CHAPTER
2
SPACE
AND TIME
Our
present ideas about the motion of bodies date back to Galileo
and Newton. Before them people believed Aristotle, who said that
the natural state of a body was to be at rest and that it moved
only if driven by a force or impulse. It followed that a heavy
body should fall faster than a light one, because it would have
a greater pull toward the earth.
The
Aristotelian tradition also held that one could work out all the
laws that govern the universe by pure thought: it was not necessary
to check by observation. So no one until Galileo bothered to see
whether bodies of different weight did in fact fall at different
speeds. It is said that Galileo demonstrated that Aristotle’s belief
was false by dropping weights from the leaning tower of Pisa. The
story is almost certainly untrue, but Galileo did do something equivalent:
he rolled balls of different weights down a smooth slope. The situation
is similar to that of heavy bodies falling vertically, but it is
easier to observe because the Speeds are smaller. Galileo’s measurements
indicated that each body increased its speed at the same rate, no
matter what its weight. For example, if you let go of a ball on
a slope that drops by one meter for every ten meters you go along,
the ball will be traveling down the slope at a speed of about one
meter per second after one second, two meters per second after two
seconds, and so on, however heavy the ball. Of course a lead weight
would fall faster than a feather, but that is only because a feather
is slowed down by air resistance. If one drops two bodies that don’t
have much air resistance, such as two different lead weights, they
fall at the same rate. On the moon, where there is no air to slow
things down, the astronaut David R. Scott performed the feather
and lead weight experiment and found that indeed they did hit the
ground at the same time.
Galileo’s
measurements were used by Newton as the basis of his laws of motion.
In Galileo’s experiments, as a body rolled down the slope it was
always acted on by the same force (its weight), and the effect was
to make it constantly speed up. This showed that the real effect
of a force is always to change the speed of a body, rather than
just to set it moving, as was previously thought. It also meant
that whenever a body is not acted on by any force, it will keep
on moving in a straight line at the same speed. This idea was first
stated explicitly in Newton’s Principia Mathematica, published
in 1687, and is known as Newton’s first law. What happens to a body
when a force does act on it is given by Newton’s second law. This
states that the body will accelerate, or change its speed, at a
rate that is proportional to the force. (For example, the acceleration
is twice as great if the force is twice as great.) The acceleration
is also smaller the greater the mass (or quantity of matter) of
the body. (The same force acting on a body of twice the mass will
produce half the acceleration.) A familiar example is provided by
a car: the more powerful the engine, the greater the acceleration,
but the heavier the car, the smaller the acceleration for the same
engine. In addition to his laws of motion, Newton discovered a law
to describe the force of gravity, which states that every body attracts
every other body with a force that is proportional to the mass of
each body. Thus the force between two bodies would be twice as strong
if one of the bodies (say, body A) had its mass doubled. This is
what you might expect because one could think of the new body A
as being made of two bodies with the original mass. Each would
attract body B with the original force. Thus the total force
between A and B would be twice the original force.
And if, say, one of the bodies had twice the mass, and the other
had three times the mass, then the force would be six times as strong.
One can now see why all bodies fall at the same rate: a body of
twice the weight will have twice the force of gravity pulling it
down, but it will also have twice the mass. According to Newton’s
second law, these two effects will exactly cancel each other, so
the acceleration will be the same in all cases.
Newton’s
law of gravity also tells us that the farther apart the bodies,
the smaller the force. Newton’s law of gravity says that the gravitational
attraction of a star is exactly one quarter that of a similar star
at half the distance. This law predicts the orbits of the earth,
the moon, and the planets with great accuracy. If the law were that
the gravitational attraction of a star went down faster or increased
more rapidly with distance, the orbits of the planets would not
be elliptical, they would either spiral in to the sun or escape
from the sun.
The
big difference between the ideas of Aristotle and those of Galileo
and Newton is that Aristotle believed in a preferred state of rest,
which any body would take up if it were not driven by some force
Or impulse. In particular, he thought that the earth was at rest.
But it follows from Newton’s laws that there is no unique standard
of rest. One could equally well say that body A was at rest
and body B was moving at constant speed with respect to body
A, or that body B was at rest and body A was
moving. For example, if one sets aside for a moment the rotation
of the earth and its orbit round the sun, one could say that the
earth was at rest and that a train on it was traveling north at
ninety miles per hour or that the train was at rest and the earth
was moving south at ninety miles per hour. If one carried out experiments
with moving bodies on the train, all Newton’s laws would still hold.
