Light Behaviour: Does Gravity Accelerate Light?

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In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of light bending in the presence of massive bodies and whether this can be considered as acceleration. It is concluded that light follows a geodesic and does not truly accelerate, but the effects of spacetime curvature can be seen as a change in velocity. The conversation also touches on the concept of gravitational redshift and blueshift, as well as the role of general relativity in understanding acceleration. The conversation ends with a discussion about an experiment that measured the blue shift of light in a gravitational field, which was seen as a test of both special and general relativity.
  • #1
Nuclear on the Rocks
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Hello! I am somewhat a layman, but i have a question.When we talk of bodies with large gravities bending light, are they accelerating it?
 
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  • #2
No, if I understand the situation properly. The light is still following what to it is a straight line, so there is no acceleration imparted to it. Gravity bends the space itself, but the light has no way of 'knowing' that.
 
  • #3
The Speed remains constant, but the apparent direction changes, therefore this is a change in velocity which implies an acceleration.
 
  • #4
I think much of the question is a matter of semantics - what does one mean by "accelerating" the light?

I think that I generally prefer the explanation that light travels along a geodesic, though, for the following reason. If we say that light "accelerates", how do we assign a number to this acceleration to quanfity it?

We can talk about the proper acceleration of physical objects by looking at the 4-acceleration, but I don't see how to make this approach work for light. (For instance, if we try to take the limit of a 4-velocity of a massive object as it approaches c - it doesn't have a limit, so we don't even have a 4-velocity for light, much less a 4-acceleration).

Maybe there is some way around this difficulty, but I don't know what it is, and I don't recall reading anything on the topic. It might be possible to replace proper time with some affine parameter, for instance. So on the whole, I'd rather stick with saying that light follows a geodesic, it seems the simplest approach.
 
  • #5
What some call "bending of light" is simply an effect of the curvature of spacetime (e.g geodesic convergence and divergence). In general relativity a photon in a gravitational field obviously does not accelerate for it would completely invalidate the foundations of the theory.

Pervect said:
It might be possible to replace proper time with some affine parameter, for instance.
Of course that is possible. But then one ought to explain the physical meaning of that parameterization as well, otherwise it is justs playing mathematics with GR.
 
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  • #6
Isn't the gravitational red/blue shift rather like the light having been 'accelerated' or 'decelerated' ?

Question - if light reaches me from a source accelerating away from me, is there a frequency shift component for instantaneous velocity, and a separate contribution from the acceleration ?

I suppose I should go and look again at the Rindler space-time.
 
  • #7
Mentz114 said:
Isn't the gravitational red/blue shift rather like the light having been 'accelerated' or 'decelerated' ?
What is called gravitational red- and blueshift of photons are the effects of the curvature of spacetime. The photon itself undergoes no changes whatsoever.

The curvature of spacetime determines the ratio between the emitter's and absorber's measurement of the frequency of a photon.

Mentz114 said:
I suppose I should go and look again at the Rindler space-time.
The Ridler chart is very interesting but notice that Minkowski spacetime only deals with the kinematics of acceleration. A more complete understanding of acceleration can only be obtained in general relativity, where the kinematics, if we even can speak of kinematics here, is simply a reflection of the dynamics.

Afterall: In the general theory of relativity the doctrine of space and time, or kinematics, no longer figures as a fundamental independent of the rest of physics. The geometrical behaviour of bodies and the motion of clocks rather depend on gravitational fields which in their turn are produced by matter.
 
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  • #8
Looking at it from a semi-classical standpoint. Could you think of it like this?

E(photon) = p*c .. So gravity imparts a force based off of this photon's relativistic momentum. The gravitation force of course being something along the lines of centripetal force (i.e acceleration perpindicular to the direction of motion of the photon).
 
  • #9
What is called gravitational red- and blueshift of photons are the effects of the curvature of spacetime. The photon itself undergoes no changes whatsoever.

MJ, this puzzles me. In the Harvard tower experiment, light was beamed downwards i.e. it 'fell', and the blue shift was very precisely measured.
The gain in the light energy due to the blue shift was calculated to be exactly ( within the exp. error) the amount that a massive body would have gained by falling. They did it the other way around also and got the same agreement.

Was this a test of SR or GR ?

The experiment was by Pound and Snider in 1965.

A description is here -
http://www.mth.uct.ac.za/omei/gr/chap5/node2.html
 
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  • #10
Mentz114 said:
MJ, this puzzles me. In the Chicago tower experiment, light was beamed downwards i.e. it 'fell', and the blue shift was very precisely measured.
The gain in the light energy due to the blue shift was calculated to be exactly ( within the exp. error) the amount that a massive body would have gained by falling. They did it the other way around also and got the same agreement.

Was this a test of SR or GR ?

Well if you say Massive Body, I would think GR.
 
  • #11
MeJennifer said:
What some call "bending of light" is simply an effect of the curvature of spacetime (e.g geodesic convergence and divergence). In general relativity a photon in a gravitational field obviously does not accelerate for it would completely invalidate the foundations of the theory.
Actually 1/2 the value of the deflection is due to coordinate acceleration while the other 1/2 is due to spacetime curvature.

Pete
 
  • #12
pmb_phy said:
Actually 1/2 the value of the deflection is due to coordinate acceleration while the other 1/2 is due to spacetime curvature.
Well that is true, that 1/2 is actually due to the principle of equivalence alone while the other 1/2 is due to the curvature of spacetime.
Note that the first 1/2 applies to all metric theories.

Einstein was initially wrong in his calculations, he only took the equivalence principle in consideration, and so he calculated the first half only. Later he corrected it and included the curvature part as well.
 
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1. How does gravity affect the speed of light?

Gravity does not directly affect the speed of light. According to Einstein's theory of general relativity, gravity is the curvature of space and time caused by the presence of matter. Light always travels at a constant speed in a vacuum regardless of the gravitational pull.

2. Can gravity bend or slow down light?

Yes, gravity can bend the path of light. This is known as gravitational lensing, and it occurs when the path of light is bent due to the curved space-time caused by massive objects such as stars or black holes. However, the speed of light remains constant and does not slow down.

3. What is the relationship between gravity and the speed of light?

There is no direct relationship between gravity and the speed of light. The speed of light is a fundamental constant in the universe, while gravity is a force that is caused by the presence of massive objects. However, gravity can affect the path of light, but not its speed.

4. Does the speed of light change in different gravitational fields?

No, the speed of light remains constant in all gravitational fields. As mentioned before, gravity does not directly affect the speed of light. However, the path of light may appear to be different due to the effects of gravitational lensing.

5. Can we observe the effects of gravity on light in everyday life?

Yes, we can observe the effects of gravity on light in everyday life. For example, the light from stars appears to be in different positions due to the bending of light caused by the gravitational pull of other objects in space. Additionally, the phenomenon of gravitational lensing can also be observed in the presence of massive objects such as galaxies or clusters of galaxies.

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