How Does the Minkowski Metric Explain Special Relativistic Effects?

In summary: G.In summary, special relativity can be understood through the differential geometry formulation. The Minkowski metric plays a crucial role in deriving special relativistic effects. The Lorentz transformation, which leaves the proper interval unchanged, is a postulate of special relativity and is related to the isometry group of Minkowski spacetime, known as the Poincaré group. The isometry group can be derived from the Minkowski metric, showing the connection between geometry and physics in special relativity. This concept can also be seen in a simpler example using Euclidean geometry. The first chapter of Spacetime Physics by Taylor & Wheeler further explains this connection between geometry and physics.
  • #1
telegramsam1
8
0
I'm learning about special relativity in its differential geometry formulation. I don't understand how special relativistic effects can be derived from the Minkowski metric. It isn't obvious to me where relative velocity comes in, or why this makes things look different. Can somebody explain how this geometry manifests itself into physics? Deriving the lorentz transform from the metric would be helpful.

All corrections/advise/help is useful.
Thanks in advance.
 
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  • #2
The Lorentz transformation leaves the proper interval unchanged, and so has a special relationship with the Minkowski spacetime. I suppose it can be derived from that requirement alone. It's a postulate of SR that the proper time is the time measured by a clock on the worldkine.

It's easy enough to get time dilation by working out [itex]d\tau/dt[/itex] directly from the metric.
 
  • #3
The connection has to do with coordinate systems. The coordinate charts you're used to using are orthonormal ones.





Here's a fun, purely Euclidean example. Draw a long, thin (but not too thin), vertical rectangle on a sheet of paper. Draw in coordinate axes, with the x-axis horizontal and y-axis vertical. Draw in a cross section of the rectangle parallel to the x-axis. How long is it?

Now, draw a different pair of coordinate axes (still perpendicular. Or not, if you like). Draw in a cross section of the rectangle parallel to the new x-axis. How long is it?
 
  • #4
The first chapter of Spacetime Physics by Taylor & Wheeler should be illuminating. (Section 1.8 in the original edition covers the LT.)
 
  • #5
telegramsam1 said:
Deriving the lorentz transform from the metric would be helpful.
This is done by showing that the isometry group of Minkowski spacetime is isomorphic to the Poincaré group. I'll quote myself for the definition of an isometry:
Fredrik said:
Suppose M and N are both n-dimensional smooth manifolds, and consider a diffeomorphism

[tex]\phi:M\rightarrow N[/tex].

We can use [itex]\phi[/itex] to define a new function

[tex]\phi_*:T_pM\rightarrow T_{\phi(p)}N[/tex]

for each [itex]p\in M[/itex], by

[tex]\phi_*v(f)=v(f\circ\phi)[/tex]

for all smooth functions [itex]f:N\rightarrow\mathbb R[/itex]. [itex]\phi_*v[/itex] is said to be the "pushforward" of v. We can also use [itex]\phi[/itex] to define a "pullback" of covectors at each point in the manifold

[tex]\phi^*:T_{\phi(p)}^*N\rightarrow T_p^*M[/tex]

[tex]\phi^*\omega(v)=\omega(\phi_*v)[/tex]

for all [itex]v\in T_pM[/itex]. The generalization to other types of tensors is straightforward, and so is the generalization to tensor fields. For example, if [itex]\omega[/itex] is a covector field, we define [itex]\phi^*\omega[/itex] by

[tex](\phi^*\omega)_p(v)=\phi^*\omega_{\phi(p)}v[/tex]

for all [itex]v\in T_pM[/itex]. Now consider the special case M=N. The diffeomorphism [itex]\phi:M\rightarrow M[/itex] defines a pullback [itex]g^*[/itex] of the metric g:

[tex](\phi^*g)_p(u,v)=\phi^*g_{\phi(p)}(u,v)=g_{\phi(p)}(\phi_*u,\phi_*v)[/tex]

[itex]\phi[/itex] is said to be an isometry if [itex]\phi^*g=g[/itex].
I'll copy-and-paste from my personal notes for the proof. A few comments before I do that: Recall that Minkowski spacetime is the set [itex]\mathbb R^4[/itex] with a manifold structure and a specific metric. This means that the identity map on [itex]\mathbb R^4[/itex] can be interpreted as a coordinate system.

