What is Lorentz transformations: Definition and 173 Discussions

In physics, the Lorentz transformations are a six-parameter family of linear transformations from a coordinate frame in spacetime to another frame that moves at a constant velocity relative to the former. The respective inverse transformation is then parameterized by the negative of this velocity. The transformations are named after the Dutch physicist Hendrik Lorentz.
The most common form of the transformation, parametrized by the real constant



v
,


{\displaystyle v,}
representing a velocity confined to the x-direction, is expressed as









t





=
γ

(

t




v
x


c

2





)






x





=
γ

(

x

v
t

)






y





=
y





z





=
z






{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}t'&=\gamma \left(t-{\frac {vx}{c^{2}}}\right)\\x'&=\gamma \left(x-vt\right)\\y'&=y\\z'&=z\end{aligned}}}
where (t, x, y, z) and (t′, x′, y′, z′) are the coordinates of an event in two frames, where the primed frame is seen from the unprimed frame as moving with speed v along the x-axis, c is the speed of light, and



γ
=



(


1




v

2



c

2






)



1





{\displaystyle \gamma =\textstyle \left({\sqrt {1-{\frac {v^{2}}{c^{2}}}}}\right)^{-1}}
is the Lorentz factor. When speed v is much smaller than c, the Lorentz factor is negligibly different from 1, but as v approaches c,



γ


{\displaystyle \gamma }
grows without bound. The value of v must be smaller than c for the transformation to make sense.
Expressing the speed as



β
=


v
c


,


{\displaystyle \beta ={\frac {v}{c}},}
an equivalent form of the transformation is








c

t





=
γ

(

c
t

β
x

)






x





=
γ

(

x

β
c
t

)






y





=
y





z





=
z
.






{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}ct'&=\gamma \left(ct-\beta x\right)\\x'&=\gamma \left(x-\beta ct\right)\\y'&=y\\z'&=z.\end{aligned}}}
Frames of reference can be divided into two groups: inertial (relative motion with constant velocity) and non-inertial (accelerating, moving in curved paths, rotational motion with constant angular velocity, etc.). The term "Lorentz transformations" only refers to transformations between inertial frames, usually in the context of special relativity.
In each reference frame, an observer can use a local coordinate system (usually Cartesian coordinates in this context) to measure lengths, and a clock to measure time intervals. An event is something that happens at a point in space at an instant of time, or more formally a point in spacetime. The transformations connect the space and time coordinates of an event as measured by an observer in each frame.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 less than the speed of light. Lorentz transformations have a number of unintuitive features that do not appear in Galilean transformations. For example, they reflect the fact that observers moving at different velocities may measure different distances, elapsed times, and even different orderings of events, but always such that the speed of light is the same in all inertial reference frames. The invariance of light speed is one of the postulates of special relativity.
Historically, the transformations were 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 Albert Einstein's special relativity, but was derived first.
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 mathematical model of spacetime in special relativity—the Lorentz transformations preserve the spacetime interval between any two events. This property is the defining property of a Lorentz transformation. They describe only the transformations in which the spacetime event at the origin is left fixed. 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.

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  1. R

    Can the Lorentz Transformations be derived with only two conditions?

    The book I use for relativity states that 4 conditions are required to get the four constants in the lorentz transformations. The 4 conditions the book uses are: 1) velocity of S' seen by S is v. 2) velocity of S as seen by S' is v. 3) Time dilation is same in either frame. 4) Speed of...
  2. T

    Are Lorentz transformations consistent with different reference frames?

    Question Show that, with V = 4/5c, the Lorentz transformation of the equations, t^prime = y(V) (t-(v/c^2)x) and x^prime = y(V) (x-Vt). (where y(V) = the Lorentz factor). can be written as ct^prime = 5/3ct - 4/3x and x^prime = 5/3x - 4/3ct Relevant equations y(V) = 1/(sqrt1-(V/c)^2) The...
  3. A

    The Lorentz Transformations and vector components

    If a rod is traveling with a velocity 'v' and its proper length is L_0 will the lorentz transformations given below hold true for the length contraction L_0 = \frac {L} { \sqrt {1 - \frac {{v_x}^2} {c^2}}} L_0 = \frac {L} { \sqrt {1 - \frac {{v_y}^2} {c^2}}}
  4. B

    Relativistic addition of velocities without lorentz transformations

    I have studied N.David Mermin "Relativistic addition of velocities directly from the constancy of the velocity of light," Am.J.Phys. 51 1130 1983 and others with the same subject quoted by the Author. He describes a derivation of the addition law that dispenses not only with the LT but also...
  5. N

    Lorentz Transformations and their Inverse

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  6. B

    A problem concerning the Lorentz transformations

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  7. N

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  8. P

    Why does the Lorentz transformations form a group?