For instance, playing Ping-Pong on the train, one would find that
the ball obeyed Newton’s laws just like a ball on a table by the
track. So there is no way to tell whether it is the train or the
earth that is moving.
The
lack of an absolute standard of rest meant that one could not determine
whether two events that took place at different times occurred in
the same position in space. For example, suppose our Ping-Pong ball
on the train bounces straight up and down, hitting the table twice
on the same spot one second apart. To someone on the track, the
two bounces would seem to take place about forty meters apart, because
the train would have traveled that far down the track between the
bounces. The nonexistence of absolute rest therefore meant that
one could not give an event an absolute position in space, as Aristotle
had believed. The positions of events and the distances between
them would be different for a person on the train and one on the
track, and there would be no reason to prefer one person’s position
to the other’s.
Newton
was very worried by this lack of absolute position, or absolute
space, as it was called, because it did not accord with his idea
of an absolute God. In fact, he refused to accept lack of absolute
space, even though it was implied by his laws. He was severely criticized
for this irrational belief by many people, most notably by Bishop
Berkeley, a philosopher who believed that all material objects and
space and time are an illusion. When the famous Dr. Johnson was
told of Berkeley’s opinion, he cried, “I refute it thus!” and stubbed
his toe on a large stone.
Both
Aristotle and Newton believed in absolute time. That is, they believed
that one could unambiguously measure the interval of time between
two events, and that this time would be the same whoever measured
it, provided they used a good clock. Time was completely separate
from and independent of space. This is what most people would take
to be the commonsense view. However, we have had to change our ideas
about space and time. Although our apparently commonsense notions
work well when dealing with things like apples, or planets that
travel comparatively slowly, they don’t work at all for things moving
at or near the speed of light.
The
fact that light travels at a finite, but very high, speed was first
discovered in 1676 by the Danish astronomer Ole Christensen Roemer.
He observed that the times at which the moons of Jupiter appeared
to pass behind Jupiter were not evenly spaced, as one would expect
if the moons went round Jupiter at a constant rate. As the earth
and Jupiter orbit around the sun, the distance between them varies.
Roemer noticed that eclipses of Jupiter’s moons appeared later the
farther we were from Jupiter. He argued that this was because the
light from the moons took longer to reach us when we were farther
away. His measurements of the variations in the distance of the
earth from Jupiter were, however, not very accurate, and so his
value for the speed of light was 140,000 miles per second, compared
to the modern value of 186,000 miles per second. Nevertheless, Roemer’s
achievement, in not only proving that light travels at a finite
speed, but also in measuring that speed, was remarkable – coming
as it did eleven years before Newton’s publication of Principia
Mathematica. A proper theory of the propagation of light didn’t
come until 1865, when the British physicist James Clerk Maxwell
succeeded in unifying the partial theories that up to then had been
used to describe the forces of electricity and magnetism. Maxwell’s
equations predicted that there could be wavelike disturbances in
the combined electromagnetic field, and that these would travel
at a fixed speed, like ripples on a pond. If the wavelength of these
waves (the distance between one wave crest and the next) is a meter
or more, they are what we now call radio waves. Shorter wavelengths
are known as microwaves (a few centimeters) or infrared (more than
a ten-thousandth of a centimeter). Visible light has a wavelength
of between only forty and eighty millionths of a centimeter. Even
shorter wavelengths are known as ultraviolet, X rays, and gamma
rays.
Maxwell’s
theory predicted that radio or light waves should travel at a certain
fixed speed. But Newton’s theory had got rid of the idea of absolute
rest, so if light was supposed to travel at a fixed speed, one would
have to say what that fixed speed was to be measured relative to.
It
was therefore suggested that there was a substance called the "ether"
that was present everywhere, even in "empty" space. Light
waves should travel through the ether as sound waves travel through
air, and their speed should therefore be relative to the ether.
Different observers, moving relative to the ether, would see light
coming toward them at different speeds, but light's speed relative
to the ether would remain fixed. In particular, as the earth was
moving through the ether on its orbit round the sun, the speed of
light measured in the direction of the earth's motion through the
ether (when we were moving toward the source of the light) should
be higher than the speed of light at right angles to that motion
(when we are not moving toward the source). In 1887Albert Michelson
(who later became the first American to receive the Nobel Prize
for physics) and Edward Morley carried out a very careful experiment
at the Case School of Applied Science in Cleveland. They compared
the speed of light in the direction of the earth's motion with that
at right angles to the earth's motion. To their great surprise,
they found they were exactly the same!
