SPACE-TIME by Albert Einstein
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The revolution of modern physics began to be reflected in the Encyclopædia Britannica in the Twelfth Edition (1922), with James (later Sir James) H. Jeans' article on "Relativity." In the Thirteenth Edition (1926) a wholly new topic, "Space-Time," was discussed by the person most qualified in all the world to do so, Albert Einstein. The article is challenging but rewarding. |
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Albert Einstein By courtesy of the Nobelstiftelsen, Stockholm |
SPACE-TIME
All our thoughts and concepts are called up
by sense-experiences and have a meaning only in reference to
these sense-experiences. On the other hand, however, they are
products of the spontaneous activity of our minds; they are
thus in no wise logical consequences of the contents of these
sense-experiences. If, therefore, we wish to grasp the essence
of a complex of abstract notions we must for the one part investigate
the mutual relationships between the concepts and the assertions
made about them; for the other, we must investigate how they
are related to the experiences.
So far as the way is concerned in which concepts are connected
with one another and with the experiences there is no difference
of principle between the concept-systems of science and those
of daily life. The concept-systems of science have grown out
of those of daily life and have been modified and completed
according to the objects and purposes of the science in question.
The more universal a concept is the more frequently it enters
into our thinking; and the more indirect its relation to sense-experience,
the more difficult it is for us to comprehend its meaning; this
is particularly the case with pre-scientific concepts that we
have been accustomed to use since childhood. Consider the concepts
referred to in the words "where," "when," "why," "being," to
the elucidation of which innumerable volumes of philosophy have
been devoted. We fare no better in our speculations than a fish
which should strive to become clear as to what is water.
SPACE
In the present article we are concerned with the meaning of
"where," that is, of space. It appears that there is no quality
contained in our individual primitive sense-experiences that
may be designated as spatial. Rather, what is spatial appears
to be a sort of order of the material objects of experience.
The concept "material object" must therefore be available if
concepts concerning space are to be possible. It is the logically
primary concept. This is easily seen if we analyse the spatial
concepts for example, "next to," "touch," and so forth, that
is, if we strive to become aware of their equivalents in experience.
The concept "object" is a means of taking into account the persistence
in time or the continuity, respectively, of certain groups of
experience-complexes. The existence of objects is thus of a
conceptual nature, and the meaning of the concepts of objects
depends wholly on their being connected (intuitively) with groups
of elementary sense-experiences. This connection is the basis
of the illusion which makes primitive experience appear to inform
us directly about the relation of material bodies (which exist,
after all, only in so far as they are thought).
In the sense thus indicated we have (the indirect) experience
of the contact of two bodies. We need do no more than call attention
to this, as we gain nothing for our present purpose by singling
out the individual experiences to which this assertion alludes.
Many bodies can be brought into permanent contact with one another
in manifold ways. We speak in this sense of the position-relationships
of bodies (Lagenbeziehungen). The general laws of such
position-relationships are essentially the concern of geometry.
This holds, at least, if we do not wish to restrict ourselves
to regarding the propositions that occur in this branch of knowledge
merely as relationships between empty words that have been set
up according to certain principles.
Pre-scientific Thought.--Now, what is the meaning of
the concept "space" which we also encounter in pre-scientific
thought? The concept of space in pre-scientific thought is characterised
by the sentence: "we can think away things but not the space
which they occupy." It is as if, without having had experience
of any sort, we had a concept, nay even a presentation, of space
and as if we ordered our sense-experiences with the help of
this concept, present a priori. On the other hand, space
appears as a physical reality, as a thing which exists independently
of our thought, like material objects. Under the influence of
this view of space the fundamental concepts of geometry: the
point, the straight line, the plane, were even regarded as having
a self-evident character. The fundamental principles that deal
with these configurations were regarded as being necessarily
valid and as having at the same time an objective content. No
scruples were felt about ascribing an objective meaning to such
statements as "three empirically given bodies (practically infinitely
small) lie on one straight line," without demanding a physical
definition for such an assertion. This blind faith in evidence
and in the immediately real meaning of the concepts and propositions
of geometry became uncertain only after non-Euclidean geometry
had been introduced.
