Lorentz Transformation
Lorentz Transformation
Lorentz Transformation
Lorentz transformation
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In physics, the Lorentz transformation (or transformations) is named after the Dutch physicist Hendrik Lorentz. It
was the result of attempts by Lorentz and others to explain how the speed of light was observed to be independent of
the reference frame, and to understand the symmetries of the laws of electromagnetism. The Lorentz transformation
is in accordance with special relativity, but was derived before special relativity.
The transformations describe how measurements of space and time by two observers are related. They reflect the fact
that observers moving at different velocities may measure different distances, elapsed times, and even different
orderings of events. They supersede the Galilean transformation of Newtonian physics, which assumes an absolute
space and time (see Galilean relativity). The Galilean transformation is a good approximation only at relative speeds
much smaller than the speed of light.
The Lorentz transformation is a linear transformation. It may include a rotation of space; a rotation-free Lorentz
transformation is called a Lorentz boost.
In Minkowski space, the Lorentz transformations preserve the spacetime interval between any two events. They
describe only the transformations in which the spacetime event at the origin is left fixed, so they can be considered as
a hyperbolic rotation of Minkowski space. The more general set of transformations that also includes translations is
known as the Poincaré group.
History
Many physicists, including Woldemar Voigt, George FitzGerald, Joseph Larmor, and Hendrik Lorentz himself had
been discussing the physics implied by these equations since 1887.
Early in 1889, Oliver Heaviside had shown from Maxwell's equations that the electric field surrounding a spherical
distribution of charge should cease to have spherical symmetry once the charge is in motion relative to the ether.
FitzGerald then conjectured that Heaviside’s distortion result might be applied to a theory of intermolecular forces.
Some months later, FitzGerald published the conjecture that bodies in motion are being contracted, in order to
explain the baffling outcome of the 1887 ether-wind experiment of Michelson and Morley. In 1892, Lorentz
independently presented the same idea in a more detailed manner, which was subsequently called
FitzGerald–Lorentz contraction hypothesis. Their explanation was widely known before 1905.
Lorentz transformation 2
Lorentz (1892–1904) and Larmor (1897–1900), who believed the luminiferous ether hypothesis, were also seeking
the transformation under which Maxwell's equations are invariant when transformed from the ether to a moving
frame. They extended the FitzGerald–Lorentz contraction hypothesis and found out that the time coordinate has to
be modified as well ("local time"). Henri Poincaré gave a physical interpretation to local time (to first order in v/c) as
the consequence of clock synchronization, under the assumption that the speed of light is constant in moving frames.
Larmor is credited to have been the first to understand the crucial time dilation property inherent in his equations.
In 1905, Poincaré was the first to recognize that the transformation has the properties of a mathematical group, and
named it after Lorentz.[2] Later in the same year Albert Einstein published what is now called special relativity, by
deriving the Lorentz transformation under the assumptions of the principle of relativity and the constancy of the
speed of light in any inertial reference frame, and by abandoning the mechanical aether.[3]
where:
• v is the relative velocity between
frames in the x-direction,
• c is the speed of light,
• is the Lorentz
factor (Greek lowercase gamma), The spacetime coordinates of an event, as measured by each observer in their inertial
• is the velocity coefficient reference frame (in standard configuration) are shown in the speech bubbles.Top: frame
F′ moves at velocity v along the x-axis of frame F.Bottom: frame F moves at velocity −v
(Greek lowercase beta), again for [4]
along the x′-axis of frame F′.
the x-direction.
The use of β and γ is standard throughout the literature.[7] For the remainder of the article – they will be also used
throughout unless otherwise stated. Since the above is a linear system of equations (more technically a linear
transformation), they can be written in matrix form:
According to the principle of relativity, there is no privileged frame of reference, so the inverse transformations
frame F′ to frame F must be given by simply negating v:
summarized by
summarized by
The Lorentz transform for a boost in one of the above directions can be compactly written as a single matrix
equation:
Lorentz transformation 5
Vector form
so that
The parallel and perpendicular components can be eliminated, by substituting into r′:
This method, of eliminating parallel and perpendicular components, can be applied to any Lorentz transformation
written in parallel-perpendicular form.
