Force field (physics)
52 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Force field (physics) →
Related Quotes
"The subject of electric oscillation announced in a remarkable paper of Henry in 1842 and threshed out in its main fea…"
"Based on Faraday's earlier work, Maxwell stressed the notion of fields, in contrast to Newton's emphasis on the direc…"
"William Gilbert published a famous book on the magnet in 1600 and laid himself open to the gibes of Sir Francis Bacon…"
"One possibility in this direction is to regard, classically, an electron as the end of a single Faraday line of force…"
"Classical mechanics has been developed continuously from the time of Newton and applied to an ever-widening range of …"
"We shall therefore assume the complete physical equivalence of a gravitational field and a corresponding acceleration…"
"If de Sitter's solution were valid everywhere, then it would be thereby shown that the purpose which I pursued with t…"
"If the idea of physical reality had ceased to be purely atomic, it still remained for the time being purely mechanist…"
"I just want to explain what I mean when I say that we should try to hold on to physical reality. We are … all aware o…"
"He was little interested mathematics or theory; for example, when his ideas on magnetic fields were extensively devel…"