The usual definition of the Poincaré group goes like this: For each linear function [itex]\Lambda:\mathbb R^4\rightarrow\mathbb R^4[/itex], and each [itex]a\in\mathbb R^4[/itex], define [itex]T(\Lambda,a):\mathbb R^4\rightarrow\mathbb R^4[/itex] by [itex]T(\Lambda,a)(x)=\Lambda x+a[/itex]. Define

[tex]P=\{T(\Lambda,a)|\Lambda^T\eta\Lambda=\eta\}[/tex]

where

[tex]\eta=\begin{pmatrix}-1&0&0&0\\0&1&0&0\\0&0&1&0\\0&0&0&1\end{pmatrix}[/tex]

Note that in the definition of P above, the [itex]\Lambda[/itex] that appears to the right of the | is the matrix of components of the linear operator [itex]\Lambda[/itex] in the standard basis. (If you need to refresh your memory about the relationship between linear operators and matrices, see this post). The group structure on P is defined by taking the binary operation to be composition of functions.

I'm getting database errors, so I'll try putting the stuff from my notes in a separate post. (Wait a few minutes...I need to edit it a little).
 
  • #6
OK, here we go. Note that I'm not really distinguishing between a linear operator and its component matrix here either. That's why I seem to be getting the result that P=G rather than "P is isomorphic to G".

First let [tex]\phi[/tex] be an arbitrary member of G. This means that it's an isometry, so for all x, and all tangent vectors u,v at x, its pullback [tex]\phi^*[/tex] satisfies

[tex](\phi^*g)_x(u,v)=g_x(u,v)[/tex]

The components of the right-hand side in the identity map coordinate system are

[tex]=\eta_{\mu\nu}u^\mu v^\nu[/tex]

for all x. The left-hand side is

[tex]=\phi^*g_{\phi^{-1}(x)}(u,v)=g_{\phi^{-1}(x)}(\phi_*u,\phi_*v)[/tex]

[tex]=(\phi_*u)^\mu(\phi^{-1}(x))\ (\phi_*v)^\nu(\phi^{-1}(x))\ g_{\phi^{-1}(x)}\big(\partial_\mu\big|_{\phi^{-1}(x)},\partial_\mu\big|_{\phi^{-1}(x)}\big)[/tex]

[tex]=(\phi_*u)^\mu(\phi^{-1}(x))\ (\phi_*v)^\nu(\phi^{-1}(x))\ \eta_{\mu\nu}[/tex]

We can simplify this. Let's call the identity map I.

[tex](\phi_*u)^\mu(\phi^{-1}(x))=(\phi_*u)_{\phi^{-1}(x)}(I^\mu)=u(I^\mu\circ\phi) =u(\phi^\mu)=u^\rho\partial_\rho\big|_x(\phi^\mu)[/tex]

[tex]=u^\rho(\phi^\mu\circ I^{-1}),_\rho(I(x))=u^\rho{\phi^\mu},_\rho(x)[/tex]

So the left-hand side of the equality we started with is

[tex]=u^\rho{\phi^\mu},_\rho(x) v^\sigma{\phi^\nu},_\sigma(x) \eta_{\mu\nu}[/tex]

This is equal to the right-hand side for all u,v and x if and only if

[tex]{\phi^\mu},_\rho(x) \eta_{\mu\nu} {\phi^\nu},_\sigma(x)=\eta_{\rho\sigma}[/tex]

for all x. This is equivalent to the matrix equation

[tex]J_\phi(x)^T \eta J_\phi(x) = \eta[/tex]

where [tex]J_\phi(x)[/tex] is the Jacobian matrix of [tex]\phi[/tex] at x. This equation implies that [tex]\phi[/tex] must be a first-degree polynomial in x. (The details of that part of the proof aren't interesting at all, so I'm not including them here).

