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Introduction to SAT II Physics - FreeExamPapers

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For people who believed that light must travel through an ether, the result of the<br />

Michelson-Morley experiment was like taking a ride in a boat and discovering that<br />

the boat crossed the wave crests at the same rate when it was driving against the waves as<br />

when it was driving in the same direction as the waves.<br />

No one was sure what <strong>to</strong> make of the Michelson-Morley experiment until 1905, when<br />

Albert Einstein offered the two basic postulates of special relativity and changed forever<br />

the way we think about space and time. He asked all sorts of unconventional questions,<br />

such as, “What would I see if I were traveling at the speed of light?” and came up with all<br />

sorts of unconventional answers that experiment has since more or less confirmed.<br />

The Basic Postulates of Special Relativity<br />

Special relativity is founded upon two basic postulates, one a holdover from New<strong>to</strong>nian<br />

mechanics and the other a seeming consequence of the Michelson-Morley experiment. As<br />

we shall see, these two postulates combined lead <strong>to</strong> some pretty counterintuitive results.<br />

First Postulate<br />

The laws of physics are the same in all inertial reference frames.<br />

An inertial reference frame is one where New<strong>to</strong>n’s First Law, the law of inertia, holds.<br />

That means that if two reference frames are moving relative <strong>to</strong> one another at a constant<br />

velocity, the laws of physics in one are the same as in the other. You may have<br />

experienced this at a train station when the train is moving. Because the train is moving<br />

at a slow, steady velocity, it looks from a passenger’s point of view that the station is<br />

moving backward, whereas for someone standing on the platform, it looks as if the train<br />

is moving forward.<br />

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