Einstein's "Clock Hypothesis" and Mossbauer Experiments in a Rotating System
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2019
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter Gmbh
Open Access Color
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Abstract
An extra energy shift between emitted and received radiation on a rotating disc - next to the conventionally recognised second-order Doppler shift - has been revealed in a series of recent Mossbauer experiments, where a radioactive source is fixed at the centre and an absorber is attached to the rim of the rotating disc. This disclosure gives indication to a possible violation of the "clock hypothesis" by Einstein: i.e. the independence of the rate of a clock on its acceleration. At the moment, there seem to be two plausible interpretations of this result: (i) the deviation of the geometry of the rotating disc from that predicted by the general theory of relativity (GTR), or (ii) the existence of a specific maximal acceleration in nature, when transformation between two accelerated frames differs from the corresponding transformation of the relativity theory. We take a closer look at both ways leading to the violation of the clock hypothesis; particularly, by analysing the outcomes of recent experiments in rotating systems and by suggesting a new Mossbauer rotor experiment to determine the most feasible mechanism for testing the dependence of the rate of a clock on its acceleration.
Description
arik, metin/0000-0001-9512-8581; Yarman, Ozan U./0000-0001-9002-3326; Yarman, Tolga/0000-0003-3209-2264
Keywords
Clock Hypothesis by Einstein, Mossbauer Experiments in a Rotating System, Special Theory of Relativity
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
Fields of Science
Citation
0
WoS Q
Q3
Scopus Q
Q3
Source
Volume
74
Issue
2
Start Page
91
End Page
100