Appendix II
The Deflection of Light by the Sun's Gravitational
Field:
An Analysis of the 1919 Solar Eclipse
Expeditions.
INTRODUCTION - According to Einstein's
general theory of relativity published in 1916, light coming from a star
far away from the Earth and passing near the Sun will be deviated by the
Sun’s gravitational field by an amount that is inversely proportional to
the star’s radial distance from the Sun (1.745'' at the Sun's limb). This
amount (dubbed the full deflection) is twice the one predicted by Einstein
in 1911, using Newton's gravitational law (half deflection). In order to
test which theory is right (if any), an expedition led by Eddington was
sent to Sobral and Principe for the eclipse of May 29, 1919 [1].
The purpose was to determine whether or not there is a deflection of light
by the Sun's gravitational field and if there is, which of the two
theories mentioned above it follows. The expedition was
claimed to be successful in proving Einstein's full deflection [1,2].
This test was crucial to the general approval that Einstein's general
theory of relativity enjoys nowadays. However, this
experimental result is obviously not in accordance with the result found
in chapter ten. This is not a problem, as we will show that the deflection
was certainly not measurable. We will see that the effect of the
atmospheric turbulence was larger than the full deflection, just like the
Airy disk. We will also see how the instruments could not give such a
precise measurement and how the stars distribution was not good enough for
such a measurement to be convincing. Finally, we will discuss how
Eddington's influence worked for Einstein's full displacement and against
any other possible result.
ABOUT THE EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS - Atmospheric turbulence
is a phenomenon due to the atmosphere which causes images of stars as seen
by an observer on Earth to jump, quiver, wobble or simply be fuzzy. This
is a well-known phenomenon to any astronomer, amateur or professional. In
fact [3]
(page 40),
Rare is the night (at most sites) when
any telescope, no matter how large its aperture or perfect its optics,
can resolve details finer than 1 arc second. More typical at ordinary
locations is 2- or 3-arc-second seeing, or
worse. The problem becomes even
worse during the afternoon due to the heat of the ground. Tentative
solutions to this seeing problem have only recently been experimented [4].
For anyone
unacquainted with atmospheric turbulence, an easy way to observe a similar
phenomenon is by looking over a hot barbecue. In this case, the distortion
of the images (of the order of 10') is due to the heat coming from the
barbecue. Eddington, an
astronomer, was certainly aware of this problem. If it was difficult in
1995 [3],
to see details finer that 1'', how much more difficult was it in the
jungle in 1919? The supposed effect (full and half deflection) decreases
with the distance of the star from the Sun. During the 1919 eclipse, the
stars closest to the Sun's limb were drowned in the corona and could not
be observed [1].
Of the stars that were not drowned in the corona, Einstein’s theory
predicts that k2 Tauri should have the
largest displacement, with 0.88''. In Sobral, the displacement for that
star was reported to be 1.00'' [2].
How could Eddington and Dyson claim to observe that if at best, their
precision due to atmospheric turbulence in daytime heat was several
seconds? And they were not at best, near noon at Sobral and 2 p.m. at
Principe, when the seeing is the worst, with small telescopes that were
less than ideal. The error caused by the
atmospheric turbulence is large enough to refute any measurement of the
so-called Einstein effect. However, there are other reasons.