Reference to the Earth.--If we start from the view that
all spatial concepts are related to contact-experiences of solid
bodies, it is easy to understand how the concept "space" originated,
namely, how a thing independent of bodies and yet embodying
their position-possibilities (Lagerungsmöglichkeiten)
was posited. If we have a system of bodies in contact and at
rest relatively to one another, some can be replaced by others.
This property of allowing substitution is interpreted as "available
space." Space denotes the property in virtue of which rigid
bodies can occupy different positions. The view that space is
something with a unity of its own is perhaps due to the circumstance
that in pre-scientific thought all positions of bodies were
referred to one body (reference body), namely the earth. In
scientific thought the earth is represented by the co-ordinate
system. The assertion that it would be possible to place an
unlimited number of bodies next to one another denotes that
space is infinite. In pre-scientific thought the concepts "space"
and "time" and "body of reference" are scarcely differentiated
at all. A place or point in space is always taken to mean a
material point on a body of reference.
Euclidean Geometry.--If we consider Euclidean geometry
we clearly discern that it refers to the laws regulating the
positions of rigid bodies. It turns to account the ingenious
thought of tracing back all relations concerning bodies and
their relative positions to the very simple concept "distance"
(Strecke). Distance denotes a rigid body on which two
material points (marks) have been specified. The concept of
the equality of distances (and angles) refers to experiments
involving coincidences; the same remarks apply to the theorems
on congruence. Now, Euclidean geometry, in the form in which
it has been handed down to us from Euclid, uses the fundamental
concepts "straight line" and "plane" which do not appear to
correspond, or at any rate, not so directly, with experiences
concerning the position of rigid bodies. On this it must be
remarked that the concept of the straight line may be reduced
to that of the distance.
Moreover, geometricians were less concerned with bringing out
the relation of their fundamental concepts to experience than
with deducing logically the geometrical propositions from a
few axioms enunciated at the outset.
A hint
of this is contained in the theorem: "the straight line is the
shortest connection between two points." This theorem served
well as a definition of the straight line, although the definition
played no part in the logical texture of the deductions.
Let us outline briefly how perhaps the basis of Euclidean geometry
may be gained from the concept of distance.
We start from the equality of distances (axiom of the equality
of distances). Suppose that of two unequal distances one is
always greater than the other. The same axioms are to hold for
the inequality of distances as hold for the inequality of numbers.
Three distances AB
, BC
, CA
may, if CA
be suitably chosen, have their marks BB
, CC
, AA
superposed on one another in such a way that a triangle ABC
results. The distance CA
has an upper limit for which this construction is still just
possible. The points A, (BB') and C then lie in a "straight
line" (definition). This leads to the concepts: producing a
distance by an amount equal to itself; dividing a distance into
equal parts; expressing a distance in terms of a number by means
of a measuring-rod (definition of the space-interval between
two points).
When the concept of the interval between two points or the
length of a distance has been gained in this way we require
only the following axiom (Pythagoras' theorem) in order to arrive
at Euclidean geometry analytically.
To every point of space (body of reference) three numbers (co-ordinates)
x, y, z may be assigned--and conversely--in such a way that
for each pair of points A (x
, y
, z
) and B (x
,
y
, z
) the theorem holds:
measure-number
AB = {sqroot (x
- x
)
+ (y
-
y
)
+ (z
-
z
)
}
All further concepts and propositions of Euclidean geometry
can then be built up purely logically on this basis, in particular
also the propositions about the straight line and the plane.
These remarks are not, of course, intended to replace the strictly
axiomatic construction of Euclidean geometry. We merely wish
to indicate plausibly how all conceptions of geometry may be
traced back to that of distance. We might equally well have
epitomised the whole basis of Euclidean geometry in the last
theorem above. The relation to the foundations of experience
would then be furnished by means of a supplementary theorem.
The co-ordinate may and must be chosen so that two pairs
of points separated by equal intervals, as calculated by the
help of Pythagoras' theorem, may be made to coincide with one
and the same suitably chosen distance (on a solid).