Between
1887 and 1905 there were several attempts, most notably by the Dutch
physicist Hendrik Lorentz, to explain the result of the Michelson-Morley
experiment in terms of objects contracting and clocks slowing down
when they moved through the ether. However, in a famous paper in
1905, a hitherto unknown clerk in the Swiss patent office, Albert
Einstein, pointed out that the whole idea of an ether was unnecessary,
providing one was willing to abandon the idea of absolute time.
A similar point was made a few weeks later by a leading French mathematician,
Henri Poincare. Einstein’s arguments were closer to physics than
those of Poincare, who regarded this problem as mathematical. Einstein
is usually given the credit for the new theory, but Poincare is
remembered by having his name attached to an important part of it.
The
fundamental postulate of the theory of relativity, as it was called,
was that the laws of science should be the same for all freely moving
observers, no matter what their speed. This was true for Newton’s
laws of motion, but now the idea was extended to include Maxwell’s
theory and the speed of light: all observers should measure the
same speed of light, no matter how fast they are moving. This simple
idea has some remarkable consequences. Perhaps the best known are
the equivalence of mass and energy, summed up in Einstein’s famous
equation E=mc2 (where E is energy, m is mass,
and c is the speed of light), and the law that nothing may
travel faster than the speed of light. Because of the equivalence
of energy and mass, the energy which an object has due to its motion
will add to its mass. In other words, it will make it harder to
increase its speed. This effect is only really significant for objects
moving at speeds close to the speed of light. For example, at 10
percent of the speed of light an object’s mass is only 0.5 percent
more than normal, while at 90 percent of the speed of light it would
be more than twice its normal mass. As an object approaches the
speed of light, its mass rises ever more quickly, so it takes more
and more energy to speed it up further. It can in fact never reach
the speed of light, because by then its mass would have become infinite,
and by the equivalence of mass and energy, it would have taken an
infinite amount of energy to get it there. For this reason, any
normal object is forever confined by relativity to move at speeds
slower than the speed of light. Only light, or other waves that
have no intrinsic mass, can move at the speed of light.
An
equally remarkable consequence of relativity is the way it has revolutionized
our ideas of space and time. In Newton’s theory, if a pulse of light
is sent from one place to another, different observers would agree
on the time that the journey took (since time is absolute), but
will not always agree on how far the light traveled (since space
is not absolute). Since the speed of the light is just the distance
it has traveled divided by the time it has taken, different observers
would measure different speeds for the light. In relativity, on
the other hand, all observers must agree on how fast light
travels. They still, however, do not agree on the distance the light
has traveled, so they must therefore now also disagree over the
time it has taken. (The time taken is the distance the light has
traveled – which the observers do not agree on – divided by the
light’s speed – which they do agree on.) In other words, the theory
of relativity put an end to the idea of absolute time! It appeared
that each observer must have his own measure of time, as recorded
by a clock carried with him, and that identical clocks carried by
different observers would not necessarily agree.
Each
observer could use radar to say where and when an event took place
by sending out a pulse of light or radio waves. Part of the pulse
is reflected back at the event and the observer measures the time
at which he receives the echo. The time of the event is then said
to be the time halfway between when the pulse was sent and the time
when the reflection was received back: the distance of the event
is half the time taken for this round trip, multiplied by the speed
of light. (An event, in this sense, is something that takes place
at a single point in space, at a specified point in time.) This
idea is shown here, which is an example of a space-time diagram...
Using
this procedure, observers who are moving relative to each other
will assign different times and positions to the same event. No
particular observer’s measurements are any more correct than any
other observer’s, but all the measurements are related. Any observer
can work out precisely what time and position any other observer
will assign to an event, provided he knows the other observer’s
relative velocity.
