Conflict between electrodynamics and classical relativity?

In summary: This is what I meant. Classical E&M doesn't predict that c is constant regardless of the emitter's speed, it only predicts that Maxwell's laws still hold in all frames, assuming the E&M equations are invariant.
  • #1
michael879
698
7
Id just like to start by saying I believe relativity is 100% at least in macroscopic terms. However, I'm having trouble seeing what the conflict was between electrodynamics and relativity.

Electrodynamics in a nutshell states that light goes a constant c. relativity states that physical laws are the same in every inertial reference frame. These don't necessarily conflict do they? Yes, if light went c with respect to some global reference frame, they would conflict. However, what if the speed of light was just c with respect to the emitter's reference frame? Wouldn't that fit both theories? It would be like a particle that is always emitted at the same speed relative to the emitter. Is there anything I'm missing that is fundamentally wrong with that?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Some thoughts to test your suggestion:

What about if c was the same in all reference frames, as relativity states? Is there a conflict then?

If the emitter is going at c and emits a photon in the forward direction, how fast will it be going?
 
  • #3
Didn't know that there was or ever has been a conflict between Relativity and Electrodynamics. Historically the conflict was between Newtonian Physics and Electrodynamics. The conflict arises in 1867 when Maxwell expressed the relationships between the fundamental electrical laws in form of a wave equation. This was when the speed of electromagnetic waves was found to be a fundamental constant. The idea of a fixed speed of an electromagnetic wave violated the idea of addition of speeds. Einstein, developed Relativity to reconnect Newtonian Mechanics to Electrodynamics. In doing so he showed that Newtonian physics was a approximation to Special Relativity.
 
  • #4
michael879 said:
However, what if the speed of light was just c with respect to the emitter's reference frame?
Classical E&M predicts that light travels at c regardless of the velocity of the emitter, so if in my frame an emitter traveling at 0.5c sends out an electromagnetic wave which moves at 1.5c in my frame, Maxwell's laws don't work in my frame.
 
  • #5
JesseM said:
Classical E&M predicts that light travels at c regardless of the velocity of the emitter, so if in my frame an emitter traveling at 0.5c sends out an electromagnetic wave which moves at 1.5c in my frame, Maxwell's laws don't work in my frame.

ok first, I was referring to classical relativity, not special relativity.

second, does E&M actually predict that c is constant regardless of the emitters speed? If that's true it answers my question, thanks.
 
  • #6
michael879 said:
ok first, I was referring to classical relativity, not special relativity.
What do you mean by classical relativity? Galilean relativity?
michael879 said:
second, does E&M actually predict that c is constant regardless of the emitters speed? If that's true it answers my question, thanks.
It predicts that electromagnetic waves always move at c regardless of the emitter's speed, yes.
 
  • #7
JesseM said :
It predicts that electromagnetic waves always move at c regardless of the emitter's speed
Maxwell predicts the speed of light to be
[tex]c = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\mu_0\epsilon_0}}[/tex]

but I don't think that the constancy of c regardless of the emitter/receiver relative velocity can be deduced from this. That idea came with SR. If you apply Gallilean relativity to EM, you get discontinous field lines and other nasties. That was one of Einstein's motivations for SR.
 
  • #8
Mentz114 said:
but I don't think that the constancy of c regardless of the emitter/receiver relative velocity can be deduced from this. That idea came with SR. If you apply Gallilean relativity to EM, you get discontinous field lines and other nasties. That was one of Einstein's motivations for SR.
It has nothing to do with applying Galilean relativity. If you pick a single frame where Maxwell's laws hold, you can analyze the behavior of an emitter which is moving in that frame--there's no need to consider any other frames, like the rest frame of the emitter.
 
  • #9
michael879 said:
...does E&M actually predict that c is constant regardless of the emitters speed? If that's true it answers my question, thanks.

Only if you add the requirement that the E&M equations be invariant among inertial frames. If classical E&M had predicted that c was independent of the emitter, Michelson and Morley may not have been surprised by their result.
 
