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Equivalence principle
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{{Short description|The hypothesis that inertial and gravitational masses are equivalent}}{{About|the principle in gravitation|the principle in electromagnetism|surface equivalence principle}}{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}(File:Elevator gravity.svg|thumb|upright=1.5|A falling object behaves exactly the same on a planet or in an equivalent accelerating frame of reference.){{General relativity sidebar |fundamentals}}The equivalence principle is the hypothesis that the observed equivalence of gravitational and inertial mass is a consequence of nature. The weak form, known for centuries, relates to masses of any composition in free fall taking the same trajectories and landing at identical times. The extended form by Albert Einstein requires special relativity to also hold in free fall and requires the weak equivalence to be valid everywhere. This form was a critical input for the development of the theory of general relativity. The strong form requires Einstein’s form to work for stellar objects. Highly precise experimental tests of the principle limit possible deviations from equivalence to be very small.- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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Concept
In classical mechanics, Newton’s equation of motion in a gravitational field, written out in full, is: Very careful experiments have shown that the inertial mass on the left side and gravitational mass on the right side are numerically equal and independent of the material composing the masses. The equivalence principle is the hypothesis that this numerical equality of inertial and gravitational mass is a consequence of their fundamental identity.BOOK, Einstein, Albert, The Meaning of Relativity,archive.org/details/meaningrelativit00aein, limited, 2003, Routledge, 9781134449798, 59, {{rp|32}}The equivalence principle can be considered an extension of the principle of relativity, the principle that the laws of physics are invariant under uniform motion. An observer in a windowless room cannot distinguish between being on the surface of the Earth and being in a spaceship in deep space accelerating at 1g and the laws of physics are unable to distinguish these cases.{{rp|33}}History
{{See also|History of gravitational theory}}Galileo compared different materials experimentally to determine that the acceleration due to gravitation is independent of the amount of mass being accelerated.JOURNAL, Everitt, C.W.F., Damour, T., Nordtvedt, K., Reinhard, R., October 2003, Historical perspective on testing the Equivalence Principle,linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0273117703903358, Advances in Space Research, en, 32, 7, 1297â1300, 10.1016/S0273-1177(03)90335-8, 2003AdSpR..32.1297E, Newton, just 50 years after Galileo, developed the idea that gravitational and inertial mass were different concepts and compared the periods of pendulums composed of different materials to verify that these masses are the same. This form of the equivalence principle became known as “weak equivalence”.A version of the equivalence principle consistent with special relativity was introduced by Albert Einstein in 1907, when he observed that identical physical laws are observed in two systems, one subject to a constant gravitational field causing acceleration and the other subject to constant acceleration like a rocket far from any gravitational field.{{rp|152}} Since the physical laws are the same, Einstein assumed the graviational field and the acceleration were “physically equivalent”. Einstein stated this hypothesis as:{{blockquote|we ... assume the complete physical equivalence of a gravitational field and a corresponding acceleration of the reference system.|Einstein, 1907Einstein, Albert. “On the relativity principle and the conclusions drawn from it.” Jahrb Radioaktivitat Elektronik 4 (1907): 411â462.}}In 1911 Einstein demonstrated the power of the equivalence principle by using it to predict that clocks run at different rates in a gravitational potential, and light rays bend in a gravitational field.BOOK, Whittaker, Sir Edmund, A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity, Courier Dover Publications, 1989-01-01, 0-486-26126-3, 2, {{rp|153}} He connected the equivalence principle to his earlier principle of special relativity:{{blockquote| This assumption of exact physical equivalence makes it impossible for us to speak of the absolute acceleration of the system of reference, just as the usual theory of relativity forbids us to talk of the absolute velocity of a system; and it makes the equal falling of all bodies in a gravitational field seem a matter of course.|Einstein, 1911Einstein, Albert. “On the Influence of Gravitation on the Propagation of Light.” Annalen der Physik 35.898â908 (1911): 906.}}Immediately after completing his workLorentz, Hendrik Antoon, et al. The Principle of Relativity: A Collection of Original Memoirs on the Special and General Theory of Relativity. United Kingdom, Dover Publications, 1923.{{rp|111}} on a theory of gravity (known as general relativity) and in later years Einstein recalled the role of the equivalence principle:{{blockquote| The breakthrough came suddenly one day. I was sitting on a chair in my patent office in Bern. Suddenly a thought struck me: If a man fallsfreely, he would not feel his weight. I was taken aback. This simple thought experiment made a deep impression on me. This led me to the theory of gravity.| Einstein, 1922Einstein, Albert, inpac.ucsd.edu/students/courses/winter2012/physics2d/einsteinonrelativity.pdf" title="web.archive.org/web/20151222085312inpac.ucsd.edu/students/courses/winter2012/physics2d/einsteinonrelativity.pdf">How I Constructed the Theory of Relativity, translated by Masahiro Morikawa from the text recorded in Japanese by Jun Ishiwara, Association of Asia Pacific Physical Societies (AAPPS) Bulletin, Vol. 15, No. 2, pp. 17â19, April 2005. Einstein recalls events of 1907 in a talk in Japan on 14 December 1922.}}Since Einstein developed general relativity, there was a need to develop a framework to test the theory against other possible theories of gravity compatible with special relativity. This was developed by Robert Dicke as part of his program to test general relativity. Two new principles were suggested, the so-called Einstein equivalence principle and the strong equivalence principle, each of which assumes the weak equivalence principle as a starting point. These are discussed below.Definitions
File:Apollo 15 feather and hammer drop.ogv|thumb|During the Apollo 15 mission in 1971, astronaut (David Scott]] showed that Galileo was right: acceleration is the same for all bodies subject to gravity on the Moon, even for a hammer and a feather.)Three main forms of the equivalence principle are in current use: weak (Galilean), Einsteinian, and strong.JOURNAL, Clifton, Timothy, Ferreira, Pedro G., Padilla, Antonio, Skordis, Constantinos, March 2012, Modified gravity and cosmology,linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0370157312000105, Physics Reports, en, 513, 1â3, 1â189, 10.1016/j.physrep.2012.01.001, 1106.2476, 2012PhR...513....1C, {{rp|6}} Some studies also create finer divisions or slight alternative.JOURNAL, Di Casola, Eolo, Liberati, Stefano, Sonego, Sebastiano, 2015-01-01, Nonequivalence of equivalence principles,pubs.aip.org/ajp/article/83/1/39/1042100/Nonequivalence-of-equivalence-principles, American Journal of Physics, en, 83, 1, 39â46, 10.1119/1.4895342, 1310.7426, 2015AmJPh..83...39D, 119110646, 0002-9505, We have seen that the various formulations of the equivalence principle form hierarchy (or rather, a nested sequence of statements narrowing down the type of gravitational theory),, JOURNAL, Ghins, Michel, Budden, Tim, March 2001, The Principle of Equivalence,linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1355219800000381, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics, en, 32, 1, 33â51, 10.1016/S1355-2198(00)00038-1, 2001SHPMP..32...33G,Weak equivalence principle
The weak equivalence principle, also known as the universality of free fall or the Galilean equivalence principle can be stated in many ways. The strong equivalence principle, a generalization of the weak equivalence principle, includes astronomic bodies with gravitational self-binding energy.JOURNAL, Wagner, Todd A., Schlamminger, Stephan, Gundlach, Jens H., Adelberger, Eric G., 2012, Torsion-balance tests of the weak equivalence principle, Classical and Quantum Gravity, 29, 18, 184002, 10.1088/0264-9381/29/18/184002, 1207.2442, 2012CQGra..29r4002W, 59141292, Instead, the weak equivalence principle assumes falling bodies are self-bound by non-gravitational forces only (e.g. a stone). Either way:- “All uncharged, freely falling test particles follow the same trajectories, once an initial position and velocity have been prescribed”.{{rp|6}}
- “... in a uniform gravitational field all objects, regardless of their composition, fall with precisely the same acceleration.” “The weak equivalence principle implicitly assumes that the falling objects are bound by non-gravitational forces.”
