General Relativity Postulates and History of Publication

In summary: That said, I don't think that the equivalence principle is a GR postulate. It's just a postulate that is required in order to derive GR, but it's not a GR postulate in and of itself.
  • #1
εllipse
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What I've read on special relativity has built it up from its two postulates, the principle of relativity (in the restricted sense) and the constancy of the propagation of light in vacuo. But I haven't seen general relativity's postulates in such a concise listing. I assume the equivalence principle is a postulate required to derive general relativity, as well as the general principle of relativity.. Are these the only two postulates needed for GR? Is the constancy of the propagation of light in vacuo a GR postulate as well, or is it only a postulate of SR?

Also, was there a single paper that defined what the general theory of relativity is? Some things I've read have said GR was published in 1915, while most say it was in 1916, and I've read that earlier works relating to GR were also published. Everyone seems to agree that On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies, published in the Annalen der Physik, was the paper that defined special relativity, but was there such a paper for general relativity, or was it developed through a series of publications?
 
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  • #2
Yes, GR came out a bit in dribs and drabs as Einstein, and also Hilbert, struggled to get the math right. Einstein's "call it done" paper (my term) was in 1915, with the field equations, but there were still questions and both Einstein and Hilbert published important updates in 1916. Even after that the math was still incomplete; the important Bianchi identities weren't recognized (by Emmy Noether) until later, although of course Bianchi himself had stated them years earlier.
 
  • #3
Ray d'Inverno in his 'Introducing Einstein's relativity' has an axiomatical presentation of GR quite good.

Daniel.
 
  • #4
http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/TOCs/c5836.html
has the Table of Contents for "The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Volume 6:
The Berlin Years: Writings, 1914-1917"

Some interesting reading on the History of SR and GR here
http://www.philoscience.unibe.ch/lehre/sommer05/Einstein 1905/Texte/event?id=119 (In case you need help from Google Langauge Tools)

http://www.tc.umn.edu/~janss011/pdf%20files/06-HGR7-031105.pdf
"Déjà Vu All Over Again : How Einstein Found His Field Equations" by Michel Janssen and Jürgen Renn, which is based on http://www.tc.umn.edu/~janss011/pdf%20files/knot.pdf
More at http://www.tc.umn.edu/~janss011/
 
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  • #5
εllipse said:
What I've read on special relativity has built it up from its two postulates, the principle of relativity (in the restricted sense) and the constancy of the propagation of light in vacuo. But I haven't seen general relativity's postulates in such a concise listing. I assume the equivalence principle is a postulate required to derive general relativity, as well as the general principle of relativity.. Are these the only two postulates needed for GR? Is the constancy of the propagation of light in vacuo a GR postulate as well, or is it only a postulate of SR?
As far as I know the two main postulates are the principle of equivalence and the general covariance. I assume that one has to add the local validity of the postulates of special relativity to get the whole picture. However, these postulates do not uniquely determine the resulting theory. For example, based on these postulates Einstein thought till the end of 1915 that the left hand side of the field equations should contain the Ricci tensor only, Ruv = k Tuv instead of Guv = k Tuv. The correspondence with Hilbert convinced him about the incorrectness.
 
  • #6
Yes, the devil is in the detail, the particular form of the field equations was choosen for aesthetic reasons, so it's hard to think of a sensible postulate from which to derive them from.
 

1. What are the two postulates of General Relativity?

The two postulates of General Relativity are the equivalence principle and the principle of covariance. The equivalence principle states that the effects of gravity are indistinguishable from the effects of acceleration. The principle of covariance states that the laws of physics must be the same for all observers, regardless of their frame of reference.

2. Who developed the theory of General Relativity and when was it published?

The theory of General Relativity was developed by Albert Einstein in 1915 and was published in his paper titled "The Field Equations of Gravitation" in 1916.

3. How did the publication of General Relativity impact the scientific community?

The publication of General Relativity had a significant impact on the scientific community, as it revolutionized our understanding of gravity and space-time. It also paved the way for further developments in physics, such as the study of black holes and the Big Bang theory.

4. What are some key experiments that have supported the postulates of General Relativity?

Some key experiments that have supported the postulates of General Relativity include the observation of the bending of starlight during a solar eclipse, the measurement of the precession of Mercury's orbit, and the detection of gravitational waves by the LIGO experiment.

5. Are there any challenges or controversies surrounding the theory of General Relativity?

While General Relativity has been widely accepted and has been confirmed by numerous experiments, there are still some challenges and controversies surrounding the theory. For example, the theory does not currently account for the behavior of matter at a quantum level, and there are ongoing efforts to reconcile it with the theory of quantum mechanics.

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