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Hogg David W. Special Relativity

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Hogg David W. Special Relativity
Princeton: School of Natural Sciences Institute for Advanced Study, 1997. — IV + 47 p.
For author, the wonder of special relativity lies in its successful prediction of interesting and very nonintuitive phenomena from simple arguments with simple premises.
These notes have three (perhaps ambitious) aims: (a) to introduce undergraduates to special relativity from its founding principle to its varied consequences, (b) to serve as a reference for those of us who need to use special relativity regularly but have no long-term memory, and (c) to provide an illustration of the methods of theoretical physics for which the elegance and simplicity of special relativity are ideally suited. History is a part of all science, but there is no attempt to present the material in a historical way.
A common confusion for students of special relativity is between that which is real and that which is apparent. For instance, length contraction is often mistakenly thought to be some optical illusion. But moving things do not “appear” shortened, they actually are shortened. How they appear depends on the particulars of the observation, including distance to the observer, viewing angles, times, etc. The observer finds that they are shortened only after correcting for these non-fundamental details of the observational procedure. Author attempt to emphasize this distinction: All apparent effects, including the Doppler Shift, stellar aberration, and superluminal motion, are relegated to Chapter 7. Author think these are very important aspects of special relativity, but from a pedagogical standpoint it is preferable to separate them from the basics, which are not dependent on the properties of the observer.
Author love the description of special relativity in terms of frame-independent, geometric objects, such as scalars and 4-vectors. These are introduced in Chapter 6 and used thereafter. But even before this, the geometric properties of spacetime are emphasized. Most problems can be solved with a minimum of algebra; this is one of the many beautiful aspects of the subject.
Contents.
Principles of relativity
What is a principle of relativity?
Einstein’s principle of relativity.
The Michelson-Morley experiment.
The “specialness” of special relativity.
Time dilation and length contraction
Time dilation.
Observing time dilation.
Length contraction.
Magnitude of the effects.
Experimental confirmation.
The geometry of spacetime
Spacetime diagrams.
Boosting: changing reference frames.
The “ladder and barn” paradox.
Relativity of simultaneity.
The boost transformation.
Transforming space and time axes.
The Lorentz transformation
Proper time and the invariant interval.
Derivation of the Lorentz transformation.
The Lorentz transformation.
Velocity addition.
The twin paradox.
Causality and the interval
The ladder and barn revisited.
Causality.
Nothing can travel faster than the speed of light.
Relativistic mechanics
Scalars.
4-vectors.
4-velocity.
4-momentum, rest mass and conservation laws.
Collisions.
Photons and Compton scattering.
Mass transport by photons.
Particle production and decay.
Velocity addition (revisited) and the Doppler shift.
4-force.
Optics and apparent effects: special relativity applied to astronomy
Doppler shift (revisited).
Stellar Aberration.
Superluminal motion.
Relativistic beaming.
The appearance of passing objects.
A simpleminded cosmology.
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