Title: faster than light?
1 faster than light?
- Einstein, light, and quantum mechanics
2Einstein, light and quantum mechanics
- Folklore
- Einstein proved that nothing can go faster than
light - Einstein didnt believe in quantum mechanics
- Fact
- Many things go or appear to go faster than light
(in some circumstances) - Einstein got his Nobel Prize for quantum mechanics
3things that go faster than light
- the expansion of the universe
- objects cannot go faster than light across space
- space can expand as fast as it wants
- optical illusions
- jets emitted by many radio galaxies and quasars
- the lighthouse beam from a pulsar
- many particles in material
- the limit is the speed of light in a vacuum
- in material, e.g. glass, water, light slows down,
but particles dont
4Cerenkov radiation
Cerenkov radiation is emitted when a particle is
moving faster than the speed of light in the
material its travelling through analogous to
sonic boom
5Using Cerenkov radiation
6Detecting Cerenkov radiation
electric charge out
light in
7Einstein and the nature of light
- Einstein said that the speed of light in a vacuum
should appear the same to all observers - this is based on Maxwells theory of
electromagnetism - in Maxwells theory light is a wave
- Therefore special relativity isa consequence of
the wavepicture of light
8Einstein and the nature of light
- But Einstein got his Nobel prize for his
explanation of the photoelectric effect - the bold, not to say the reckless, hypothesis of
an electro-magnetic light corpuscle Millikan - Therefore Einsteins Nobel prize is a consequence
of the particle theory of light
9The photoelectric effect
- Light striking the surface of some materials
causes emission of electrons - but only if frequency is high enough
- higher frequency ? higher energy electrons
- greater amplitude ? more electrons
- but only if frequency is high enough
- This is easily explained if we think of light as
consisting of photons with energy related to
their frequency - theory used by Max Planck to explain radiation
from hot objects - not widely believed at the time
10Quantum doubts
- Planck (who invented it)
- One should not hold against him too much that in
his speculations he might have occasionally
overshot the goal, as for example in his
hypothesis of the quanta of light. A reference
letter for Einstein! - Millikan (who measured it)
- This hypothesis may well be called recklessit
flies in the face of the thoroughly established
facts of interference His paper on the
measurement of h - this work resulted, contrary to my own
expectation, in the first direct experimental
proof Nobel lecture
11Einstein and light
- Einstein developed the theory of relativity by
taking Maxwells wave theory of light and
developing its logical consequences - Einstein developed the theory of the
photoelectric effect by taking Plancks theory of
light and developing its logical consequences - It is a measure of his genius that he was able to
do both!
12Robert Millikan, physics, 1923, e and h
Max Planck, physics, 1918, quanta
Albert Einstein, physics, 1921, photoelectric
effect
Walther Nernst, chemistry, 1920, thermo-chemistry
Max von Laue, physics, 1914, X-ray diffraction