Two object
glasses were used during the expedition at Sobral, a 4-inch object glass
and an astrographic object glass. Assuming a perfect optical shape, which
means perfect correction for sphericity and chromaticity, for the 4-inch
telescope, the size of the central spot (which is surrounded by the ring
system of the diffraction pattern) can never be smaller than 1.25''. This
central spot is called the Airy disk. Since some of the results were
presented with a claimed accuracy of the order of 0.01'' [2]
(page 391), that relatively big diffraction ring pattern (125 times the
claimed accuracy) should have been easily seen. Since no mention is made
of it, we must understand that it was not observable because various
aberrations (chromatic of spheric) were larger than 1.25'' and/or because,
as expected, the atmospheric turbulence was larger than 1.25'', which is
the theoretical limit of resolution of that telescope when there is no
aberration and no turbulence. The focus of the
telescopes was determined and fixed many days before the eclipse [1]
(page 141). But the elements of a telescope are very sensitive to
temperature [1]
(page 153): "when the [astrographic] object glass is
mounted in a steel tube, the change of scale over a range of temperature
of 10° F. should be insignificant, and the definition should be very
good". During the team’s stay
at Sobral, the temperature ranged from 75°F during the night to 97°F in
the afternoon. This change in temperature must have affected the
astrograph, but what about the the mirrors and the 4-inch
telescope? The photographs of the
eclipse taken with the astrograph were very disappointing [1]
(page 153). It appears that the focus had changed from the night of May 27
to the moment of the eclipse. After the eclipse, the team left Sobral and
came back in July to take comparison plates. They discovered that the
astrograph had returned to focus! They blamed this change of focus on the
effect of the Sun’s heat on the mirror, but they could not say whether
this effect caused a change of scale or if it only blurred the
images. What about the 4-inch
telescope? The Sun’s heat could have affected its scale without blurring
the images. We know that there is a zone around the focal length where the
image will look as if it were in focus but where the scale will be
changed. To the best of our knowledge, nothing has ever been said about
that possible problem. If we plot the value of
Einstein's deflection against the angular distance of the star from the
Sun (as done in [5]
page 50), we see that the part of the hyperbola where the slope changes
the most lies under a distance of two solar radii from the Sun's center.
That part is thus crucial to a good interpretation of the results. Looking
at page 60 of the same article, we see that only two of the stars used by
the teams at Principe and Sobral are in this area. It is thus very
difficult to fit a hyperbola when only two of the stars are in that zone.
These observations (and most of the others studied in von Klüber's article
which reviews all observations done before 1960) could easily be fitted by
a straight line instead of Einstein's deflection equation. Therefore they
do not prove any of Einstein's deflections (full or half).
In one of the
meetings of the Royal Astronomical Society [6]
(page 41), Ludwik Silberstein pointed out that the displacements found
were not radial, as Einstein's theory states, but sometimes deviated from
the radial direction by as much as 35°! Nothing was said about that in
Dyson's article. According to Silberstein:
"If we had not the prejudice of
Einstein’s theory we should not say that the figures strongly indicated
a radial law of displacement." This brings us to our
next point, which is to what degree social circumstances influenced the
acceptation of Einstein's theory.
ABOUT EDDINGTON’S INFLUENCE - The results from the
1919 expedition were quickly accepted by the scientific community. When
preliminary results were announced, Joseph Thomson (from the Chair) said
[2]
(page 394):
"It is difficult for the audience to
weigh fully the meaning of the figures that have been put before us, but
the Astronomer Royal [Dyson] and Prof. Eddington have studied the
material carefully, and they regard the evidence as decisively in favor
of the larger value for the
displacement." Thomson makes it look
like only Eddington and Dyson are able to understand the results. It seems
that they have such a reputation that the general and the scientific
public should blindly believe them. It is Dyson who
presented the results of the Sobral expedition at a meeting of the Royal
Astronomical Society [2]
(page 391). Some of the displacements presented were very small, sometimes
of the order of 0.01''. In another meeting [6]
(page 40), Oliver Lodge asked if it were possible to measure a deviation
of 1/60'' (approximately 0.02'') to which Dyson responded:
"I do not think that it would be
possible to measure so small a quantity." We clearly see that
Dyson contradicted himself. Furthermore, Eddington
said himself he was in favour of the full deflection before doing the
experiment. Writing about the results of the expedition, he said [7]
(page 116): "Although the material was very meager
compared with what had been hoped for, the writer (who it must be
admitted was not altogether unbiased) believed it
convincing." Moreover, according to
Chandrasekhar [8]
(page 25),
"had he been left to himself, he would
not have planned the expeditions since he was fully convinced of the
truth of the general theory of
relativity!" Eddington was a Quaker
and like other Quakers, he did not want to go to war (WWI). In England,
Quakers were sent to camps during the war, but because of Dyson's
intervention [8]
(page 25),
"Eddington was deferred with the express
stipulation that if the war should end by May 1919, then Eddington
should undertake to lead an expedition for the purpose of verifying
Einstein’s predictions! " The circumstances of
the war forced Eddington to do an experiment that he would have never done
had he had a choice because he was so convinced of its outcome.
Why was the
theory so quickly, widely and easily accepted? After all, it was radically
changing the common view of the universe, curving space and dilating time.
