Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Techy Tuesday - Is Relativity Relevant to Everyday Life?

Most people are aware of at least one aspect of Relativity: the famous mass/energy equivalence relationship.  This HTML format blog editor won't let me do superscripts or real math notation, so I'll write it as "E = m*c*c"; the energy obtained from completely converting matter to energy is the mass converted times the speed of light squared.  This is the energy that results from fission ("atomic") or thermonuclear fusion ("hydrogen") bombs.  A tiny bit of mass converts to enormous amounts of energy because the speed of light is an enormous speed.

There's much more to Relativity theory, including effects on the passage of time.  You've probably heard of the "twin paradox" an example of the effect of "time dilation", that time passes slower for moving clocks than stationary ones.  This effect is tiny until the speed of the clock approachs the speed of light, and wasn't really experimentally confirmed until practical atomic clocks could be constructed in the late 1950s.  Two clocks were synchronized to each other in a lab and then separated.  One stayed in the lab, the other flown around the world at the highest speeds available.  When the clocks were brought back to each other, their times were different; the one that flew was slower by the predicted amount.  This isn't a property of the clocks, it's a property of space time that Einstein deduced.  

Time can be measured very, very precisely and as the physicists have thought of better ways of making atomic clocks, relativistic effects have been verified in other ways.  The latest atomic clock at the National Institutes of Standards and Technology, F2, should neither gain nor lose one second in about 300 million years, or 1 part in almost 10 quadrillion. The clock is based on a "fountain" of cesium atoms to determine the exact length of a second.  One of the seemingly bizarre conclusions of special relativity is that clocks change the rate they run as the distance from the center of a gravitational field changes.  Clocks on mountaintops run faster than clocks in valleys.  These are very tiny effects, but NIST atomic clocks measured the difference between two clocks when one clock was raised one foot!

This sort of stuff is interesting to most people, but they never dream that relativity will ever have any effect on their lives.  The speeds for time dilation to be visible are absurdly high, and the differences in time from climbing even to the top of Mt. Everest are just too small to ever see (not counting the movie "Interstellar", which showed them quite well). And the vast, vast majority of us will never work on nuclear weapons and turn matter into energy.  (Side note: in the Star Trek universe, they routinely "freeze out" energy into matter in their replicators, creating tools, food, whatever.  Energy has to be essentially limitless for that to be remotely possible.)

It turns out that if you're like most people, you're using relativity pretty regularly.  The GPS systems, now built in to our cars, our phones, and so many other things, would not work if relativity wasn't incorporated into their design. 
The GPS system consists of 24 satellites in high orbit around the Earth. These satellites travel at about 9,000 miles per hour and orbit at an altitude of about 12,000 miles (for comparison the International Space Station orbits at around 250 miles). Each satellite carries an atomic clock with an accuracy of around 1 nanosecond. The satellites are distributed so that from any point on the Earth’s surface there is a line of sight to at least 4 satellites. A GPS receiver on the ground (or on an airplane in flight) receives timing and location data from these satellites on a 1.575GHz radio carrier signal.

Without Albert Einstein’s universe altering theories of relativity there would be no GPS. Crazy ideas like time slowing down with velocity, or mass bending the curvature of a four dimensional fabric called space-time are critical for GPS to work. Instead of an accuracy measured in feet (or inches for the military) it would be measured in miles without Einstein’s theories being taken into account. Not exactly accurate enough for driving directions! In fact, within a very short amount of time the errors would accumulate to the point of making the entire system useless.
These two major effects on the GPS system come straight from Einstein:
  • Time dilation: For GPS satellites traveling at 9,000 mph, time slows about 7,000 nanoseconds per day as compared to a stationary receiver.  (Pretend there could be a stationary receiver up there at 12,000 miles!)
  • Clock slowing due to position in the gravity well:  gravitational effects speed the satellite atomic clocks by about 45,000 nanoseconds.  45,000 nsec faster – 7,000 nsec slower due to time dilation means the clocks are 38,000 nsec per day faster for the GPS satellites.  Radio waves travel about 1 foot per nanosecond, so without designing for the relativistic effects included, the distance measurements to each satellite would be off by 38,000 feet (or about 7 miles) per day.  In two days, 14 miles off, and so on. 
A more detailed paper (13 page pdf) is here.

When I was growing up and then in school, we talked about this, but nobody ever talked about the GPS system requiring relativistic corrections.  No one I talked to ever assumed we'd need to adjust for relativity in our work.  
(the GPS constellation - from Wired)


10 comments:

  1. From the book “One Two Three Infinity..” by George Gamow.

    There was a young girl named Miss. Bright.
    Who could travel faster than light.
    She departed one day
    In an Einsteinian way
    And came back the previous night.

    Terry
    Fla.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The size of elements in integrated circuits is small enough that people are at least starting to worry about quantum effects. Actually they may be beyond the "started worrying" phase. It has been a long time.

    But most people look at the universe the same way people did a 1000 years ago. The sun comes up. It is the sun moving, not the horizon moving.

    Besides, the fruits of science and technology - like this blog, or Angry Birds - is much more fun than learning differential equations or understanding calculus in n-dimensions.

    ReplyDelete
  3. If you are interested in this stuff, there is an excellent email list: Time Nuts

    https://www.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ahhhh....the "Time Nuts" guys!

    We had one give a talk at my radio club a couple of years ago.

    He had a full rack of HP Cesium-Vapor clock stuff, just like the master timebase we used at Western Electric when I worked there.

    I'm just happy to have a GPS Disciplined OCXO for my timebase....

    ReplyDelete
  5. If I'm ever stopped for speeding I'm going to use the "I'm just prolonging my life" excuse.....

    ReplyDelete
  6. http://gamelab.mit.edu/games/a-slower-speed-of-light/

    Neat little game to fiddle around with. Lets you get a good look at how things get weird.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Our planetary system and galaxy are moving fast. Does that have a noticeable time shift, or affect our view of distant galaxies?

    ReplyDelete
  8. I remember working on one of the first aircraft-mounted GPS systems while stationed at Edwards AFB. Late '80s, F-16 experimental plane, only four satellites in orbit, had a 30 minute window to fly with all in sight of the airplane while over the range.
    DrJim, why not just get a GPS time source with a rubidium oscillator. If GPS is not available, the oscillator gives some darn accurate timing.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Anon 10:04: since relativity is about the time differences between two different viewer's, we don't have a standard clock to go by. The motion of our solar system through the galaxy shows up when motions of other galaxies are measured, though.

    The first GPS receivers I ever saw were in the late '80s, and the amount of time it took them to find the satellites and lock onto their codes was much slower than today. One early receiver got scrambled moving as slowly as a golf cart; the other worked fine on the golf cart. GPS receivers that worked on something as fast as an airplane were a long way off for civilians, though!

    Wheelgun - I've talked about quantum computing in these pages before, and I'm sure it will come up again. But, yeah, quantum semiconductors are coming. It's just a matter of when.


    ReplyDelete
  10. The unit I have is an HP Z3801A. These used to be used at cell tower sites. If for some reason GPS isn't available, the 10 MHz double oven crystal (the OCXO part) keeps running. Since cristal oscillators have have excellent short-term stability, losing GPS once in a while doesn't matter to me.

    I also have a stand alone Frequency Electronics FE-5680A Rubidium oscillator, but I haven't packaged it up yet. Need to find a nice enclosure and build a power supply for it.

    ReplyDelete