courses:ast100:0.1
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| - | ===== - Relativity: | + | ===== - Relativity: |
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| - | Before Einstein, scientists believed that space and time were completely separate things. Space was viewed as a fixed stage where events happened, and time was like a universal clock that ticked at the same rate for everyone, everywhere. Einstein changed this view forever with his Special Theory of Relativity. He realized that because the speed of light is always the same, space and time must be connected. He showed that if you move very fast through space, time actually slows down for you compared to someone standing still. This meant that space and time are not independent; | + | Before Einstein, scientists believed that space and time were completely separate things. Space was viewed as a fixed stage where events happened, and time was like a universal clock that ticked at the same rate for everyone, everywhere. Einstein changed this view forever with his Special Theory of Relativity |
| This new way of thinking also connected matter and energy. Previously, people thought mass (how much " | This new way of thinking also connected matter and energy. Previously, people thought mass (how much " | ||
| - | ===== - Relativity: | + | ===== - Relativity: |
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| + | Einstein took his earlier ideas a giant step further with the General Theory of Relativity (1915, Berlin), which explained gravity in a completely new way. Before this, gravity was thought of as an invisible force pulling things together. Einstein instead proposed that spacetime is like a stretchy fabric, similar to a trampoline. If you place a heavy object like a bowling ball in the center, the fabric curves downward. Lighter marbles rolled nearby will follow this curve and spiral inward. Einstein showed that massive objects like the Sun curve the fabric of spacetime around them, and this curvature is what we feel as gravity. It wasn't a " | ||
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| + | This theory created a direct two-way street between the " | ||
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| + | The most profound implication of this theory was for the history of the universe itself. If matter curves spacetime, then the shape and destiny of the entire universe depend on how much " | ||
courses/ast100/0.1.1768823958.txt.gz · Last modified: by asad