- “... in a gravitational field the acceleration of a test particle is independent of its properties, including its rest mass.“BOOK, Five-dimensional Physics, Paul S., Wesson, 82,books.google.com/books?id=dSv8ksxHR0oC&q=intitle:Five+intitle:Dimensional+intitle:Physics, 978-981-256-661-4, World Scientific, 2006,
- Mass (measured with a balance) and weight (measured with a scale) are locally in identical ratio for all bodies (the opening page to Newton’s Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, 1687).
Einstein equivalence principle
What is now called the “Einstein equivalence principle” states that the weak equivalence principle holds, and that:{{block indent|em=1.5|text=the outcome of any local, non-gravitational test experiment is independent of the experimental apparatus’ velocity relative to the gravitational field and is independent of where and when in the gravitational field the experiment is performed.BOOK, Haugen, Mark P., Gyros, Clocks, Interferometers...: Testing Relativistic Graviy in Space. Lecture Notes in Physics, Lämmerzahl, Claus, 2001, 978-3-540-41236-6, 562, 195â212, Principles of Equivalence: Their Role in Gravitation Physics and Experiments That Test Them., 2001LNP...562..195H, 10.1007/3-540-40988-2_10, gr-qc/0103067, 15430387, }}Here local means that experimental setup must be small compared to variations in the gravitational field, called tidal forces. The test experiment must be small enough so that its gravitational potential does not alter the result.The two additional constraints added to the weak principle to get the Einstein form â (1) the independence of the outcome on relative velocity (local Lorentz invariance) and (2) independence of “where” known as (local positional invariance) â have far reaching consequences. With these constraints alone Einstein was able to predict the gravitational redshift. Theories of gravity that obey the Einstein equivalence principle must be “metric theories”, meaning that trajectories of freely falling bodies are geodesics of symmetric metric.{{rp|9}}Around 1960 Leonard I. Schiff conjectured that any complete and consistent theory of gravity that embodies the weak equivalence principle implies the Einstein equivalence principle; the conjecture can’t be proven but has several plausibility arguments in its favor.{{rp|20}} Nonetheless, the two principles are tested with very different kinds of experiments.The Einstein equivalence principle has been criticized as imprecise, because there is no universally accepted way to distinguish gravitational from non-gravitational experiments (see for instance HadleyJOURNAL, Mark J., Hadley, 10.1007/BF02764119, Foundations of Physics Letters, 10, 1, The Logic of Quantum Mechanics Derived from Classical General Relativity, 43â60, 1997, quant-ph/9706018, 1997FoPhL..10...43H, 10.1.1.252.6335, 15007947, and DurandJOURNAL, Durand, Stéphane, 2002, An amusing analogy: modelling quantum-type behaviours with wormhole-based time travel,stacks.iop.org/ob/4/S351, Journal of Optics B: Quantum and Semiclassical Optics, 4, 4, S351âS357, 10.1088/1464-4266/4/4/319, 2002JOptB...4S.351D, ).Strong equivalence principle
The strong equivalence principle applies the same constraints as the Einstein equivalence principle, but allows the freely falling bodies to be massive gravitating objects as well as test particles.Thus this is a version of the equivalence principle that applies to objects that exert a gravitational force on themselves, such as stars, planets, black holes or Cavendish experiments. It requires that the gravitational constant be the same everywhere in the universe{{rp|49}} and is incompatible with a fifth force. It is much more restrictive than the Einstein equivalence principle.Like the Einstein equivalence principle, the strong equivalence principle requires gravity is geometrical by nature, but in addition it forbids any extra fields, so the metric alone determines all of the effects of gravity. If an observer measures a patch of space to be flat, then the strong equivalence principle suggests that it is absolutely equivalent to any other patch of flat space elsewhere in the universe. Einstein’s theory of general relativity (including the cosmological constant) is thought to be the only theory of gravity that satisfies the strong equivalence principle. A number of alternative theories, such as BransâDicke theory and the Einstein-aether theory add additional fields.Active, passive, and inertial masses
Some of the tests of the equivalence principle use names for the different ways mass appears in physical formulae. In nonrelativistic physics three kinds of mass can be distinguished:JOURNAL, Will, Clifford M., Dec 2014, The Confrontation between General Relativity and Experiment, Living Reviews in Relativity, en, 17, 1, 4, 10.12942/lrr-2014-4, 2367-3613, 5255900, 28179848, 1403.7377, 2014LRR....17....4W,- Inertial mass intrinsic to an object, the sum of all of its massâenergy.
