Jump to content

Relativistic aberration

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Rastoring (talk | contribs) at 07:41, 16 September 2017 (Delete unsourced claim that Newtonian physics leads to the relativistic aberration formula. (It does not, as explained in the main article on aberration, which covers the relativistic version better than this article does.) Two other minor edits.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Relativistic aberration is the relativistic version of aberration of light, including relativistic corrections that become significant for observers who move with velocities close to the speed of light. It is described by Einstein's special theory of relativity.

Suppose, in the reference frame of the observer, the source is moving with speed at an angle relative to the vector from the observer to the source at the time when the light is emitted. Then the following formula, which was derived by Einstein in 1905 from the Lorentz transformation, describes the aberration of the light source, , measured by the observer:

In this circumstance, the rays of light from the source which reach the observer are tilted towards the direction of the source's motion (relative to the observer). It is as if light emitted by a moving object is concentrated conically, towards its direction of motion; an effect called relativistic beaming. Also, light received by a moving object (e.g. the view from a very fast spacecraft) also appears concentrated towards its direction of motion.

One consequence of this is that a forward observer should normally be expected to intercept a greater proportion of the object's light than a rearward one; this concentration of light in the object's forward direction is referred to as the "searchlight effect" (or headlight effect).

See also