Furthermore, the British were accepting a theory from a German man, right
after a bitter war with Germany. It seems that the
theory was widely accepted only after the eclipse expedition [9]
(page 50). According to Earman and Glymour, Dyson and Eddington played a
great influential role in the acceptation of the general theory of
relativity by the British. In fact, it is Eddington who, convinced of the
truth of the theory, convinced Dyson. In the few years before 1919, they
made the measurement of the "Einstein effect" a challenge and after the
expeditions of May 1919, they helped give the impression that the data had
confirmed Einstein’s theory. Aside from the fact
that Eddington was convinced that the theory was right, another reason
pushed him to advocate it [9]
(page 85). He hoped that a British verification of a German theory might
reopen the lines of communication and collaboration between the scientists
of both countries, lines that had been closed during World War One.
Finally,
before 1919, no one had claimed to have observed shifts of the size
required by Einstein's theory. Probably because the theory was thought to
be proved by the 1919 eclipse observations, a lot of scientists, maybe
throwing out some of their data, reported finding the right shift [9]
(page 85). After 1919, other
expeditions were undertaken to measure the deflection of light by the Sun.
Most of them obtained results a bit higher than Einstein's prediction, but
it did not matter anymore since the reputation of the theory had already
been established. Jamal Munshi
in reference to his ² Weird but
True² reports on the internet at:
http://munshi.sonoma.edu/jamal/physicsmath.html:
Dr. F. Schmeidler of the Munich
University Observatory has published a paper [49]
titled "The Einstein Shift An Unsettled Problem," and a plot of shifts
for 92 stars for the 1922 eclipse shows shifts going in all directions,
many of them going the wrong way by as large a deflection as those
shifted in the predicted direction! Further examination of the 1919 and
1922 data originally interpreted as confirming relativity, tended to
favor a larger shift, the results depended very strongly on the manner
for reducing the measurements and the effect of omitting individual
stars. So now we find that the legend of Albert Einstein as the world's
greatest scientist was based on the Mathematical Magic of Trimming and
Cooking of the eclipse data to present the illusion that Einstein's
general relativity theory was correct in order to prevent Cambridge
University from being disgraced because one of its distinguished members
was close to being declared a "conscientious
objector"! CONCLUSION
-
Much of the popularity of Einstein's general theory of relativity relies
on the observations done at Sobral and Principe. We see now that these
results were overemphasized and did certainly not consecrate Einstein's
theory. It is interesting to think of what would have happened if the
results had been deemed not good enough or if they had clearly showed that
there is no deviation of light by the Sun. Einstein’s theory might not
have enjoyed the popularity it now does and a new more realistic theory
might have been found years ago. REFERENCES
[1] Dyson, F. W., A. S. Eddington
and C. Davidson, A Determination of the Deflection of Light by the
Sun's Gravitational Field, from Observations Made at the Total Eclipse of
May 29, 1919, in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of
London, series A, 220, p. 291-333, 1920. (See also: Annual
Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution Showing the
Operations, Expenditures, and Conditions of the Institution for the Year
Ending June 30 1919, Government Printing Office, Washington, p.
133-176, 1921. [2]
Joint Eclipse Meeting of the Royal Society and the Royal Astronomical
Society, 1919, November 6, The Observatory, 42, 545, p. 389-398,
1919. [3]
MacRobert, Alan M., Beating the Seeing, Sky & Telescope,
89, 4, p. 40-43, 1995. [4] Fischer, Daniel, Optical Interferometry: Breaking the
Barriers, Sky & Telescope, 92, 5, p. 36-41,
1996. [5] von Klüber, H.,
The Determination of Einstein's Light-Deflection in the Gravitational
Field of the Sun, Vistas in Astronomy, Pergamon Press, London,
3, p. 47-77, 1960. [6] Meeting of the Royal Astronomical Society, Friday, 1919,
December 12, in The Observatory, 43, 548, p. 33-45, Jan.
1920. [7] Eddington, A.,
Space, Time and Gravitation: An Outline of the General Relativity
Theory, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 218 pages, 1959.
[8] Chandrasekhar, S.,
Eddington: The Most Distinguished Astrophysicist of His Time,
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 64 pages, 1983. [9] Earman, J. and C. Glymour,
Relativity and Eclipses: The British Eclipse Expeditions of 1919 and
Their Prede
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