The concepts and propositions of Euclidean geometry may be
derived from Pythagoras' proposition without the introduction
of rigid bodies; but these concepts and propositions would not
then have contents that could be tested. They are not "true"
propositions but only logically correct propositions of purely
formal content.
Difficulties.--A serious difficulty is encountered in
the above represented interpretation of geometry in that the
rigid body of experience does not correspond exactly with
the geometrical body. In stating this I am thinking less of
the fact that there are no absolutely definite marks than that
temperature, pressure and other circumstances modify the laws
relating to position. It is also to be recollected that the
structural constituents of matter (such as atom and electron,
q.v.) assumed by physics are not in principle commensurate
with rigid bodies, but that nevertheless the concepts of geometry
are applied to them and to their parts. For this reason consistent
thinkers have been disinclined to allow real contents of facts
(reale Tatsachenbestände) to correspond to geometry
alone. They considered it preferable to allow the content of
experience (Erfahrungsbestände) to correspond to
geometry and physics conjointly.
This view is certainly less open to attack than the one represented
above; as opposed to the atomic theory it is the only one that
can be consistently carried through. Nevertheless, in the opinion
of the author it would not be advisable to give up the first
view, from which geometry derives its origin. This connection
is essentially founded on the belief that the ideal rigid body
is an abstraction that is well rooted in the laws of nature.
Foundations of Geometry.--We come now to the question:
what is a priori certain or necessary, respectively in
geometry (doctrine of space) or its foundations? Formerly we
thought everything--yes, everything; nowadays we think--nothing.
Already the distance-concept is logically arbitrary; there need
be no things that correspond to it, even approximately. Something
similar may be said of the concepts straight line, plane, of
three-dimensionality and of the validity of Pythagoras' theorem.
Nay, even the continuum-doctrine is in no wise given with the
nature of human thought, so that from the epistemological point
of view no greater authority attaches to the purely topological
relations than to the others.
Earlier Physical Concepts.--We have yet to deal with
those modifications in the space-concept, which have accompanied
the advent of the theory of relativity. For this purpose we
must consider the space-concept of the earlier physics from
a point of view different from that above. If we apply the theorem
of Pythagoras to infinitely near points, it reads
ds
= dx
+ dy
+
dz
where ds denotes the measurable interval between them. For an
empirically-given ds the co-ordinate system is not yet fully
determined for every combination of points by this equation.
Besides being translated, a co-ordinate system may also be rotated.
This signifies analytically: the relations of Euclidean geometry
are covariant with respect to linear orthogonal transformations
of the co-ordinates.
Change
of direction of the co-ordinate axes while their orthogonality
is preserved.
In applying Euclidean geometry to pre-relativistic mechanics
a further indeterminateness enters through the choice of the
co-ordinate system: the state of motion of the co-ordinate system
is arbitrary to a certain degree, namely, in that substitutions
of the co-ordinates of the form
x' = x - vt
y' = y
z' = z
also appear possible. On the other hand, earlier mechanics did
not allow co-ordinate systems to be applied of which the states
of motion were different from those expressed in these equations.
In this sense we speak of "inertial systems." In these favoured-inertial
systems we are confronted with a new property of space so far
as geometrical relations are concerned. Regarded more accurately,
this is not a property of space alone but of the four-dimensional
continuum consisting of time and space conjointly.
Appearance of Time.--At this point time enters explicitly
into our discussion for the first time. In their applications
space (place) and time always occur together. Every event that
happens in the world is determined by the space-co-ordinates
x, y, z, and the time-co-ordinate t. Thus the physical description
was four-dimensional right from the beginning. But this four-dimensional
continuum seemed to resolve itself into the three-dimensional
continuum of space and the one-dimensional continuum of time.
This apparent resolution owed its origin to the illusion that
the meaning of the concept "simultaneity" is self-evident, and
this illusion arises from the fact that we receive news of near
events almost instantaneously owing to the agency of light.
This faith in the absolute significance of simultaneity was
destroyed by the law regulating the propagation of light in
empty space or, respectively, by the Maxwell-Lorentz electrodynamics.
