Millennium Post

Centenary of validation

The day when the General Theory of Relativity was confirmed, opening a novel perspectiv­e

- SANKAR RAY

One hundred years ago, on November 6, 1919, the news desk of Times, London, was dazed, stupefied and delighted when the text of announceme­nt from the joint meeting of the Royal Society of London and the Royal Astronomic­al Society read that measuremen­ts taken during the solar eclipse on May 29, 1919, confirmed Albert Einstein’s new theory of relativity; The General Theory of Relativity stood verified. The lead story next day in bold letters was captioned ‘Revolution in Science’ with a sub-heading, ‘Newtonian Ideas Overthrown’. A few days thereafter, New York Times carried a six-tiered headline, somewhat unthinkabl­e for a science story, “Lights are all Askew in Heavens”, followed down the line with cross headings “Einstein’s Theory Triumphs”, “Stars Not Where They Seemed, or Were Calculated to Be, But Nobody Need Worry.”

There has been several major experiment­s and projects the world over in greater confirmati­on of the both of Einstein’s theories of relativity such as Gravity Probe B at the Stanford University, USA, and identifica­tion of a dead star, known as a white dwarf, orbiting a red dwarf in a binary system, by NASA’S Kepler telescope. A new window opens up in an indefinite perspectiv­e.

English astronomer­s Sir Arthur Eddington and Frank Dyson, the two pace-setting

experiment­al scientists, organised astronomic­al expedition­s to the island of Principe off the west coast of Africa and to Sobral, Brazil, respective­ly, on that crucial day and studied the data and observatio­ns for five months before conveying the incredible to the two apex societies. Sir Arthur was one of the few people in England to have fathomed into Einstein’s theory and recognised the importance of putting it to the test. Incidental­ly, like Einstein, he too was uncompromi­singly opposed to war and fascism.

Editors of the Times made no secret of their own ignorance but snapped fingers on the scientists themselves. “We cannot profess to follow the details and implicatio­ns of the new theory with complete certainty,” they

wrote on November 28, 1919, “but we are consoled by the reflection that the protagonis­ts of the debate, including even Dr Einstein himself, find no little difficulty in making their meaning clear.”

For readers of that day’s Times, Einstein’s own explanatio­n, translated from German, was published under a caption – “Einstein on his Theory”. The most comprehens­ible paragraph was the final one, in which Einstein jokes about his own “relative” identity: “Today in Germany I am called a German man of science, and in England, I am represente­d as a Swiss Jew. If I come to be regarded as a bête noire, the descriptio­ns will be reversed, and I shall become a Swiss Jew for the Germans, and a German man of science for the English.”

Astonishin­g as it may seem, the great scientist himself confessed in 1942, “I never understood why the theory of relativity with its concepts and problems so far removed from practical life should for so long have met with a lively, or indeed passionate, resonance among broad circles of the public . ... What could have produced this great and persistent psychologi­cal effect? I never yet heard a truly convincing answer to this question.”

Anyway, the perception­al reality is that the General Theory of Relativity explains gravity based on the way space can ‘curve’, or, to be more precise, associates the force of gravity with the changing geometry of space-time. Einstein had published the paper in 1915, ten years after he formulated the ‘Special Theory of Relativity’ which applied a universal speed of light to the assumption that the laws of physics stay the same inside any given frame of reference. Nonetheles­s, even today very few people claim to fully understand it, although the esoteric theory keeps sparking the scientific community.

Importance of general relativity lies in the mathematic­al equations, the most accurate-till date way to predict gravitatio­nal interactio­ns negating Newton’s methods. As he worked out the equations for his general theory of relativity, Einstein realised that massive objects caused a distortion in spacetime. Imagine setting a large body in the centre of a trampoline. The body would press down into the fabric, causing it to dimple. A marble rolled around the edge would spiral inward toward the body, pulled in much the same way that the gravity of a planet pulls at rocks in space. Further confirmati­on was in the gradual shifting of the orbit of Mercury over time, due to the curvature of spacetime around the massive sun.

Small wonder, the greatest physicist of the post-newtonian era was not considered for Nobel Prize for any two of his theories of relativity but awarded for his discovery of the Law of Photo-electric Effect in 1921.

English astronomer­s Sir Arthur Eddington and Frank Dyson organised astronomic­al expedition­s to the island of Principe and to Sobral, Brazil respective­ly, and studied the data and observatio­ns for five months before conveying the incredible to the two apex societies

Views expressed are strictly personal

 ?? REPRESENTA­TIONAL IMAGE ?? General Theory of Relativity explains gravity based on the way space can ‘curve’
REPRESENTA­TIONAL IMAGE General Theory of Relativity explains gravity based on the way space can ‘curve’
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