Big Bang. Simon Singh
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Big Bang - Simon Singh страница 21

Название: Big Bang

Автор: Simon Singh

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Прочая образовательная литература

Серия:

isbn: 9780007375509

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ horses to pull the hemispheres apart.

      Although this equine tug-of-war showed the power of the vacuum, it said nothing about the nature of light. This question was addressed in a somewhat daintier experiment, which required von Guericke to evacuate a glass jar containing a ringing bell. As the air was sucked out of the jar, the audience could no longer hear the ringing, but they could still see the clapper hitting the bell. It was clear, therefore, that sound could not travel through a vacuum. At the same time, the experiment showed that light could travel through a vacuum because the bell did not vanish and the jar did not darken. Bizarrely, if light could travel through a vacuum, then something could travel through nothing.

      Confronted with this apparent paradox, scientists began to wonder if a vacuum was really empty. The jar had been evacuated of air, but perhaps there was something remaining inside, something that provided the medium for conveying light. By the nineteenth century, physicists had proposed that the entire universe was permeated by a substance they termed the luminiferous ether, which somehow acted as a medium for carrying light. This hypothetical substance had to possess some remarkable properties, as pointed out by the great Victorian scientist Lord Kelvin:

      Now what is the luminiferous ether? It is matter prodigiously less dense than air – millions and millions and millions of times less dense than air. We can form some sort of idea of its limitations. We believe it is a real thing, with great rigidity in comparison with its density: it may be made to vibrate 400 million million times per second; and yet be of such density as not to produce the slightest resistance to any body going through it.

      In other words, the ether was incredibly strong, yet strangely insubstantial. It was also transparent, frictionless and chemically inert. It was all around us, yet it was clearly hard to identify because nobody had ever seen it, grabbed it or bumped into it. Nevertheless, Albert Michelson, America’s first Nobel Laureate in physics, believed that he could prove its existence.

      Michelson’s Jewish parents had fled persecution in Prussia in 1854, when he was just two years old. He grew up and studied in San Francisco before going on to join the US Naval Academy, where he graduated a lowly twenty-fifth in seamanship, but top in optics. This prompted the Academy’s superintendent to remark: ‘If in the future you’d give less attention to those scientific things and more to your naval gunnery, there might come a time when you would know enough to be of some service to your country.’ Michelson sensibly moved into full-time optics research, and in 1878, aged just twenty-five, he determined the speed of light to be 299,910 ± 50 km/s, which was twenty times more accurate than any previous estimation.

      Then, in 1880, Michelson devised the experiment that he hoped would prove the existence of the light-bearing ether. His equipment split a single light beam into two separate perpendicular beams. One beam travelled in the same direction as the Earth’s movement through space, while the other beam moved in a direction at a right angle to the first beam. Both beams travelled an equal distance, were reflected off mirrors, and then returned to combine into a single beam. Upon combining they underwent a process known as interference, which allowed Michelson to compare the two beams and identify any discrepancy in travel times.

      Michelson knew that the Earth travels at roughly 100,000 km/h around the Sun, which presumably meant that it also passed through the ether at this speed. Since the ether was supposed to be a steady medium that permeated the universe, the Earth’s passage through the universe would create a sort of ether wind. This would be similar to the sort of pseudo-wind you would feel if you were speeding along in an open-top car on a still day – there is no actual wind, but there seems to be one due to your own motion. Therefore, if light is carried in and by the ether, its speed should be affected by the ether wind. More specifically, in Michelson’s experiment one light beam would be travelling into and against the ether wind and should thus have its speed significantly affected, while the other beam would be travelling across the ether wind and its speed should be less affected. If the travel times for the two beams were different, then Michelson would be able to use this discrepancy as strong evidence in favour of the ether’s existence.

      This experiment to detect the ether wind was complicated, so Michelson explained the underlying premise in terms of a puzzle:

      Suppose we have a river of width 100 feet, and two swimmers who both swim at the same speed, say 5 feet per second. The river flows at a steady rate of 3 feet per second. The swimmers race in the following way: they both start at the same point on one bank. One swims directly across the river to the closest point on the opposite bank, then turns around and swims back. The other stays on one side of the river, swimming downstream a distance (measured along the bank) exactly equal to the width of the river, then swims back to the start. Who wins? [See Figure 20 for the solution.]

image20

      Figure 20 Albert Michelson used this swimming puzzle to explain his ether experiment. The two swimmers play the same role as the two beams of light heading in perpendicular directions, then both returning to the same starting point. One swims first with and then against the current, while the other swims across the current – just as one light beam travels with and against the ether wind, and the other across it. The puzzle is to work out the winner of a race over a distance of 200 feet between two swimmers who both can swim at 5 feet per second in still water. Swimmer A goes downstream 100 feet and back upstream 100 feet, whereas swimmer B goes across the river and back, also covering two legs of 100 feet. The river has a 3 ft/s current.

      The time of swimmer A, going downstream and then upstream, is easy to analyse. With the current, the swimmer has an overall speed of 8 ft/s (5 + 3 ft/s), so the 100 feet takes just 12.5 seconds. Coming back against the current means that he is swimming at only 2 ft/s (5 - 3 ft/s), so swimming this 100 feet takes him 50 seconds. Therefore his total time is 62.5 seconds to swim 200 feet.

      Swimmer B, going across the river, has to swim at an angle in order to compensate for the current. Pythagoras’ theorem tells us that if he swims at 5 ft/s at the correct angle, he will have an upstream component of 3 ft/s, which cancels the effect of the current, and a cross-stream component of 4 ft/s. Therefore he swims the first width of 100 feet in just 25 seconds, and then takes another 25 seconds to return, giving a total time of 50 seconds to swim 200 feet. Although both swimmers would swim at the same speed in still water, the swimmer crossing the current wins the race against the swimmer who goes with and against the current. Hence, Michelson suspected that a light beam travelling across the ether wind would have a shorter travel time than a beam travelling with and then against the ether wind. He designed an experiment to see if this was really the case.

      Michelson invested in the best possible light sources and mirrors for his experiment and took every conceivable precaution in assembling the apparatus. Everything was carefully aligned, levelled and polished. To increase the sensitivity of his equipment and minimise errors, he even floated the main assembly in a vast bath of mercury, thereby isolating it from external influences such as the tremors caused by distant footsteps. The whole point of this experiment was to prove the existence of the ether, and Michelson had done everything possible to maximise the chance of its detection – which is why he was so astonished by his complete and utter failure to detect any difference in the arrival times of the two perpendicular beams of light. There was no sign of the ether whatsoever. It was a shocking result.

      Desperate to find out what had gone wrong, Michelson recruited the chemist Edward Morley. Together they rebuilt the apparatus, improving each piece of equipment to make the experiment even more sensitive, and then they carried out the measurements over and over again. Eventually, in 1887, after seven years of repeating their experiment, they published their definitive results. There was still no sign of the ether. Therefore they were forced to conclude that the ether did not exist.

      Bearing in mind its ridiculous set of properties – it was supposed to be the least dense yet the most rigid substance СКАЧАТЬ