Nowadays
we use just this method to measure distances precisely, because
we can measure time more accurately than length. In effect, the
meter is defined to be the distance traveled by light in 0.000000003335640952
second, as measured by a cesium clock. (The reason for that particular
number is that it corresponds to the historical definition of the
meter – in terms of two marks on a particular platinum bar kept
in Paris.) Equally, we can use a more convenient, new unit of length
called a light-second. This is simply defined as the distance that
light travels in one second. In the theory of relativity, we now
define distance in terms of time and the speed of light, so it follows
automatically that every observer will measure light to have the
same speed (by definition, 1 meter per 0.000000003335640952 second).
There is no need to introduce the idea of an ether, whose presence
anyway cannot be detected, as the Michelson-Morley experiment showed.
The theory of relativity does, however, force us to change fundamentally
our ideas of space and time. We must accept that time is not completely
separate from and independent of space, but is combined with it
to form an object called space-time.
It
is a matter of common experience that one can describe the position
of a point in space by three numbers, or coordinates. For instance,
one can say that a point in a room is seven feet from one wall,
three feet from another, and five feet above the floor. Or one could
specify that a point was at a certain latitude and longitude and
a certain height above sea level. One is free to use any three suitable
coordinates, although they have only a limited range of validity.
One would not specify the position of the moon in terms of miles
north and miles west of Piccadilly Circus and feet above sea level.
Instead, one might describe it in terms of distance from the sun,
distance from the plane of the orbits of the planets, and the angle
between the line joining the moon to the sun and the line joining
the sun to a nearby star such as Alpha Centauri. Even these coordinates
would not be of much use in describing the position of the sun in
our galaxy or the position of our galaxy in the local group of galaxies.
In fact, one may describe the whole universe in terms of a collection
of overlapping patches. In each patch, one can use a different set
of three coordinates to specify the position of a point.
An
event is something that happens at a particular point in space and
at a particular time. So one can specify it by four numbers or coordinates.
Again, the choice of coordinates is arbitrary; one can use any three
well-defined spatial coordinates and any measure of time. In relativity,
there is no real distinction between the space and time coordinates,
just as there is no real difference between any two space coordinates.
One could choose a new set of coordinates in which, say, the first
space coordinate was a combination of the old first and second space
coordinates. For instance, instead of measuring the position of
a point on the earth in miles north of Piccadilly and miles west
of Piccadilly, one could use miles northeast of Piccadilly, and
miles north-west of Piccadilly. Similarly, in relativity, one could
use a new time coordinate that was the old time (in seconds) plus
the distance (in light-seconds) north of Piccadilly.
It
is often helpful to think of the four coordinates of an event as
specifying its position in a four-dimensional space called space-time.
It is impossible to imagine a four-dimensional space. I personally
find it hard enough to visualize three-dimensional space! However,
it is easy to draw diagrams of two-dimensional spaces, such as the
surface of the earth. (The surface of the earth is two-dimensional
because the position of a point can be specified by two coordinates,
latitude and longitude.) I shall generally use diagrams in which
time increases upward and one of the spatial dimensions is shown
horizontally. The other two spatial dimensions are ignored or, sometimes,
one of them is indicated by perspective. (These are called space-time
diagrams, like Figure 2:1.)
Figure 2:2
For
example, in Figure 2:2
time is measured upward in years and the distance along the line
from the sun to Alpha Centauri is measured horizontally in miles.
The paths of the sun and of Alpha Centauri through space-time
are shown as the vertical lines on the left and right of the diagram.
A ray of light from the sun follows the diagonal line, and takes
four years to get from the sun to Alpha Centauri.
As
we have seen, Maxwell’s equations predicted that the speed of light
should be the same whatever the speed of the source, and this has
been confirmed by accurate measurements. It follows from this that
if a pulse of light is emitted at a particular time at a particular
point in space, then as time goes on it will spread out as a sphere
of light whose size and position are independent of the speed of
the source. After one millionth of a second the light will have
spread out to form a sphere with a radius of 300 meters; after two
millionths of a second, the radius will be 600 meters; and so on.
It will be like the ripples that spread out on the surface of a
pond when a stone is thrown in. The ripples spread out as a circle
that gets bigger as time goes on. If one stacks snapshots of the
ripples at different times one above the other, the expanding circle
of ripples will mark out a cone whose tip is at the place and time
at which the stone hit the water Figure 2:3.
Figure 2:3
Similarly,
the light spreading out from an event forms a (three-dimensional)
cone in (the four-dimensional) space-time. This cone is called
the future light cone of the event. In the same way we can draw
another cone, called the past light cone, which is the set of
events from which a pulse of light is able to reach the given
event Figure 2:4.
