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The
Gravitational Field
If
we pick up a stone and then let it go, why does it fall to the ground?
The usual answer to this question is: Because it is attracted
by the earth. Modern physics formulates the answer rather
differently for the following reason. As a result of the more careful
study of electromagnetic phenomena, we have come to regard action
at a distance as a process impossible without the intervention of
some intermediary medium.
If, for instance, a magnet attracts a piece of iron, we cannot be
content to regard this as meaning that the magnet acts directly
on the iron though the intermediate empty space, but we are constrained
to imagineafter the manner of Faradaythat the magnet
always calls into being something physically real in the space around
it, that something being what we call a magnetic field.
In its turn this magnetic field operates on the piece of iron, so
that the latter strives to move towards the magnet.
We
shall not discuss here the justification for this incidental conception,
which is indeed a somewhat arbitrary one. We shall only mention
that with its aid electromagnetic phenomena can be theoretically
represented much more satisfactorily than without it, and this applies
particularly to the transmission of electromagnetic waves. The effects
of gravitation also are regarded in an analogous manner.
The
action of the earth on the stone takes place indirectly. The earth
produces in its surroundings a gravitational field, which acts on
the stone and produces its motion of fall. As we know from experience,
the intensity of the action on a body diminishes according to a
quite definite law, as we proceed farther and farther away from
the earth. From our point of view this means: The law governing
the properties of the gravitational field in space must be a perfectly
definite one, in order correctly to represent the diminution of
gravitational action with the distance from operative bodies. It
is something like this; The body (e.g. the earth) produces a field
in its immediate neighbourhood directly; the intensity and direction
of the field at points farther removed from the body are thence
determined by the law which governs the properties in space of the
gravitational fields themselves.
In
contrast to electric and magnetic fields, the gravitational field
exhibits a most remarkable property, which is of fundamental importance
for what follows. Bodies which are moving under the sole influence
of a gravitational field receive an acceleration, which does not
in the least depend either on the material or on the physical state
of the body. For instance, a piece of lead and a piece of wood fall
in exactly the same manner in a gravitational field (in vacuo),
when they start off from rest or with the same initial velocity.
This
law, which holds most accurately, can be expressed in a different
form in the light of the following consideration.
According to Newtons law of motion, [ F = ma ] we have
(Force) = (inertial mass) x (acceleration)
where the inertial mass is a characteristic constant
of the accelerated body.
If
now gravitation is the cause of the acceleration, we then have
(Force) = (gravitational mass) x (intensity of the gravitational
field),
where the gravitational mass is likewise a characteristic
constant for the body.
From these two relations follows:
(acceleration)=(gravitational mass)/(inertial mass) x (intensity
of the gravitational field)
If
now, as we find from experience, the acceleration is to be independent
of the nature and the condition of the body and always the same
for a given gravitational field, then the ratio of the gravitational
to the inertial mass must likewise be the same for all bodies. By
a suitable choice of units we can thus make this ratio equal to
unity. We then have the following law: The gravitational mass of
a body is equal to its inertial mass.
It
is true that this important law had hitherto been recorded in mechanics,
but it had not been interpreted. A satisfactory interpretation can
be obtained only if we recognize the following fact: The same quality
of a body manifests itself according to circumstances as inertia
or as weight (lit. heaviness).
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