- Passive mass, the response to gravity, the object’s weight.
- Active mass, the mass that determines the objects gravitational effect.
Experimental tests
Tests of the weak equivalence principle
Tests of the weak equivalence principle are those that verify the equivalence of gravitational mass and inertial mass. An obvious test is dropping different objects and verifying that they land at the same time. Historically this was the first approach, though probably not by Galileo’s Leaning Tower of Pisa experimentBOOK, Drake, Stillman, Galileo at Work: His Scientific Biography, 2003, Dover publ., Mineola (N.Y.), 9780486495422, Facsim., {{rp|19â21}} but earlier by Simon StevinBOOK, Devreese, Jozef T., Jozef T. Devreese, Vanden Berghe, Guido, 2008, ‘Magic Is No Magic’: The Wonderful World of Simon Stevin,books.google.com/books?isbn=1845643917, 154, WIT Press, 9781845643911, who dropped lead balls of different masses off the Delft churchtower and listened for the sound they made on a wooden plank.Isaac Newton measured the period of pendulums made with different materials as an alternative test giving the first precision measurements. Loránd Eötvös’s approach in 1908 used a very sensitive torsion balance to give precision approaching 1 in a billion. Modern experiments have improved this by another factor of a million.A popular exposition of this measurement was done on the Moon by David Scott in 1971. He dropped a falcon feather and a hammer at the same time, showing on videoWEB,www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJyUDpm9Kvk,ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/MJyUDpm9Kvk, 2021-12-21, live, Weak Equivalence Principle test on the moon, YouTube, {{cbignore}} that they landed at the same time.{| class=“wikitable“|+ Chronology of weak equivalence principles testsCiufolini, Ignazio; Wheeler, John A.; Gravitation and Inertia, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1995, pp. 117â119500? | John PhiloponusPhiloponus, John; “Corollaries on Place and Void”, translated by David Furley, Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1987 | “small” | Drop tower |
1585 | Simon StevinStevin, Simon; De Beghinselen der Weeghconst [“Principles of the Art of Weighing”], Leyden, 1586; Dijksterhuis, Eduard J.; “The Principal Works of Simon Stevin”, Amsterdam, 1955 | {{val | e=â2}} | Drop tower |
1590? | Galileo GalileiGalilei, Galileo; “Discorsi e Dimostrazioni Matematiche Intorno a Due Nuove Scienze”, Leida: Appresso gli Elsevirii, 1638; “Discourses and Mathematical Demonstrations Concerning Two New Sciences”, Leiden: Elsevier Press, 1638{{rp|91}} | {{val | e=â3}} | Pendulum, drop tower |
1686 | Isaac NewtonNewton, Isaac; “Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica” [Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy and his System of the World], translated by Andrew Motte, revised by Florian Cajori, Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 1934; Newton, Isaac; “The Principia: Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy”, translated by I. Bernard Cohen and Anne Whitman, with the assistance of Julia Budenz, Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 1999{{rp|91}} | {{val|e=â3}} | Pendulum |
1832 | Friedrich Wilhelm BesselBessel, Friedrich W.; “Versuche Uber die Kraft, mit welcher die Erde Körper von verschiedner Beschaffenhelt anzieht”, Annalen der Physik und Chemie, Berlin: J. Ch. Poggendorff, 25 401â408 (1832){{rp|91}} | {{val | e=â5}} | Pendulum |