Given
an event P, one can divide the other events in the universe into
three classes. Those events that can be reached from the event
P by a particle or wave traveling at or below the speed of light
are said to be in the future of P. They will lie within or on
the expanding sphere of light emitted from the event P. Thus they
will lie within or on the future light cone of P in the space-time
diagram. Only events in the future of P can be affected by what
happens at P because nothing can travel faster than light.
Similarly,
the past of P can be defined as the set of all events from which
it is possible to reach the event P traveling at or below the speed
of light. It is thus the set of events that can affect what happens
at P. The events that do not lie in the future or past of P are
said to lie in the elsewhere of P Figure 2:5.
What
happens at such events can neither affect nor be affected by what
happens at P. For example, if the sun were to cease to shine at
this very moment, it would not affect things on earth at the present
time because they would be in the elsewhere of the event when the
sun went out Figure 2:6.
Figure 2:6
We
would know about it only after eight minutes, the time it takes
light to reach us from the sun. Only then would events on earth
lie in the future light cone of the event at which the sun went
out. Similarly, we do not know what is happening at the moment
farther away in the universe: the light that we see from distant
galaxies left them millions of years ago, and in the case of the
most distant object that we have seen, the light left some eight
thousand million years ago. Thus, when we look at the universe,
we are seeing it as it was in the past.
If
one neglects gravitational effects, as Einstein and Poincare did
in 1905, one has what is called the special theory of relativity.
For every event in space-time we may construct a light cone (the
set of all possible paths of light in space-time emitted at that
event), and since the speed of light is the same at every event
and in every direction, all the light cones will be identical and
will all point in the same direction. The theory also tells us that
nothing can travel faster than light. This means that the path of
any object through space and time must be represented by a line
that lies within the light cone at each event on it (Fig. 2.7).
The special theory of relativity was very successful in explaining
that the speed of light appears the same to all observers (as shown
by the Michelson-Morley experiment) and in describing what happens
when things move at speeds close to the speed of light. However,
it was inconsistent with the Newtonian theory of gravity, which
said that objects attracted each other with a force that depended
on the distance between them. This meant that if one moved one of
the objects, the force on the other one would change instantaneously.
Or in other gravitational effects should travel with infinite velocity,
instead of at or below the speed of light, as the special theory
of relativity required. Einstein made a number of unsuccessful attempts
between 1908 and 1914 to find a theory of gravity that was consistent
with special relativity. Finally, in 1915, he proposed what we now
call the general theory of relativity.
Einstein
made the revolutionary suggestion that gravity is not a force like
other forces, but is a consequence of the fact that space-time is
not flat, as had been previously assumed: it is curved, or “warped,”
by the distribution of mass and energy in it. Bodies like the earth
are not made to move on curved orbits by a force called gravity;
instead, they follow the nearest thing to a straight path in a curved
space, which is called a geodesic. A geodesic is the shortest (or
longest) path between two nearby points. For example, the surface
of the earth is a two-dimensional curved space. A geodesic on the
earth is called a great circle, and is the shortest route between
two points (Fig. 2.8). As the geodesic is the shortest path between
any two airports, this is the route an airline navigator will tell
the pilot to fly along. In general relativity, bodies always follow
straight lines in four-dimensional space-time, but they nevertheless
appear to us to move along curved paths in our three-dimensional
space. (This is rather like watching an airplane flying over hilly
ground. Although it follows a straight line in three-dimensional
space, its shadow follows a curved path on the two-dimensional ground.)
The
mass of the sun curves space-time in such a way that although the
earth follows a straight path in four-dimensional space-time, it
appears to us to move along a circular orbit in three-dimensional
space.
Fact,
the orbits of the planets predicted by general relativity are almost
exactly the same as those predicted by the Newtonian theory of gravity.
However, in the case of Mercury, which, being the nearest planet
to the sun, feels the strongest gravitational effects, and has a
rather elongated orbit, general relativity predicts that the long
axis of the ellipse should rotate about the sun at a rate of about
one degree in ten thousand years. Small though this effect is, it
had been noticed before 1915 and served as one of the first confirmations
of Einstein’s theory. In recent years the even smaller deviations
of the orbits of the other planets from the Newtonian predictions
have been measured by radar and found to agree with the predictions
of general relativity.
