1 / 13

An Extension of Lorentz Transformations

An Extension of Lorentz Transformations. Dometrious Gordine Virginia Union University Howard University REU Program. Maxwell’s Equations Lorentz transformations (symmetry of Maxwell’s equations). Gauss & Ampere. Gauss & Faraday. Q: Can we extend to non-constant v ?. v is a constant.

cece
Télécharger la présentation

An Extension of Lorentz Transformations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Extension of Lorentz Transformations DometriousGordine Virginia Union University Howard University REU Program

  2. Maxwell’s Equations • Lorentz transformations(symmetry of Maxwell’s equations) Gauss & Ampere Gauss & Faraday Q: Can we extendto non-constant v? v is a constant Introduction (matrix format)

  3. Q:Can we extend Lorentz transformations, but so as to still be a symmetry of Maxwell’s equations? • Generalize v → v0 + aμxμ = v0 + a0x0 + a1x1 + a2x2 + a3x3 • Expand all functions of v, but treat the aμ as small… … … is messy • For example, expanding • …turnsthestandardLorentz-boostmatrix • …into: …so that The Quest

  4. Even just one specific electric and magnetic field component: This is clearly exceedingly unwieldy.We needa better approach. The Quest

  5. Use the formal tensor calculus • Maxwell’s equations: • General coordinate transformations: The Quest note: opposite derivatives • Transform the Maxwell’s equations: • Use that the equations in old coordinates hold. • Compute the transformation-dependent difference. • Derive conditions on the aμ parameters.

  6. The Gauss-Ampere equations: • …transform as Transform Maxwell’s Eq’s: Should vanish, = “condition X” The original equation, = 0

  7. This produces “Condition X”: • where we needthis “X” tovanish. • Similarly, transforming the second half: • produces “Condition Y”: • where we needthis “Y” tovanish. • These conditions, “X=0” and “Y=0” insure that the particular coordinate transformation is a symmetry of Maxwell equations • They comprise 2·24 = 48 equations, for only 4 parameters aμ! Transform Maxwell’s Eq’s:

  8. The Conditions are “reciprocal” • …in the former, new coordinates are functions of the old, • …in the second, old coordinates are functions of the new. • Introduce “small” deviations from linearity, • …so that the inverse transformation is, to lowest order: • Insert these into “X” and “Y” above; keep only 1st order terms. Evaluating Conditions:

  9. For example, • Multiply out, compute derivatives, while keeping 1st order terms: • Now contract with the inverse-transformation: • …which expands (to 1st order) to: • …and simplifies upon transforming ν (“nu”) to the new system Evaluating Conditions:

  10. Writing out the small A’s for every choice of every free index: Evaluating Conditions: Most of these vanish to 1st order.

  11. Writing out the conditions, for every choice of the free index… • For example, Evaluating Conditions: • Similarly, we obtain a0 = 0. • However, there appear no restrictions on a2 and a3. • Since the initial coordinate system was chosen so the Lorentz-boost is in the x- (i.e., 1st) direction, the “X = 0” conditions allow Lorentz-boosts with

  12. The “Y = 0” conditions are evaluated in the same fashion • A little surprisingly, they turn out to produce no restriction on the remaining extension parameters, a2 and a3. • Summarizing: • This permits velocities that are: • homogeneous (same direction everywhere) • constant in time (no acceleration/deceleration) • but the magnitude of which may vary (linearly, slowly)in directionsperpendicular to the boost velocity Conclusions:

  13. Open questions: • Second and higher order effects (some conditions on a2 and a3 ?) • Combination of Lorentz-boosts with rotations • Consequences on the relativistic mechanics of moving bodies • …and especially, moving charged bodies. • Acknowledgments: • Funding from the REU grant PHY-1358727 Thank You! This leaves:

More Related