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Theory of relativity
Albert Einstein's Theory of Relativity is a set of two theories in physics:
special relativity and general relativity. The core idea of both theories is
that two observers who move relative to each other will often measure
different 'time' and 'space' intervals for the same events, but the content
of physical law will be the same for both.
Special relativity, developed in 1905, only considers observers in inertial
reference frames which are in uniform motion with respect to each other. The
theory postulates that the speed of light in vacuum will be the same for
these observers. This leads to redefinitions of such fundamental notions as
time, distance, mass, energy and momentum with wide ranging consequences.
Moving objects appear heavier and compressed in the direction they are
moving, while moving clocks appear to run slower. Light has momentum. The
speed of light emerges as an upper limit for the speed of matter and
information. Mass and energy are seen as equivalent. Two events judged to be
simultaneous by one observer may be seen as non-simultaneous by other
observers which are in motion with respect to the first one. The theory does
not account for gravitational effects. The mathematical basis of special
relativity is provided by the Lorentz transformation.
General relativity was published by Einstein in 1915. It uses the
mathematics of differential geometry and tensors in order to describe
gravity. The laws of general relativity are the same for all observers, even
if they are accelerated with respect to each other. General relativity is a
geometrical theory which postulates that the presence of mass and energy
"curves" space, and this curvature affects the path of free particles (and
even the path of light), an effect we interpret as a gravitational force.
The theory can be used to build models of the evolution of the universe and
is hence a crucial tool in cosmology.
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