Lorentz transformation 6
Matrix forms
These equations can be expressed in block matrix form as
where I is the 3×3 identity matrix and β = v/c is the relative velocity vector (in units of c) as a column vector – in
cartesian and tensor index notation it is:
where δij is the Kronecker delta, and by convention: Latin letters for indices take the values 1, 2, 3, for spatial
components of a 4-vector (Greek indices take values 0, 1, 2, 3 for time and space components).
Note that this transformation is only the "boost," i.e., a transformation between two frames whose x, y, and z axis are
parallel and whose spacetime origins coincide. The most general proper Lorentz transformation also contains a
rotation of the three axes, because the composition of two boosts is not a pure boost but is a boost followed by a
rotation. The rotation gives rise to Thomas precession. The boost is given by a symmetric matrix, but the general
Lorentz transformation matrix need not be symmetric.
Lorentz transformation 7
• gyr (lower case g) is the gyrovector space abstraction of the gyroscopic Thomas precession, defined as an
operator on a velocity w in terms of velocity addition:
for all w.
The composition of two Lorentz transformations L(u, U) and L(v, V) which include rotations U and V is given by:[8]
Lorentz transformation 8
The purple hyperbolae indicate this is a hyperbolic rotation, the hyperbolic angle ϕ is called rapidity (see below).
The greater the relative speed between the reference frames, the more "warped" the axes become. The relative
velocity cannot exceed c.
The black arrow is a displacement four-vector between two events (not necessarily on the same world line), showing
that in a Lorentz boost; time dilation (fewer time intervals in moving frame) and length contraction (shorter lengths
in moving frame) occur. The axes in the moving frame are orthogonal (even though they do not look so).
Rapidity
The Lorentz transformation can be cast into another useful form by defining a parameter ϕ called the rapidity (an
instance of hyperbolic angle) such that
and thus
Equivalently:
Hyperbolic expressions
From the above expressions for eφ and e−φ
and therefore,
Thus, the Lorentz transformation can be seen as a hyperbolic rotation of coordinates in Minkowski space, where the
parameter ϕ represents the hyperbolic angle of rotation, often referred to as rapidity. This transformation is
sometimes illustrated with a Minkowski diagram, as displayed above.
This 4-by-4 boost matrix can thus be written compactly as a Matrix exponential,
Lorentz transformation 10
where the simpler Lie-algebraic hyperbolic rotation generator Kx is called a boost generator.
Special relativity
The crucial insight of Einstein's clock-setting method is the idea that time is relative. In essence, each observer's
frame of reference is associated with a unique set of clocks, the result being that time as measured for a location
passes at different rates for different observers. This was a direct result of the Lorentz transformations and is called
time dilation. We can also clearly see from the Lorentz "local time" transformation that the concept of the relativity
of simultaneity and of the relativity of length contraction are also consequences of that clock-setting hypothesis.[9]
Spacetime interval
In a given coordinate system xμ, if two events A and B are separated by
This can be written in another form using the Minkowski metric. In this coordinate system,
Now suppose that we make a coordinate transformation xμ → x′ μ. Then, the interval in this coordinate system is
given by
or
It is a result of special relativity that the interval is an invariant. That is, s2 = s′ 2. For this to hold, it can be shown[12]
that it is necessary (but not sufficient) for the coordinate transformation to be of the form
Here, Cμ is a constant vector and Λμν a constant matrix, where we require that
gives us
The set of Poincaré transformations satisfies the properties of a group and is called the Poincaré group. Under the
Erlangen program, Minkowski space can be viewed as the geometry defined by the Poincaré group, which combines
Lorentz transformations with translations. In a similar way, the set of all Lorentz transformations forms a group,
called the Lorentz group.
A quantity invariant under Lorentz transformations is known as a Lorentz scalar.