[tex]\phi(x)=\Lambda x+a[/tex]

The partial derivatives of [tex]\phi[/tex] at x are

[tex]{\phi^\mu},_\nu(x)=\partial_\nu({\Lambda^\mu}_\rho x^\rho+a^\mu) ={\Lambda^\mu}_\rho\delta^\rho_\nu ={\Lambda^\mu}_\nu[/tex]

so

[tex]J_\phi(x)=\Lambda[/tex]

This implies that the matrix equation above is equivalent to

[tex]\Lambda^T \eta \Lambda = \eta[/tex]

so [tex]\phi[/tex] must be a member of [tex]P[/tex].

Now let [tex]\phi[/tex] be an arbitrary member of P. We can see that its Jacobian satisfies

[tex]J_\phi(x)^T \eta J_\phi(x) = \eta[/tex]

by examining the calculations above. Those calculations also tell us that this condition is equivalent to saying that [tex]\phi[/tex] is an isometry of the Minkowski metric, so [tex]\phi[/tex] must be a member of G.
 
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  • #7
telegramsam1 said:
I'm learning about special relativity in its differential geometry formulation. I don't understand how special relativistic effects can be derived from the Minkowski metric.It isn't obvious to me where relative velocity comes in, or why this makes things look different. Can somebody explain how this geometry manifests itself into physics? Deriving the lorentz transform from the metric would be helpful.

All corrections/advise/help is useful.
Thanks in advance.

The affine Minkowski space with the minkowski metric does contain all the mathematical content/structure of special relativity. Relative velocity comes in when we want to represent the 4-velocity in a coordinate sytem: Let {t, x} be the instantaneous comoving reference frame with observer I and v' the tangent vector of the world line of observer II. Then v' = γ(v)∂t + vγ(v)∂x, where v is the relative velocity of II with respect to I. For example, we could find the velocity addition formula as follows: Let B move with a speed u with respect to A, and let C move with a speed v with respect to B, and C move with a speed w with respect to A. Then the 4-vectors will have the following representations:

[tex] v_{CA} = \gamma(w)\partial_t + w\gamma(w)\partial_x [/tex]
[tex] v_{BA} = \gamma(u)\partial_t + u\gamma(u)\partial_x [/tex]
[tex] v_{CB} = \gamma(v)\partial_{t'} + v\gamma(v)\partial_{x'} [/tex]
[tex] v_B = \partial_{t'} [/tex]

To find the relationship between u, v and w, we note that g(vCA,vBA) = g(vCB,vB), so γ(v) = γ(w)γ(u) - wvγ(w)γ(u), which gives w = (u + v)/(1 - uv).

Lorentz transformations:

Let {t, x} and {t', x'} be two observers, with II moving with a speed v with respect to I. Thus, ∂t' = γ(v)∂t + vγ(v)∂x.

[tex] dt' = \mathcal{G} \cdot \partial_{t'} = (dt^2 - dx^2) \cdot (\gamma(v)\partial_t + v \gamma(v) \partial_x )[/tex]

so dt' = γ(v)dt - vγ(v)dx, which implies t' = γ(v)t - vγ(v)x. The formula for x' can be derived in a similar way.
 
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  • #8
telegramsam1 said:
I'm learning about special relativity in its differential geometry formulation.

I have no idea about the "differential formulation" of the geometry, but I can tell you, geometrically, what you are doing to the space-time diagram is scaling by a factor of s on the x=ct axis, and scaling by a factor of 1/s on the x=-ct axis (or vice-versa).

[tex]
\begin{pmatrix} ct' \\ x'\ \end{pmatrix}=
\begin{pmatrix} \gamma & -\beta\gamma \\ -\beta\gamma & \gamma \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix} =
\begin{pmatrix} \cosh(\theta) & -sinh(\theta) \\ -sinh(\theta) & \cosh\theta \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix}=
\begin{pmatrix} \frac {1+s}{2} & \frac {1-s}{2} \\ \frac {1-s}{2}& \frac {1+s}{2} \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} \frac {s^{-1}+1}{2} & \frac {s^{-1} -1}{2} \\ \frac {s^{-1}-1}{2}& \frac {s^{-1}+1}{2} \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix}
[/tex]
 
  • #9
JDoolin said:
I have no idea about the "differential formulation" of the geometry, but I can tell you, geometrically, what you are doing to the space-time diagram is scaling by a factor of s on the x=ct axis, and scaling by a factor of 1/s on the x=-ct axis (or vice-versa).

