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Chapter 1

Special Relativity: Setting the Stage

For a superficial observer, scientific truth is beyond

the possibility of doubt; the logic of science is infallible, and if the scientists are sometimes mistaken, this is only from their mistaking its rule. . .

Henri Poincaré

1.1 Introduction

General Relativity and Special Relativity are both credited to Einstein yet, while for the former he has an absolute credit beyond any possible doubt, the latter, notwithstanding Einstein’s essential role in its formulation, appears to spring from the work of several distinguished actors. As a matter of fact, Special Relativity was coming to ripeness in the scientific community just at the time it was formulated by Einstein and, although it is always risky to make such statements, I think that it might have been introduced by someone else, also in the case Einstein did not publish it in 1905. The main difference between these two theoretical developments, that are historically separated by a decade of studies, resides in the following. Special Relativity grew from the need to reconcile the theory with some experimental facts, namely the independency of light-speed from the state of motion of the observer, which was revealed by the Michelson and Morley experiment, and the invariance of Maxwell equations with respect to transformations different from those of Galileo, that was discovered by Lorentz. On the contrary General Relativity was not motivated by any new experimental data, rather it sprang from a pure logical need, that of formulating the laws of physics in a frame independent way, equally good for any observer, irrespectively of his state of motion. The awareness of such a logical need was probably present in Einstein’s mind before 1905, yet it is doubtful that it might have developed into a concrete research programme without the intermediate step of Special Relativity. Indeed, once Lorentz group replaced Galilei group on the throne of inertial frames, the logical need of liberating physics from privileged observers was accompanied by another urgent clash: the Lorentz non-invariance of Newton’s theory of gravitation.

To solve this problem what was required was a substantial mathematical upgrading of early XX century Physics. Differential geometry and the theory of metrics and connections had parallelly developed in Mathematics, starting with the 1828

P.G. Frè, Gravity, a Geometrical Course, DOI 10.1007/978-94-007-5361-7_1,

1

© Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013

 

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