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# [SCI] Special Relativity ⏎ **Special Relativity** (Einstein, 1905) is the theory that the laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames and that the speed of light is constant, leading to time dilation, length contraction, and the mass-energy equivalence E = mc². ⏎ ## Overview ⏎ Einstein's 1905 paper resolved the contradiction between Newtonian mechanics (velocities add) and Maxwell's electromagnetism (the speed of light is constant). The postulates — (1) all inertial frames are equivalent; (2) c is constant — lead to the Lorentz transformation, replacing Galilean relativity. Consequences: moving clocks run slow; moving rulers contract; mass increases with velocity; E = mc² (a separate 1905 paper). Hermann Minkowski reformulated SR as four-dimensional spacetime geometry (1907). ⏎ E = mc² has had extraordinary consequences: it explains the energy source of stars and radioactivity, underpins nuclear power and nuclear weapons, and is exact. ⏎ ## Key Figures & Recognition ⏎ - **Albert Einstein** (1879–1955): Special relativity, 1905. **Nobel Prize 1921** (for photoelectric effect, not SR — committee was sceptical of SR at the time). - **Hendrik Lorentz** (1853–1928): Lorentz transformation, 1904. **Nobel Prize 1902**. - **Hermann Minkowski** (1864–1909): Spacetime geometry, 1907. ⏎ ## Seminal Papers ⏎ - Einstein, A. ["Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper." *Ann. Phys.* 17 (1905)](https://doi.org/10.1002/andp.19053221004) - Einstein, A. ["Ist die Trägheit eines Körpers von seinem Energieinhalt abhängig?" *Ann. Phys.* 18 (1905)](https://doi.org/10.1002/andp.19053231314) ⏎ # Parents ⏎ * [SCI] Electromagnetic Wave Theory⏎
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