Two infinitely near points can be connected by means of a light-signal
if the relation
ds
= c
dt
- dx
- dy
-
dz
= 0
holds for them. It further follows that ds has a value which,
for arbitrarily chosen infinitely near space-time points, is
independent of the particular inertial system selected. In agreement
with this we find that for passing from one inertial system
to another, linear equations of transformation hold which do
not in general leave the time-values of the events unchanged.
It thus became manifest that the four-dimensional continuum
of space cannot be split up into a time-continuum and a space-continuum
except in an arbitrary way. This invariant quantity ds may be
measured by means of measuring-rods and clocks.
Four-Dimensional Geometry.--On the invariant ds a four-dimensional
geometry may be built up which is in a large measure analogous
to Euclidean geometry in three dimensions. In this way physics
becomes a sort of statics in a four-dimensional continuum. Apart
from the difference in the number of dimensions the latter continuum
is distinguished from that of Euclidean geometry in that ds
may be greater or less than zero. Corresponding to this we
differentiate between time-like and space-like line-elements.
The boundary between them is marked out by the element of the
"light-cone" ds
= 0 which starts out from every point. If we consider only
elements which belong to the same time-value, we have
- ds
=
dx
+ dy
+ dz
These elements ds may have real counterparts in distances at
rest and, as before, Euclidean geometry holds for these elements.
Effect of Relativity, Special and General.--This is
the modification which the doctrine of space and time has undergone
through the restricted theory of relativity. The doctrine of
space has been still further modified by the general theory
of relativity, because this theory denies that the three-dimensional
spatial section of the space-time continuum is Euclidean in
character. Therefore it asserts that Euclidean geometry does
not hold for the relative positions of bodies that are continuously
in contact.
For the empirical law of the equality of inertial and gravitational
mass led us to interpret the state of the continuum, in so far
as it manifests itself with reference to a non-inertial system,
as a gravitational field and to treat non-inertial systems as
equivalent to inertial systems. Referred to such a system, which
is connected with the inertial system by a non-linear transformation
of the co-ordinates, the metrical invariant ds
assumes the general form:--
ds
=

g{sub 
}dx
dx
where the g{sub 
}'s are functions of the co-ordinates and where the sum
is to be taken over the indices for all combinations 11, 12,
. . . 44. The variability of the g{sub
}'s is equivalent
to the existence of a gravitational field. If the gravitational
field is sufficiently general it is not possible at all to find
an inertial system, that is, a co-ordinate system with reference
to which ds
may be expressed in the simple form given above:--
ds
= c
dt
- dx
- dy
-
dz
But in this case, too, there is in the infinitesimal neighbourhood
of a space-time point a local system of reference for which
the last-mentioned simple form for ds holds.
This state of the facts leads to a type of geometry which Riemann's
genius created more than half a century before the advent of
the general theory of relativity of which Riemann divined the
high importance for physics.
Riemann's Geometry.--Riemann's geometry of an n-dimensional
space bears the same relation to Euclidean geometry of an n-dimensional
space as the general geometry of curved surfaces bears to the
geometry of the plane. For the infinitesimal neighbourhood of
a point on a curved surface there is a local co-ordinate system
in which the distance ds between two infinitely near points
is given by the equation
ds
= dx
+ dy
For any arbitrary (Gaussian) co-ordinate-system, however, an expression of the form
ds
= g{sub
11}dx
+
2g{sub 12}dx
dx
+ g{sub
22}dx
holds in a finite region of the curved surface. If the g{sub

}'s are given as functions of x
and x
the surface is then fully determined geometrically. For from
this formula we can calculate for every combination of two infinitely
near points on the surface the length ds of the minute rod connecting
them; and with the help of this formula all networks that can
be constructed on the surface with these little rods can be
calculated. In particular, the "curvature" at every point of
the surface can be calculated; this is the quantity that expresses
to what extent and in what way the laws regulating the positions
of the minute rods in the immediate vicinity of the point under
consideration deviate from those of the geometry of the plane.
