June
1905
Einstein sent
the Annalen der Physik a paper on electromagnetism and
motion. Since the time of Galileo and Newton , physicists had known that
laboratory measurements of mechanical processes could
never show any difference between an apparatus at rest
and an apparatus moving at constant speed in a straight
line. Objects behave the same way on a uniformly moving
ship as on a ship at the dock; this is called the
Principle of Relativity. But according to the
electromagnetic theory, developed by Maxwell and refined by Lorentz, light should not
obey this principle. Their electromagnetic theory
predicted that measurements on the velocity of light
would show the effects of motion. Yet no such effect had
been detected in any of the ingenious and delicate
experiments that physicists had devised: the velocity of
light did not vary.
Einstein had
long been convinced that the Principle of Relativity must
apply to all phenomena, mechanical or not. Now he found a
way to show that this principle was compatible with
electromagnetic theory after all. As Einstein later
remarked, reconciling these seemingly incompatible ideas
required "only" a new and more careful
consideration of the concept of time. His new theory,
later called the special theory of relativity, was based
on a novel analysis of space and time -- an analysis so
clear and revealing that it can be understood by
beginning science students.
September
1905
Einstein
reported a remarkable consequence of his special theory
of relativity: if a body emits a certain amount of
energy, then the mass of that body must decrease by a
proportionate amount. Meanwhile he wrote a friend, "The
relativity principle in connection with the Maxwell equations demands that the mass is a
direct measure for the energy contained in bodies; light
transfers mass... This thought is amusing and infectious,
but I cannot possibly know whether the good Lord does not
laugh at it and has led me up the garden path."
Einstein and many others were soon convinced of its truth.
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The old clock tower and an electrified trolley in Bern.
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