  • #10
Posted by JesseM :
It has nothing to do with applying Galilean relativity. If you pick a single frame where Maxwell's laws hold, you can analyze the behavior of an emitter which is moving in that frame--there's no need to consider any other frames, like the rest frame of the emitter.
I'm not sure I understand this - but it does nothing to change my view. If there is an emitter moving relative to a receiver - one has to apply some rule of velocity addition, which is where the problems start.

Only if you add the requirement that the E&M equations be invariant among inertial frames. If classical E&M had predicted that c was independent of the emitter, Michelson and Morley may not have been surprised by their result.
Yes, thank you CB.
 
  • #11
Mentz114 said:
I'm not sure I understand this - but it does nothing to change my view. If there is an emitter moving relative to a receiver - one has to apply some rule of velocity addition, which is where the problems start.
No, you don't need velocity addition! You just have the object's velocity in your frame, and you apply Maxwell's laws to it--Maxwell's laws are certainly capable of dealing with objects that have a nonzero velocity in the frame you're using, the entire phenomenon of magnetism is based on moving charge after all!
 
  • #12
country boy said:
Only if you add the requirement that the E&M equations be invariant among inertial frames. If classical E&M had predicted that c was independent of the emitter, Michelson and Morley may not have been surprised by their result.
Classical E&M does predict that c is independent of the emitter, but only in a frame where Maxwell's laws hold exactly. Michelson and Morley (along with other physicists at the time) thought Maxwell's laws would only hold exactly in the rest frame of the aether, and that in other frames they would have to be modified by a Galilei transformation. M&M thought that the Earth would have a different velocity relative to the aether at different points in its orbit, so if they repeated their interferometer experiment at different times of year they would see a deviation from Maxwell's laws at some point, in the form of light traveling at different speeds in different directions.
 
Last edited:
  • #13
JesseM said:
No, you don't need velocity addition! You just have the object's velocity in your frame, and you apply Maxwell's laws to it--Maxwell's laws are certainly capable of dealing with objects that have a nonzero velocity in the frame you're using, the entire phenomenon of magnetism is based on moving charge after all!

Even so, I would take the velocity c to be wrt the emitter. Pre SR I would then apply a velocity addition law. I do not agree that the first principle of SR can be deduced from Maxwell's equations.
 
  • #14
Mentz114 said:
Even so, I would take the velocity c to be wrt the emitter.
But that would be wrong. Just as the theory of vibrations in the air predicts that all sound waves move at the speed of sound as measured in the rest frame of the air, regardless of the velocity of the emitter, so Maxwell's laws predict that all electromagnetic waves move at c in the frame where Maxwell's laws hold--there are no valid solutions to Maxwell's equations that describe a traveling wave moving at any other speed, and an oscillating charge will produce waves traveling at c regardless of its own average velocity. This is why people imagined that electromagnetic waves were vibrations in a "luminiferous aether", analogous to sound waves which are vibrations in the air, and they imagined that Maxwell's laws would only hold exactly in the rest frame of the aether, just as sound waves only move at exactly the same speed in all directions in the rest frame of the air.

If you don't believe me, look at this page:
This was the conflict that vexed the young Einstein (age 16) when he was attending "prep school" in Aarau, Switzerland in 1895, preparing to re-take the entrance examination at the Zurich Polytechnic. Although he was deficient in the cultural subjects, he already knew enough mathematics and physics to realize that Maxwell's equations don't support the existence of a free wave at any speed other than c, which should be a fixed constant of nature according to the classical principle of relativity. But to admit an invariant speed seemed impossible to reconcile with the classical transformation rules.
This page also gives some mathematical detail to show that if you have a frame where Maxwell's laws hold and you do a Galilei transform on it, Maxwell's laws will be violated in the new frame (look at the section 'Proof of Galilean non-invariance').
Mentz114 said:
Pre SR I would then apply a velocity addition law. I do not agree that the first principle of SR can be deduced from Maxwell's equations.
I didn't say they could, although SR can be deduced from the assumption that all laws of physics, including Maxwell's laws, must obey the same equations in every inertial frame.
 