    Is the reason why the Lorentz transformations form a group because of the reason on this website http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorentz_transformation_under_symmetric_configuration So the group consits of 3 matrices, {identity, forward transformations, inverse transformations}?
  9. E

    Why must the Lorentz Transformations Be Linear?

    All derivations of the Lorentz Transformations I've seen assume a linear transformation between coordinates. Why must this be the case? Thanks.
  10. H

    Composition of Lorentz Transformations

    It is not intuitive, for me at least, why when relating the velocity of 3 inertial frames (Say F1, F2 moving at v1 with respect to F1, and F3 moving at v2 with respect to F2), one mulitplies the transforms of F2 and F3 to get the transform for F1 with respect to F3 to get v3. I understand why v3...
  11. B

    Lorentz Transformations and Spinors

    Hi, I have a question about spinors If \Lambda is a Lorentz Transformation what is (and how do you show that it is) the spinor representation of the Lorentz group ? I think it has somnething to do with the equivalence transformation S\dagger{\gamma}S=\Lambda\gamma But that is just a...
  12. S

    Can Lorentz transformations be represented by matrices in EM fields?

    Show that \partial'_{\alpha} A'^\alpha (x') = \partial _{mu} A^{\mu}(x') lets focus on the partial operator for now \partial'_{\alpha} = \frac{\partial}{\partial x'^{\alpha}} = \frac{\partial}{L_{\nu}^{\alpha} \partial x^{\nu}} Now A represents the Scalar and vector fields of an EM...
  13. S

    What is the Relationship Between the Lorentz Transformations and Their Inverse?

    Givne the Lorentz transformations (LTs)}, x'^{\mu} = L_{\nu}^{\mu} x^{\nu} , between the coordinates, x^{\mu} = (ct , \vec{r}) of an event as seen by O, and coordinates, x'^{\mu} = (ct', \vec{r'}) of the same event as seen by an inertial observer O', show that if we write the inverse...
  14. P

    What are the prerequisites for understanding Lorentz transformations?

    can ne 1 explain 2 me the basics of lorentz transformations...mathematically i know how things transform bt i want a more revealing explanation ...relate it 2 boosts and rotations also ... thanx
  15. M

    What convervation law is required by the Lorentz Transformations

    Time invariance implies conservation of energy. Space invariance implies momentum convervation. What convervation law does the Lorentz invariance imply?
  16. Orion1

    What Does the Derivative of the Lorentz Gamma Function Indicate?

    What is the signifigance of the first derivative of the Lorentz transformation gamma function with respect to dv? What type of system does this derivative represent? \gamma'(v) = \frac{d}{dv} \left( \frac{1}{\sqrt{1 - \left( \frac{v}{c} \right)^2}} \right) = \frac{v}{c^2 \left[ 1 - \left(...
  17. G

    Lorentz transformations explanation?

    sorry, I'm not particularly well versed in this field. can someone explain the lorentz transformations to me?
  18. E

    Derivation of Lorentz Transformations

    Could anyone provide a derivation of the Lorentz transformations for me? And if the Lorentz transformations existed before Einstein came up with special relativity, then why wasn't the Lorentz guy able to come up with special relativity? It seems to me that he did all the work in showing that...
  19. quasar987

    How Do Lorentz Transformations Work with Y and Z Components of Speed?

    In all the textbooks I read on SR, they always list the LT assuming y'=y and z'=z. But how does the time coordinate transform if the speed has a y and a z component? I'm guessing t' = \frac{t-(v_x x + v_y y +v_z z )/c^2}{\sqrt{1-v^2/c^2}}
  20. A

    Understanding Lorentz Transformations: A Derivation for A-Level Students

    Hi , I'd like to know if anybody could help me understand the following: I was following the following derivation of the Lorentz transformations (http://vishnu.mth.uct.ac.za/omei/gr/chap1/node4.html) and i managed to understand everything except possibly the most crucial step...how does one get...
  21. W

    Mathematica Lorentz Transformations Help Mathematica

    Ok I need some help. I have. t=\frac{t_0}{\sqrt{1-\frac{v^2}{c^2}}} and i rearrange to get: v=\sqrt{c^2(1-\frac{t_0^2}{t^2})} Ok I am setting C=1 tnot = 518400 t = 4.7304 *10^17 as you can imagine my answer i know will be .999999999999 with a lot of 9'sV. The problem is...
  22. D

    Lorentz Transformations Are Wrong

    Something has me puzzled about the theory of relativity. At time 0, a photon is emitted from the origin of a rectangular coordinate system. At time t, the photon is at position x, on the positive x axis. Therefore in amount of time t-0=t, the photon has traveled a distance of x. The speed...
  23. A

    What exactly are Lorentz transformations?

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