1908 (1922) | Loránd EötvösR. v. Eötvös 1890 Mathematische und Naturwissenschaftliche Berichte aus Ungarn, 8, 65; Annalen der Physik (Leipzig) 68 11 (1922); 10.1103/PHYSREVD.61.022001 > VOLUME=61 | YEAR=1999 | LAST1 = SMITH | LAST2 = HOYLE | LAST3 = GUNDLACH | LAST4 = ADELBERGER | LAST5 = HECKEL | LAST6 = SWANSON | ISSUE=2 | BIBCODE=1999PHRVD..61B2001S, {{rp|92}} | {{val | e=â9}} | Torsion balance |
1910 | SouthernsSOUTHERNS > FIRST1 = LEONARD | TITLE = A DETERMINATION OF THE RATIO OF MASS TO WEIGHT FOR A RADIOACTIVE SUBSTANCE | VOLUME = 84 | PAGES = 325â344 | BIBCODE = 1910RSPSA..84..325S | 91}} | {{val | e=â6}} | Pendulum |
1918 | ZeemanZeeman, Pieter (1918) “Some experiments on gravitation: The ratio of mass to weight for crystals and radioactive substances”, Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen, Amsterdam 20(4) 542â553{{rp|91}} | {{val | e=â8}} | Torsion balance |
1923 | PotterPOTTER > FIRST1 = HAROLD H. | TITLE = SOME EXPERIMENTS ON THE PROPORTIONALITY OF MASS AND WEIGHT | VOLUME = 104 | PAGES = 588â610 | BIBCODE = 1923RSPSA.104..588P | 91}} | {{val | e=â6}} | Pendulum |
1935 | RennerRENNER > FIRST1 = JáNOS | TITLE = KÃSéRLETI VIZSGáLATOK A TöMEGVONZáS éS TEHETETLENSéG ARáNYOSSáGáRóL | VOLUME = 53 | 92}} | {{val | e=â9}} | Torsion balance |
1964 | Roll, Krotkov, DickeRoll, Peter G.; Krotkov, Robert; Dicke, Robert H.; The equivalence of inertial and passive gravitational mass, Annals of Physics, Volume 26, Issue 3, 20 February 1964, pp. 442â517 | {{val | e=â11}} | Torsion balance |
1972 | Vladimir Braginsky | , PanovBRAGINSKI | LAST2 = PANOV | YEAR = 1971 | JOURNAL = (ZHURNAL ÃKSPERIMENTAL’NOÄ I TEORETICHESKOÄ FIZIKI, JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL AND THEORETICAL PHYSICS) | PAGE = 873, {{rp|92}} | {{val|e=â12}} | Torsion balance |
1976 | Shapiro, et al.SHAPIRO >FIRST1=IRWIN I. | FIRST2=III | FIRST3=C. | FIRST4=ROBERT W. | TITLE=VERIFICATION OF THE PRINCIPLE OF EQUIVALENCE FOR MASSIVE BODIES | ARCHIVE-URL=HTTPS://ARCHIVE.TODAY/20140122182435/HTTP://PRL.APS.ORG/PDF/PRL/V36/I11/P555_1 | ARCHIVE-DATE=2014-01-22 | VOLUME=36 | PAGES=555â558 | BIBCODE=1976PHRVL..36..555S, {{rp|92}} | {{val|e=â12}} | Lunar laser ranging |
1979 | Keiser, FallerKEISER > FIRST1 = GEORGE M. | FIRST2 = JAMES E. | TITLE=NEW APPROACH TO THE EöTVöS EXPERIMENT | VOLUME = 24 | 93}} | {{val | e=â11}} | Fluid support |
1987 | Niebauer, et al.NIEBAUER > FIRST1 = TIMOTHY M. | FIRST2 = MARTIN P. | FIRST3 = JAMES E. | TITLE = GALILEAN TEST FOR THE FIFTH FORCE | JOURNAL = PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS | ISSUE = 6 | DOI=10.1103/PHYSREVLETT.59.609 | PMID=10035824 | 95}} | {{val|e=â10}} | Drop tower |
1989 | Stubbs, et al.STUBBS > FIRST1 = CHRISTOPHER W. | FIRST2 = ERIC G. | FIRST3 = BLAYNE R. | FIRST4 = WARREN F. | FIRST5 = H. ERIK | FIRST6 = R. | FIRST7 = JENS H. | FIRST8 = FREDERICK J. | TITLE = LIMITS ON COMPOSITION-DEPENDENT INTERACTIONS USING A LABORATORY SOURCE: IS THERE A “FIFTH FORCE” COUPLED TO ISOSPIN? | VOLUME = 62 | PAGES = 609â612 | BIBCODE = 1989PHRVL..62..609S | 93}} | {{val|e=â11}} | Torsion balance |
1990 | Adelberger, Eric G.; et al.ADELBERGER > FIRST1 = ERIC G. | FIRST2 = CHRISTOPHER W. | FIRST3 = BLAYNE R. | FIRST4 = Y. | FIRST5 = H. ERIK | FIRST6 = G. L. | FIRST7 = JENS H. | FIRST8 = WARREN F. | TITLE = TESTING THE EQUIVALENCE PRINCIPLE IN THE FIELD OF THE EARTH: PARTICLE PHYSICS AT MASSES BELOW 1 μEV? | VOLUME = 42 | PAGES = 3267â3292 | PMID = 10012726 | 95}} | {{val|e=â12}} | Torsion balance |
