Skip to main content

Einstein’s mass energy equation inadequate, claims Indian researcher

Albert Einstein’s mass energy equation (E=mc2) is inadequate as it has not been completely studied and is only valid under special conditions, an Indian researcher has claimed in an international paper.

Einstein considered just two light waves of equal energy emitted in opposite directions with uniform relative velocity, Ajay Sharma, a Shimla-based researcher who challenged Einstein’s derivation, said on Sunday.


The equation was proposed by Einstein in 1905.

His technical paper — The mathematical derivation or speculation of E=mc2, in Einstein’s September 1905 paper, and some peculiar experiments — was published by Bauman Moscow State Technical University in Moscow last month.

E=mc2 means energy is equal to mass multiplied by the speed of light squared.

Mr. Sharma, an assistant director for education with the Himachal Pradesh government, told IANS that Einstein’s theory has not been studied completely.

“It’s only valid under special conditions of the parameters involved, e.g. number of light waves, magnitude of light energy, angles at which waves are emitted and relative velocity,” he said.

Einstein considered just two light waves of equal energy, emitted in opposite directions and the relative velocity uniform. There are numerous possibilities for the parameters which were not considered in Einstein’s 1905 derivation, said Mr. Sharma’s paper.

This equation expresses the fact that mass and energy are the same physical entity and can be changed into each other, the paper said.

It said E=mc2 is obtained from L=mc2 by simply replacing L by E (all energy) without derivation by Einstein. “It’s illogical,” he said.

The paper said W.L. Fadner correctly pointed out that Einstein did not mention E in the derivation.

Mr. Sharma’s book, Beyond Einstein and E=mc2 published by the Cambridge International Science Publishers, says Einstein was not the original propounder of the theory of relativity — rather he took work from existing literature and published it in 1905 in German journal Annalen de Physik.

“Many people will be surprised that Einstein’s work was not peer reviewed before publication. The first postulate of relativity was given by Galileo in 1632 in his book ‘Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems’,” the 51-year-old Mr. Sharma said.

According to him, Einstein took this opportunity to publish the work of Galileo (1632, Principle of Relativity), Poincare (1898, Constancy of Velocity of Light), Lorentz (1892, Variation of Mass etc), Larmer (1897, Time Dilation), and Fitzegerald (1889, Length Contraction) in his own name.

Although Einstein’s theory is well established, it has to be critically analysed and the new results would definitely emerge, a beaming Mr. Sharma added.

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Introducing 'Zinnia': The first ever flower grown in space!

This is one sweet piece of news! For the first time ever, a flower is happily blooming in the zero gravity of space. US astronaut Scott Kelly took to Twitter to announce this historic success and has shared incredible pictures of this orange, 13-petalled beauty. While the crew of the ISS has grown edible plants before, such as romaine lettuce and arugula - the zinnias are the first flowering plants to be grown, paving the way to grow crops such as tomatoes.

New Horizons anniversary: Ten years ago today (19 January), Pluto probe rocketed into sky

Washington: NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft marked its 10 years in space Wednesday since it rocketed into the sky above the Florida coastline, beginning its long journey into the history books. Ten years ago on this day, 19 January, 2006, the small probe - weighing barely 1,000 pounds - lifted off from Cape Canaveral at precisely 2 p.m. EST aboard a Lockheed Martin Atlas V launch vehicle specially equipped with a Boeing third stage, making it the most powerful rocket NASA’s science program has used in this century.