References
[1] http:/ / en. wikipedia. org/ w/ index. php?title=Template:Spacetime& action=edit
[2] The reference is within the following paper:
[3] . See also: English translation (http:/ / www. fourmilab. ch/ etexts/ einstein/ specrel/ ).
[4] University Physics – With Modern Physics (12th Edition), H.D. Young, R.A. Freedman (Original edition), Addison-Wesley (Pearson
International), 1st Edition: 1949, 12th Edition: 2008, ISBN (10-) 0-321-50130-6, ISBN (13-) 978-0-321-50130-1
[5] Dynamics and Relativity, J.R. Forshaw, A.G. Smith, Manchester Physics Series, John Wiley & Sons Ltd, ISBN 978-0-470-01460-8
[6] http:/ / hyperphysics. phy-astr. gsu. edu/ hbase/ hframe. html. Hyperphysics, web-based physics material hosted by Georgia State University,
USA.
[7] Relativity DeMystified, D. McMahon, Mc Graw Hill (USA), 2006, ISBN 0-07-145545-0
[8] eq. (55), Thomas rotation and the parameterization of the Lorentz transformation group, AA Ungar – Foundations of Physics Letters, 1988
[9] Dynamics and Relativity, J.R. Forshaw, A.G. Smith, Wiley, 2009, ISBN 978 0 470 01460 8
[10] Electromagnetism (2nd Edition), I.S. Grant, W.R. Phillips, Manchester Physics, John Wiley & Sons, 2008, ISBN 9-780471-927129
[11] Introduction to Electrodynamics (3rd Edition), D.J. Griffiths, Pearson Education, Dorling Kindersley, 2007, ISBN 81-7758-293-3
[12] : (Section 2:1)
[13] : volume 1.
Further reading
• Einstein, Albert (1961), Relativity: The Special and the General Theory (http://www.marxists.org/reference/
archive/einstein/works/1910s/relative/), New York: Three Rivers Press (published 1995), ISBN 0-517-88441-0
• Ernst, A.; Hsu, J.-P. (2001), "First proposal of the universal speed of light by Voigt 1887" (http://psroc.phys.
ntu.edu.tw/cjp/v39/211.pdf), Chinese Journal of Physics 39 (3): 211–230, Bibcode: 2001ChJPh..39..211E
(http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2001ChJPh..39..211E)
• Thornton, Stephen T.; Marion, Jerry B. (2004), Classical dynamics of particles and systems (5th ed.), Belmont,
[CA.]: Brooks/Cole, pp. 546–579, ISBN 0-534-40896-6
• Voigt, Woldemar (1887), "Über das Doppler'sche princip", Nachrichten von der Königlicher Gesellschaft den
Wissenschaft zu Göttingen 2: 41–51
Lorentz transformation 13
External links
• Derivation of the Lorentz transformations (http://www2.physics.umd.edu/~yakovenk/teaching/Lorentz.pdf).
This web page contains a more detailed derivation of the Lorentz transformation with special emphasis on group
properties.
• The Paradox of Special Relativity (http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/sr/paradox.html). This webpage poses a
problem, the solution of which is the Lorentz transformation, which is presented graphically in its next page.
• Relativity (http://www.lightandmatter.com/html_books/0sn/ch07/ch07.html) – a chapter from an online
textbook
• Special Relativity: The Lorentz Transformation, The Velocity Addition Law (http://physnet.org/home/modules/
pdf_modules/m12.pdf) on Project PHYSNET (http://www.physnet.org)
• Warp Special Relativity Simulator (http://www.adamauton.com/warp/). A computer program demonstrating
the Lorentz transformations on everyday objects.
• Animation clip (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2VMO7pcWhg) visualizing the Lorentz transformation.
• Lorentz Frames Animated (http://math.ucr.edu/~jdp/Relativity/Lorentz_Frames.html) from John de Pillis.
Online Flash animations of Galilean and Lorentz frames, various paradoxes, EM wave phenomena, etc.
Article Sources and Contributors 14
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