1999 | Baessler, et al.BAEÃLER > FIRST1 = STEFAN | YEAR = 2001 | JOURNAL = CLASSICAL AND QUANTUM GRAVITY | ISSUE = 13 | DOI = 10.1088/0264-9381/18/13/301 | S2CID = 250758089, BAEÃLER > FIRST1 = STEFAN | FIRST2 = BLAYNE R. | FIRST3 = ERIC G. | FIRST4 = JENS H. | FIRST5 = ULRICH | FIRST6 = H. ERIK | TITLE = IMPROVED TEST OF THE EQUIVALENCE PRINCIPLE FOR GRAVITATIONAL SELF-ENERGY | VOLUME = 83 | PAGE = 3585 | BIBCODE = 1999PHRVL..83.3585B, | {{val | e=â14}} | Torsion balance |
2008 | Schlamminger, et al.SCHLAMMINGER >FIRST1=STEPHAN | FIRST2=KI-YOUNG | FIRST3=TODD A. | FIRST4=JENS H. | FIRST5=ERIC G. | JOURNAL=PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS | ISSUE=4 | DOI=10.1103/PHYSREVLETT.100.041101 | ARXIV=0712.0607 | PAGE=041101, 18653407, | {{val|e=â13}} | Torsion balance |
2017 | MICROSCOPEJOURNAL
, MICROSCOPE Mission: First Results of a Space Test of the Equivalence Principle , JOURNAL, Touboul, P., Métris, G., Rodrigues, M., Bergé, J., Robert, A., Baghi, Q., André, Y., Bedouet, J., Boulanger, D., Bremer, S. and Carle, P., 2022, MICROSCOPE Mission: Final Results of the Test of the Equivalence Principle., Physical Review Letters, 129, 12, 121102, 10.1103/PhysRevLett.129.121102, 36179190, 2209.15487, 2022PhRvL.129l1102T, 252468544,journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.129.121102, , Touboul, Pierre , Métris, Gilles , Rodrigues, Manuel , André, Yves , Baghi, Quentin , Bergé, Joël , Boulanger, Damien , Bremer, Stefanie , Carle, Patrice , Chhun, Ratana , Christophe, Bruno , Cipolla, Valerio , Damour, Thibault , Danto, Pascale , Dittus, Hansjoerg , Fayet, Pierre , Foulon, Bernard , Gageant, Claude , Guidotti, Pierre-Yves , Hagedorn, Daniel , Hardy, Emilie , Huynh, Phuong-Anh , Inchauspe, Henri , Kayser, Patrick , Lala, Stéphanie , Lämmerzahl, Claus , Lebat, Vincent , Leseur, Pierre , Liorzou, Françoise , List, Meike , 29 , Physical Review Letters , 119 , 23 , 2017 , 231101 , 1712.01176 , 10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.231101 , 29286705, 6211162 , 2017PhRvL.119w1101T | 10â15 | Earth orbit |
Tests of the Einstein equivalence principle
In addition to the tests of the weak equivalence principle, the Einstein equivalence principle requires testing the local Lorentz invariance and local positional invariance conditions.Testing local Lorentz invariance amounts to testing special relativity, a theory with vast number of existing tests.{{rp|12}} Nevertheless, attempts to look for quantum gravity require even more precise tests. The modern tests include looking for directional variations in the speed of light (called “clock anisotropy tests“) and new forms of the Michelson-Morley experiment. The anisotropy measures less than one part in 10â20.{{rp|14}}Testing local positional invariance divides in to tests in space and in time.{{rp|17}} Space-based tests use measurements of the gravitational redshift, the classic is the PoundâRebka experiment in the 1960s. The most precise measurement was done in 1976 by flying a hydrogen maser and comparing it to one on the ground. The Global positioning system requires compensation for this redshift to give accurate position values.Time-based tests search for variation of dimensionless constants and mass ratios.JOURNAL, Uzan, Jean-Philippe, 2003-04-07, The fundamental constants and their variation: observational and theoretical status,link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/RevModPhys.75.403, Reviews of Modern Physics, en, 75, 2, 403â455, 10.1103/RevModPhys.75.403, hep-ph/0205340, 2003RvMP...75..403U, 118684485, 0034-6861, For example, Webb et al.JOURNAL, John K., Webb, Michael T., Murphy, Victor V., Flambaum, Vladimir A., Dzuba, John D., Barrow, Chris W., Churchill, Jason X., Prochaska, Arthur M., Wolfe, 10.1103/PhysRevLett.87.091301, Physical Review Letters, Further Evidence for