This theory of surfaces by Gauss has been extended by Riemann
to continua of any arbitrary number of dimensions and has thus
paved the way for the general theory of relativity. For it was
shown above that corresponding to two infinitely near space-time
points there is a number ds which can be obtained by measurement
with rigid measuring-rods and clocks (in the case of time-like
elements, indeed, with a clock alone). This quantity occurs
in the mathematical theory in place of the length of the minute
rods in three-dimensional geometry. The curves for which
ds has stationary values determine the paths of material points
and rays of light in the gravitational field, and the "curvature"
of space is dependent on the matter distributed over space.
Just as in Euclidean geometry the space-concept refers to the
position-possibilities of rigid bodies, so in the general theory
of relativity the space-time-concept refers to the behaviour
of rigid bodies and clocks. But the space-time-continuum differs
from the space-continuum in that the laws regulating the behaviour
of these objects (clocks and measuring-rods) depend on where
they happen to be. The continuum (or the quantities that describe
it) enters explicitly into the laws of nature, and conversely
these properties of the continuum are determined by physical
factors. The relations that connect space and time can no longer
be kept distinct from physics proper.
Nothing certain is known of what the properties of the space-time-continuum
may be as a whole. Through the general theory of relativity,
however, the view that the continuum is infinite in its time-like
extent but finite in its space-like extent has gained in probability.
TIME
The physical time-concept answers to the time-concept of the
extra-scientific mind. Now, the latter has its root in the time-order
of the experiences of the individual, and this order we must
accept as something primarily given.
I experience the moment "now," or, expressed more accurately,
the present sense-experience (Sinnen-Erlebnis) combined
with the recollection of (earlier) sense-experiences. That is
why the sense-experiences seem to form a series, namely the
time-series indicated by "earlier" and "later." The experience-series
is thought of as a one-dimensional continuum. Experience-series
can repeat themselves and can then be recognised. They can also
be repeated inexactly, wherein some events are replaced by others
without the character of the repetition becoming lost for us.
In this way we form the time-concept as a one-dimensional frame
which can be filled in by experiences in various ways. The same
series of experiences answer to the same subjective time-intervals.
The transition from this "subjective" time (Ich-Zeit)
to the time-concept of pre-scientific thought is connected with
the formation of the idea that there is a real external world
independent of the subject. In this sense the (objective) event
is made to correspond with the subjective experience. In the
same sense there is attributed to the "subjective" time of the
experience a "time" of the corresponding "objective" event.
In contrast with experiences external events and their order
in time claim validity for all subjects.
This process of objectification would encounter no difficulties
were the time-order of the experiences corresponding to a series
of external events the same for all individuals. In the case
of the immediate visual perceptions of our daily lives, this
correspondence is exact. That is why the idea that there is
an objective time-order became established to an extraordinary
extent. In working out the idea of an objective world of external
events in greater detail, it was found necessary to make events
and experiences depend on each other in a more complicated way.
This was at first done by means of rules and modes of thought
instinctively gained, in which the conception of space plays
a particularly prominent part. This process of refinement leads
ultimately to natural science.
The measurement of time is effected by means of clocks. A clock
is a thing which automatically passes in succession through
a (practically) equal series of events (period). The number
of periods (clock-time) elapsed serves as a measure of time.
The meaning of this definition is at once clear if the event
occurs in the immediate vicinity of the clock in space; for
all observers then observe the same clock-time simultaneously
with the event (by means of the eye) independently of their
position. Until the theory of relativity was propounded it was
assumed that the conception of simultaneity had an absolute
objective meaning also for events separated in space.
This assumption was demolished by the discovery of the law
of propagation of light. For if the velocity of light in empty
space is to be a quantity that is independent of the choice
(or, respectively, of the state of motion) of the inertial system
to which it is referred, no absolute meaning can be assigned
to the conception of the simultaneity of events that occur at
points separated by a distance in space. Rather, a special time
must be allocated to every inertial system. If no co-ordinate
system (inertial system) is used as a basis of reference there
is no sense in asserting that events at different points in
space occur simultaneously. It is in consequence of this that
space and time are welded together into a uniform four-dimensional
continuum.
(A.E.)
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