Last edited:
  • #15
Thanks, JesseM. I will study this.
[some time later ...]
I've done a simple calculation. Writing the equation of a plane wave traveling in the x-direction with wave number k and phase velocity s = w/k ( w for omega) thus

[tex] \phi = Ae^{i(kx-\omega t)}[/tex]

Now I make a Gallilean boost x -> x' = x + vt to a frame moving at speed v in the x direction. Substituting x' for x in the wave equation immediately gives the Doppler change in frequency and a phase velocity s' = s - v.

Does this mean the speed of the wave is now measured as a different value, despite always being emitted at a constant speed wrt the medium ?
 
Last edited:
  • #16
Mentz114 said:
Thanks, JesseM. I will study this.
[some time later ...]
I've done a simple calculation. Writing the equation of a plane wave traveling in the x-direction with wave number k and phase velocity s = w/k ( w for omega) thus

[tex] \phi = Ae^{i(kx-\omega t)}[/tex]

Now I make a Gallilean boost x -> x' = x + vt to a frame moving at speed v in the x direction. Substituting x' for x in the wave equation immediately gives the Doppler change in frequency and a phase velocity s' = s - v.

Does this mean the speed of the wave is now measured as a different value, despite always being emitted at a constant speed wrt the medium ?
If you make a Galilean boost, naturally the velocity of the wave will change by v. But Maxwell's laws will no longer hold in the frame you've boosted to, as explained in the second link from my last post. If you want to know what Maxwell's laws predict about a moving emitter, you pick a frame where Maxwell's laws hold, and see what they predict about the waves sent out by an emitter which is moving in that frame, there's no need for any sort of boost.

Do you understand that in general, when calculating the behavior of moving objects, there is no need to use multiple frames? For example, would you agree that when calculating the results of an elastic collision in classical mechanics, you can use the equations of classical mechanics to find the outcome in a frame where both objects are moving, there's no need to transform into either object's rest frame?
 
  • #17
OK, at the request of some of the posters, I've split this thread into two parts, since it took off in a different direction. See "relative speed of a photon - mk2" for the split-off part.
 
Last edited:

1. What is the conflict between electrodynamics and classical relativity?

The conflict between electrodynamics and classical relativity refers to the fact that both theories make different predictions about the behavior of moving charged particles. While classical relativity predicts that the mass of a charged particle will increase as its velocity approaches the speed of light, electrodynamics predicts that the mass will remain constant. This discrepancy raises questions about the validity of both theories and the need for a more comprehensive understanding of the laws of physics.

2. How does the conflict between electrodynamics and classical relativity impact our understanding of the universe?

The conflict between these two theories has significant implications for our understanding of the fundamental laws of the universe. It challenges our current understanding of space, time, and the nature of matter and energy. It also highlights the need for a unified theory that can reconcile these conflicting predictions and provide a more comprehensive explanation of the universe.

3. What experiments have been conducted to investigate the conflict between electrodynamics and classical relativity?

Several experiments have been conducted to test the predictions of both theories and resolve the conflict between them. One notable example is the Michelson-Morley experiment, which aimed to measure the speed of light in different directions to detect any potential differences, as predicted by classical relativity. Other experiments have also been conducted using high-energy particle accelerators to study the behavior of charged particles at high speeds.

4. Have any solutions been proposed to reconcile the conflict between electrodynamics and classical relativity?

Several theoretical solutions have been proposed to reconcile the conflict between these two theories. One approach is to modify the equations of electrodynamics to account for the mass increase of charged particles at high speeds. Another solution is to incorporate the principles of quantum mechanics into relativity, resulting in a theory known as quantum field theory. However, none of these proposed solutions have been universally accepted, and the conflict remains a topic of ongoing research and discussion in the scientific community.

5. How does the conflict between electrodynamics and classical relativity impact the development of new technologies?

The conflict between these two theories has significant implications for the development of new technologies. For example, the predictions of classical relativity are fundamental to the functioning of GPS satellites, which rely on precise measurements of the speed of light. If the predictions of electrodynamics were to be proven correct, it could potentially lead to the need for significant adjustments to these technologies. Additionally, resolving this conflict could also open up new possibilities for technological advancements and scientific discoveries.

Similar threads

  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
57
Views
4K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
16
Views
650
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
20
Views
791
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
17
Views
558
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
5
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
8
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
25
Views
852
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
6
Views
250
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
11
Views
994
Back
Top