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Why Does E=mc2_ - Brian Cox [0]

By Root 922 0
Table of Contents

Title Page

Dedication

Acknowledgements

PREFACE

Chapter 1 - Space and Time

Chapter 2 - The Speed of Light

Chapter 3 - Special Relativity

Chapter 4 - Spacetime

Chapter 5 - Why Does E=mc?

Chapter 6 - And Why Should We Care? Of Atoms, Mousetraps, and the Power of the Stars

Chapter 7 - The Origin of Mass

Chapter 8 - Warping Spacetime

INDEX

Copyright Page

To our families, especially Gia, Mo, George, David, Barbara, Sandra, Naomi, Isabel, Sylvia, Thomas, and Michael

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank our management and agents, Susan, Diane, and George, and our editors, Ben and Cisca. Of our scientific colleagues, we should particularly like to thank Richard Batty, Fred Loebinger, Robin Marshall, Simone Marzani, Ian Morison, and Gavin Smith. Special thanks to Naomi Baker, especially for her comments on the early chapters, and to Gia Milinovich for asking the question.

PREFACE

Our aim in this book is to describe Einstein’s theory of space and time in the simplest way we can while at the same time revealing its profound beauty. Ultimately, this will allow us to arrive at his famous equation E = mc2 using mathematics no more complicated than Pythagoras’ theorem. And don’t worry if you can’t remember Pythagoras, because we will describe that as well. Equally important, we want every reader who finishes this little book to see how modern physicists think about nature and build theories that become profoundly useful and ultimately change our lives. By building a model of space and time, Einstein paved the way for an understanding of how stars shine, uncovered the deep reason why electric motors and generators work, and ultimately laid the foundation on which all of modern physics rests. This book is also intended to be provocative and challenging. The physics itself is not at issue: Einstein’s theories are very well established and backed up by a great deal of experimental evidence, as we shall discover as the book unfolds. In due course, it is very important to emphasize, Einstein may be forced to give way to an even more accurate picture of nature. In science, there are no universal truths, just views of the world that have yet to be shown to be false. All we can say for certain is that, for now, Einstein’s theory works. Instead, the provocation lies in the way the science challenges us to think about the world around us. Scientist or not, each of us has intuition and we all infer things about the world from our everyday experiences. If we subject our observations to the cold and precise light of the scientific method, however, we often discover that nature confounds our intuition. As this book unfolds, we will discover that when things whiz about at high speeds, common-sense notions regarding space and time are dashed and replaced by something entirely new, unexpected, and elegant. The lesson is a salutary and humbling one, and it leaves many scientists with a sense of awe: The universe is much richer than our everyday experiences would have us believe. Perhaps most wonderful of all is the fact that the new physics, for all its richness, is filled with a breathtaking mathematical elegance.

Difficult as it may sometimes seem, science at its heart is not a complicated discipline. One might venture to say that it is an attempt at removing our innate prejudices in order to observe the world as objectively as possible. It may be more or less successful in that goal but few can doubt its success in teaching us how the universe “works.” The really difficult thing is to learn not to trust what we might like to think of as common sense. By teaching us to accept nature for what it is, and not for what our prejudice may suggest that it should be, the scientific method has delivered the modern technological world. In short, it works.

In the first half of the book we will derive the equation E = mc2. By “derive,” we mean that we will show how Einstein reached the conclusion that energy is equal to mass multiplied by the speed of light squared, which is what the equation says.

Think

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