Home Contact Links Jobs
Introduction Admissions Programs People Research Community Outreach News & Seminars
Seminar
Henri Poincaré’s Special Theory of Relativity (Cancelled)
Speaker Prof Xiaofeng Jin, Department of Physics, Fudan University
Date 26 April 2024 (Friday)
Time 10:30-12:00
Venue Room 3598, Academic Building, HKUST (Lifts 27-28)
Abstract

In this talk, I will systematically introduce the mental journey of Henri Poincaré in establishing the special theory of relativity. It includes the following:

  • The mathematical structure of 2+1 dimensional pseudo-Euclidean geometry in 1881;
  • The viewpoint on the existence of ether in 1888;
  • Issues regarding time measurement, the postulate of the constancy of the speed of light, and the problem of simultaneity at different locations in 1898;
  • The principle of total momentum conservation for matters and electromagnetic field in 1900, a beam of electromagnetic radiation equivalent to a hypothetical fluid with inertia m=E/c^2, and a method proposed for synchronizing clocks at different locations using light signals, resulting in the time transformation formula under first-order approximation: t’=t-vx/c^2;
  • The principle of relativity in classical mechanics and the unobservability of Earth’s motion relative to the ether in 1902; the relativity of simultaneity;
  • The complete statement of the principle of relativity in 1904;
  • The pseudo-Euclidean geometry structure and the Lorentz transformation as a four-dimensional spacetime rotation around the origin, which together with spatial rotation forms the Lorentz group, published in two articles on June 5 and July 23 in 1905. The relativistic velocity addition rule; mathematical formulas for length contraction, time dilation, and the relativity of simultaneity at different locations; the complete covariance of electrodynamics; the relativistic principle of least action; the Lorentz group symmetry of physical laws; and the relativistic equations of motion for electrons.


Please contact phweb@ust.hk should you have questions about the talk.

 

 

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS