String Theory For Dummies. Andrew Zimmerman Jones
Gravity: A great discovery
With the laws of motion in hand, Newton was able to perform the action that would make him the greatest physicist of his age: explaining the motion of the heavens and Earth. His proposal was the law of universal gravitation, which defines a force acting between two objects based on their masses and the distance separating them.
The more massive the objects are, the higher the gravitational force is. The relationship with distance is an inverse relationship, meaning that as the distance increases, the force drops off. (It actually drops off with the square of the distance — so it drops off very quickly as objects are separated.) The closer two objects are, the higher the gravitational force is.
The strength of the gravitational force determines a value in Newton’s equation called the universal constant of gravitation or Newton’s constant. A striking property of the universal constant of gravitation is that it is … well, universal. This means that its value is the same in New York, Tokyo, Mars, Alpha Centauri, or the Andromeda galaxy. This value is obtained by performing laboratory experiments and astronomical observations, and calculating what the constant should be. One question still open to physics and string theory is why gravity is so weak compared to other forces.
Gravity seems fairly straightforward, but it actually causes quite a few problems for physicists because it won’t behave itself and get along with the other forces of the universe. Newton himself wasn’t comfortable with the idea of a force acting at a distance, without understanding the mechanism involved. But the equations, even without a thorough explanation for what causes gravity, worked. In fact, the equations worked well enough that for more than two centuries, until Einstein, no one could figure out what was missing from the theory. More on this in Chapter 6.
Optics: Shedding light on light’s properties
Newton also performed extensive work in understanding the properties of light, a field known as optics. Newton supported a view that light moves as tiny particles, as opposed to a theory that light travels as a wave. He performed all his work in optics assuming that light moves as tiny balls of energy flying through the air.
For nearly a century, Newton’s view of light as particles dominated, until Thomas Young’s experiments in the early 1800s demonstrated that light exhibits the properties of waves — namely, the principle of superposition (see the earlier “Catching the wave” section for more on superposition and the later “Light as a wave: The ether theory” section for more on light waves).
The understanding of light, which began with Newton, would lead to the revolutions in physics by Albert Einstein and, ultimately, to the ideas at the heart of string theory. In string theory, both gravity and light are caused by the behavior of strings.
Calculus and mathematics: Enhancing scientific understanding
To study the physical world, Newton had to develop new mathematical tools. One of the tools he developed was a type of math that we call calculus. At the same time Newton invented it, philosopher and mathematician Gottfried Leibniz also created calculus completely independently! Newton needed calculus to perform his analysis of the natural world. Leibniz, on the other hand, developed it mainly to explain certain geometric problems.
Think for a moment how amazing this really is. A purely mathematical construct, calculus, provided key insights into the physical systems that Newton explored. Alternately, the physical analysis that Newton performed led him to create calculus. In other words, this is a case where mathematics and physics seemed to help build upon each other! One of the major successes of string theory is that it has provided motivation for important mathematical developments that have gone on to be useful in other realms.
The Forces of Light: Electricity and Magnetism
In the 19th century, the physical understanding of the nature of light changed completely. Experiments began to show strong cases where light acts like waves instead of particles, which contradicted Newton (see the “Optics: Shedding light on light’s properties” section for more on Newton’s findings). During the same time, experiments into electricity and magnetism began to reveal that these forces behave like light, except we can’t see them.
By the end of the 19th century, it became clear that electricity and magnetism are different manifestations of the same force: electromagnetism. One of the goals of string theory is to develop a single theory that incorporates both electromagnetism and gravity.
Light as a wave: The ether theory
Newton had treated light as particles, but experiments in the 19th century began to show that light acts like a wave. The major problem with this was that waves require a medium. Something has to do the waving. Light seemed to travel through empty space, which contained no substance at all. What was the medium that light used to move through space? What was waving?
To explain the problem, physicists proposed that space is filled with a substance. When looking for a name for this hypothetical substance, they turned back to Aristotle and named it luminous aether, or ether. (No relation to the gas used in old-timey surgeries as anesthetic.)
Even with this hypothetical ether, though, there were problems. Newton’s optics still worked, and his theory described light in terms of tiny balls moving in straight lines, not as waves. It seemed that sometimes light acts like a wave and sometimes it acts as a particle.
Most physicists of the 19th century believed in the wave theory, largely because the study of electricity and magnetism helped support the idea that light is a wave, but they were unable to find solid evidence of the ether.
Invisible lines of force: Electric and magnetic fields
Electricity is the study of how charged particles affect each other. Magnetism, on the other hand, is the study of how magnetized objects affect each other. In the 19th century, research began to show that these two seemingly separate phenomena are, in fact, different aspects of the same thing. The physicist Michael Faraday proposed that invisible fields transmit the force.
Electricity and magnetism are linked together
An electrical force acts between two objects that contain a property called electrical charge, which can be either positive or negative. Positive charges repel other positive charges, and negative charges repel other negative charges, but positive and negative charges attract each other, as in Figure 5-4.
FIGURE 5-4: Like repels like, but opposites attract.
Coulomb’s Law, which describes the simplest behavior of the electric force between charged particles (a field called electrostatics), is an inverse square law, similar to Newton’s law of gravity. This provided some of the first inklings that gravity and electrostatic forces (and, ultimately, electromagnetism) may have something