Newton's Bucket and the Higgs
Brane Dead said:
Inertia has always bothered me in the sense of the actual mechanism behind this resistance to acceleration-why? I believe Mach had some idea that the gravitational attraction of the rest of the universe was behind it but did he manage to prove anything? Certainly Einstein's equivalence principle would suggest such a connection but I believe Einstein himself never found a real inertial mechanism. Any thoughts?
I've always been interested in the cause of inertia myself. In fact, many years ago when I was first introduced to Mach's Principle while studying General Relativity I liked the idea. But then in a book called "The Structure of the Universe" by Narlikar I read that Kurt Gödel had proven that Mach's Principle was mathematically incompatible with General Relativity.
More recently while reading Brian Greene's "The Fabric of the Cosmos", I was surprised to hear Brian consider that Mach's Principle might still be compatible with GR after all
to some extent. But then Brian goes on to say that it may not be fully compatible with GR, plus GR actually suggests that the effects of inertia may very well be present in an
almost empty universe. I not sure how they can say that with any confidence because who's to say that GR would even still be valid in an
almost empty universe?
In any case, you might want to read Brian Greene's book. He talks about this topic in terms of
Newton's Bucket. And it does appear to me that Brian suggests that inertia would indeed still exist in an
almost empty universe.
I believe that most recently the Higgs field is currently being given credit for causing both mass and inertia,
these two properties are pretty much inseparable and are obviously intimately bound to the phenomenon of gravity (pun intended

).
I also believe that the Higgs field had something to do with causing the inflation of the Big Bang. Somehow it got
caught in some kind of a weird energy well during inflation and never quite came out of that well. And that's why we have mass, gravity, and inertia today.
That's my vague understanding of the ideas. Steven Pollock and Alex Filippenko (sp?) have a couple of educational videos avaliable at
The Teaching Company. Pollock's video is on particle physics and mentions the Higgs field. Filippenko's video is on astronomy and talks about the cause of inflation in the last part of the course (his big course). Neither of these courses go into any of mathematical details but they are quite interesting none the less.
Here's a link to The Teaching Company that has these videos:
http://www.teach12.com/