Cosmological Evolution of the Fine Structure Constant, 87, 9, 2001, astro-ph/0012539, 11531558, 2001PhRvL..87i1301W, 091301, 40461557, reported detection of variation (at the 10â5 level) of the fine-structure constant from measurements of distant quasars. Other researchers dispute these findings.JOURNAL, Rocha, G, Trotta, R, Martins, C.J.A.P, Melchiorri, A, Avelino, P.P, Viana, P.T.P, Nov 2003, New constraints on varying α,linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1387647303001532, New Astronomy Reviews, en, 47, 8â10, 863â869, 10.1016/j.newar.2003.07.018, astro-ph/0309205, 2003NewAR..47..863R, 9280269, The present best limits on the variation of the fundamental constants have mainly been set by studying the naturally occurring Oklo natural nuclear fission reactor, where nuclear reactions similar to ones we observe today have been shown to have occurred underground approximately two billion years ago. These reactions are extremely sensitive to the values of the fundamental constants.{| class=“wikitable”weak interaction constant | 1976 | Oklo | 10â11 |
fine-structure constant | 1976 | Oklo | 10â16 |
electronâproton mass ratio | 2002 | quasars | 10â15 |
Tests of the strong equivalence principle
The strong equivalence principle can be tested by 1) finding orbital variations in massive bodies (Sun-Earth-Moon), 2 )variations in the gravitational constant (G) depending on nearby sources of gravity or on motion, or 3) searching for a variation of Newton’s gravitational constant over the life of the universe{{rp|47}}Orbital variations due to gravitational self-energy should cause a “polarization” of solar system orbits called the Nordtvedt effect. This effect has been sensitively tested by the Lunar Laser Ranging Experiment.WEB,funphysics.jpl.nasa.gov/technical/grp/lunar-laser.html, Fundamental Physics of Space â Technical Details, 7 May 2005,funphysics.jpl.nasa.gov/technical/grp/lunar-laser.html," title="web.archive.org/web/20161128185551funphysics.jpl.nasa.gov/technical/grp/lunar-laser.html,">web.archive.org/web/20161128185551funphysics.jpl.nasa.gov/technical/grp/lunar-laser.html, 28 November 2016, dead, JOURNAL, Viswanathan, V, Fienga, A, Minazzoli, O, Bernus, L, Laskar, J, Gastineau, M, The new lunar ephemeris INPOP17a and its application to fundamental physics, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, May 2018, 476, 2, 1877â1888, 10.1093/mnras/sty096, 1710.09167, 2018MNRAS.476.1877V, 119454879, Up to the limit of one part in 1013 there is no Nordtvedt effect.A tight bound on the effect of nearby gravitational fields on the strong equivalence principle comes from modeling the orbits of binary stars and comparing the results to pulsar timing data.{{rp|49}} In 2014, astronomers discovered a stellar triple system containing a millisecond pulsar PSR J0337+1715 and two white dwarfs orbiting it. The system provided them a chance to test the strong equivalence principle in a strong gravitational field with high accuracy.JOURNAL,www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature12917.html#ref7, A millisecond pulsar in a stellar triple system, Scott M., Ransom, etal, Nature, 2014, 10.1038/nature12917, 1401.0535, 2014Natur.505..520R, 505, 7484, 520â524, 24390352, 4468698, JOURNAL, Universality of free fall from the orbital motion of a pulsar in a stellar triple system, Anne M. Archibald, Anne Archibald, etal, Nature, 559, 7712, 73â76, 4 July 2018, 10.1038/s41586-018-0265-1, 29973733, 1807.02059, 2018Natur.559...73A, 49578025, NEWS, Even Phenomenally Dense Neutron Stars Fall like a Feather â Einstein Gets It Right