Light
rays too must follow geodesics in space-time. Again, the fact that
space is curved means that light no longer appears to travel in
straight lines in space. So general relativity predicts that light
should be bent by gravitational fields. For example, the theory
predicts that the light cones of points near the sun would be slightly
bent inward, on account of the mass of the sun. This means that
light from a distant star that happened to pass near the sun would
be deflected through a small angle, causing the star to appear in
a different position to an observer on the earth (Fig. 2.9). Of
course, if the light from the star always passed close to the sun,
we would not be able to tell whether the light was being deflected
or if instead the star was really where we see it. However, as the
earth orbits around the sun, different stars appear to pass behind
the sun and have their light deflected. They therefore change their
apparent position relative to other stars. It is normally very difficult
to see this effect, because the light from the sun makes it impossible
to observe stars that appear near to the sun the sky. However, it
is possible to do so during an eclipse of the sun, when the sun’s
light is blocked out by the moon. Einstein’s prediction of light
deflection could not be tested immediately in 1915, because the
First World War was in progress, and it was not until 1919 that
a British expedition, observing an eclipse from West Africa, showed
that light was indeed deflected by the sun, just as predicted by
the theory. This proof of a German theory by British scientists
was hailed as a great act of reconciliation between the two countries
after the war. It is ionic, therefore, that later examination of
the photographs taken on that expedition showed the errors were
as great as the effect they were trying to measure. Their measurement
had been sheer luck, or a case of knowing the result they wanted
to get, not an uncommon occurrence in science. The light deflection
has, however, been accurately confirmed by a number of later observations.
Another
prediction of general relativity is that time should appear to slower
near a massive body like the earth. This is because there is a relation
between the energy of light and its frequency (that is, the number
of waves of light per second): the greater the energy, the higher
frequency. As light travels upward in the earth’s gravitational
field, it loses energy, and so its frequency goes down. (This means
that the length of time between one wave crest and the next goes
up.) To someone high up, it would appear that everything down below
was making longer to happen. This prediction was tested in 1962,
using a pair of very accurate clocks mounted at the top and bottom
of a water tower. The clock at the bottom, which was nearer the
earth, was found to run slower, in exact agreement with general
relativity. The difference in the speed of clocks at different heights
above the earth is now of considerable practical importance, with
the advent of very accurate navigation systems based on signals
from satellites. If one ignored the predictions of general relativity,
the position that one calculated would be wrong by several miles!
Newton’s
laws of motion put an end to the idea of absolute position in space.
The theory of relativity gets rid of absolute time. Consider a pair
of twins. Suppose that one twin goes to live on the top of a mountain
while the other stays at sea level. The first twin would age faster
than the second. Thus, if they met again, one would be older than
the other. In this case, the difference in ages would be very small,
but it would be much larger if one of the twins went for a long
trip in a spaceship at nearly the speed of light. When he returned,
he would be much younger than the one who stayed on earth. This
is known as the twins paradox, but it is a paradox only if one has
the idea of absolute time at the back of one’s mind. In the theory
of relativity there is no unique absolute time, but instead each
individual has his own personal measure of time that depends on
where he is and how he is moving.
Before
1915, space and time were thought of as a fixed arena in which events
took place, but which was not affected by what happened in it. This
was true even of the special theory of relativity. Bodies moved,
forces attracted and repelled, but time and space simply continued,
unaffected. It was natural to think that space and time went on
forever.
The
situation, however, is quite different in the general theory of
relativity. Space and time are now dynamic quantities: when a body
moves, or a force acts, it affects the curvature of space and time
– and in turn the structure of space-time affects the way in which
bodies move and forces act. Space and time not only affect but also
are affected by everything that happens in the universe. Just as
one cannot talk about events in the universe without the notions
of space and time, so in general relativity it became meaningless
to talk about space and time outside the limits of the universe.
In
the following decades this new understanding of space and time was
to revolutionize our view of the universe. The old idea of an essentially
unchanging universe that could have existed, and could continue
to exist, forever was replaced by the notion of a dynamic, expanding
universe that seemed to have begun a finite time ago, and that might
end at a finite time in the future. That revolution forms the subject
of the next chapter. And years later, it was also to be the starting
point for my work in theoretical physics. Roger Penrose and I showed
that Einstein’s general theory of relativity implied that the universe
must have a beginning and, possibly, an end.
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