E
equals m c squared
"Proof"
of E=mc2
Before
Einstein, it was known that a beam of light pushes against
matter; this is known as radiation pressure. This means
the light has momentum. A beam of light of energy E has
momentum E/c. Einstein used this fact to show that radiation
(light) energy has an equivalent mass.
Consider a cylinder of mass M. A pulse of light with energy
E is emitted from the left side. The cylinder recoils to
the left with velocity v=E/(Mc). If the mass of the cylinder
is large, it doesn't move far before the light reaches the
other side. So, the light must travel a distance L, requiring
time t=L/c. In this time, the cylinder travels a distance
x=vt=[E/(Mc)](L/c).
Einstein reasoned that the center of mass of an isolated
system doesn't just move on its own. So, the motion of the
cylinder must be compensated by the motion of some other
mass. Let's assume the light has mass m. Then, Mx=mL, since
the cylinder moves x to the left and the light moves L to
the right. Substituting the expression for x given above,
the equation can be simplified to E=mc2.
From
the fact that light has momentum, Einstein showed that light
energy has the characteristics of mass also. In other words,
energy has inertia. It turns out that all energy has this
feature. That's because one form of energy can be transformed
into another. So, if one kind of energy has this characteristic,
all forms of energy do.
"In light of knowledge attained, the happy achievement
seems almost a matter of course, and any intelligent student
can grasp it without too much trouble. But the years of
anxious searching in the dark, with their intense longing,
their alterations of confidence and exhaustion and the final
emergence into the light -- only those who have experienced
it can understand it."
Einstein's
theories sprang from a ground of ideas prepared by decades
of experiments. One of the most striking, in retrospect,
was done in Cleveland, Ohio, by Albert Michelson and Edward
Morley in 1887. Their apparatus was a massive stone block
with mirrors and crisscrossing light beams, giving an accurate
measurement of any change in the velocity of light. Michelson
and Morley expected to see their light beams shifted by
the swift motion of the earth in space. To their surprise,
they could not detect any change. It is debatable whether
Einstein paid heed to this particular experiment, but his
work provided an explanation of the unexpected result through
a new analysis of space and time.
When
Einstein used his equations to study the motion of a body,
they pointed him to a startling insight about the body's
mass and energy.
The
deep connection Einstein discovered between energy and mass
is expressed in the equation E equals m c squared. Here
E represents energy, m represents mass, and c squared is
a very large number, the square of the speed of light. Full
confirmation was slow in coming. In Paris in 1933, Irène
and Frédéric Joliot-Curie took a photograph
showing the conversion of energy into mass. In the photography,
an invisible quantum of light carrying energy changes into
mass --Two particles were created and curved away from each
other.
Meanwhile
in Cambridge, England, the reverse process was seen: the
conversion of mass into pure energy. With their apparatus
John Cockcroft and E.T.S. Walton broke apart an atom. The
fragments had slightly less mass in total than the original
atom, but they flew apart with great energy.