Again,public.nrao.edu/news/neutron-stars-fall/, NRAO, 4 July 2018, Charles Blue, Paul Vosteen, JOURNAL, Voisin, G., Cognard, I., Freire, P. C. C., Wex, N., Guillemot, L., Desvignes, G., Kramer, M., Theureau, G., 2020-06-01, An improved test of the strong equivalence principle with the pulsar in a triple star system,www.aanda.org/articles/aa/abs/2020/06/aa38104-20/aa38104-20.html, Astronomy & Astrophysics, en, 638, A24, 2005.01388, 10.1051/0004-6361/202038104, 2020A&A...638A..24V, 218486794, 0004-6361, Most alternative theories of gravity predict a change in the gravity constant over time. Studies of Big Bang nucleosynthesis, analysis of pulsars, and the lunar laser ranging data have shown that G cannot have varied by more than 10% since the creation of the universe. The best data comes from studies of the ephemeris of Mars, based on three successive NASA missions, Mars Global Surveyor, Mars Odyssey, and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.{{rp|50}}See also
{{cols|colwidth=20em}}- Classical mechanics
- Eötvös experiment
- Einstein’s thought experiments
- Gauge gravitation theory
- General covariance
- Mach’s principle
- Tests of general relativity
- Unsolved problems in astronomy
- Unsolved problems in physics
References
{{reflist|30em}}Further reading
- Dicke, Robert H.; “New Research on Old Gravitation”, Science 129, 3349 (1959). Explains the value of research on gravitation and distinguishes between the strong (later renamed “Einstein“) and weak equivalence principles.
- Dicke, Robert H.; “Mach’s Principle and Equivalence”, in Evidence for gravitational theories: proceedings of course 20 of the International School of Physics “Enrico Fermi”, ed. C. Møller (Academic Press, New York, 1962). This article outlines the approach to precisely testing general relativity advocated by Dicke and pursued from 1959 onwards.
- Misner, Charles W.; Thorne, Kip S.; and Wheeler, John A.; Gravitation, New York: W. H. Freeman and Company, 1973, Chapter 16 discusses the equivalence principle.
- Ohanian, Hans; and Ruffini, Remo; Gravitation and Spacetime 2nd edition, New York: Norton, 1994, {{ISBN|0-393-96501-5}} Chapter 1 discusses the equivalence principle, but incorrectly, according to modern usage, states that the strong equivalence principle is wrong.
- Will, Clifford M.; Theory and experiment in gravitational physics, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1993. This is the standard technical reference for tests of general relativity.
- Will, Clifford M.; Was Einstein Right?: Putting General Relativity to the Test, Basic Books (1993). This is a popular account of tests of general relativity.
- Friedman, Michael; Foundations of Space-Time Theories, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1983. Chapter V discusses the equivalence principle.
External links
- Gravity and the principle of equivalence â The Feynman Lectures on Physics
- www.phy.syr.edu/courses/modules/LIGHTCONE/equivalence.html" title="web.archive.org/web/20080515172036www.phy.syr.edu/courses/modules/LIGHTCONE/equivalence.html">Introducing The Einstein Principle of Equivalence from Syracuse University
- The Equivalence Principle at MathPages
- emis.math.ecnu.edu.cn/journals/LRG/Articles/lrr-2001-4/node3.html" title="web.archive.org/web/20090329031728emis.math.ecnu.edu.cn/journals/LRG/Articles/lrr-2001-4/node3.html">The Einstein Equivalence Principle at Living Reviews on General Relativity
- in Germany have used an atomic interferometer to perform the most accurate ever test of the equivalence principle at the level of atoms...”
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