[tex]
\begin{pmatrix} ct' \\ x'\ \end{pmatrix}=
\begin{pmatrix} \gamma & -\beta\gamma \\ -\beta\gamma & \gamma \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix} =
\begin{pmatrix} \cosh(\theta) & -sinh(\theta) \\ -sinh(\theta) & \cosh\theta \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix}=
\begin{pmatrix} \frac {1+s}{2} & \frac {1-s}{2} \\ \frac {1-s}{2}& \frac {1+s}{2} \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} \frac {s^{-1}+1}{2} & \frac {s^{-1} -1}{2} \\ \frac {s^{-1}-1}{2}& \frac {s^{-1}+1}{2} \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix}
[/tex]
The last equality seems total nonsense, where did you copy it from?

The first two are incorrect as well, here is the correct one:

[tex]
\begin{pmatrix} ct' \\ x'\ \end{pmatrix}=
\begin{pmatrix} \gamma & -\beta\gamma \\ -\beta\gamma & \gamma \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} ct \\ x\ \end{pmatrix} =
\begin{pmatrix} \cosh(\theta) & -sinh(\theta) \\ -sinh(\theta) & \cosh\theta \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} ct \\ x\ \end{pmatrix}
[/tex]
 
  • #10
starthaus said:
JDoolin said:
I have no idea about the "differential formulation" of the geometry, but I can tell you, geometrically, what you are doing to the space-time diagram is scaling by a factor of s on the x=ct axis, and scaling by a factor of 1/s on the x=-ct axis (or vice-versa).

[tex]
\begin{pmatrix} ct' \\ x'\ \end{pmatrix}=
\begin{pmatrix} \gamma & -\beta\gamma \\ -\beta\gamma & \gamma \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix} =
\begin{pmatrix} \cosh(\theta) & -sinh(\theta) \\ -sinh(\theta) & \cosh\theta \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix}=
\begin{pmatrix} \frac {1+s}{2} & \frac {1-s}{2} \\ \frac {1-s}{2}& \frac {1+s}{2} \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} \frac {s^{-1}+1}{2} & \frac {s^{-1} -1}{2} \\ \frac {s^{-1}-1}{2}& \frac {s^{-1}+1}{2} \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix}
[/tex]

The last equality seems total nonsense, where did you copy it from?

Actually (apart from the typo with c), if you multiply the matrices you will see that what JDoolin wrote is correct, with [itex]s=\exp(-\theta)[/itex]. But the equation isn't all that obviously connected with the words that precede it. A better way of putting it would be to say

[tex]
\begin{pmatrix} ct' + x'\\ ct' - x'\ \end{pmatrix} =
\begin{pmatrix} e^{\theta} & 0 \\ 0 & e^{-\theta} \end{pmatrix}
\begin{pmatrix} ct + x\\ ct - x\ \end{pmatrix}
[/tex]​
 
  • #11
JDoolin said:
I have no idea about the "differential formulation" of the geometry,
It's not "differential formulation". It's a formulation based on differential geometry. There are several different versions of special relativity, each with a different mathematical structure representing space and time. The simplest structure that works is the vector space [itex]\mathbb R^4[/itex] with a bilinear form g defined by [itex]g(u,v)=u^T\eta v[/itex]. Another option is to use a 4-dimensional smooth manifold with a specific metric tensor field that I'm too lazy to define properly here. This thread is about the version of SR that's based on the latter choice.
 
  • #12
A minor comment: the OP asked about SR "in its differential geometry formulation." I think you might as well say "in its geometry formulation," because you don't need differential geometry to describe a space that has uniform geometrical properties.
 
  • #13
I didn't copy the last portion of the equation, but I did verify it using Mathematica. (of course, Dr Greg is right, there is a typo with the t's instead of ct's.)

My idea was that I realized since the speed of light has to be preserved, the directions x=ct and x=-ct have to be eigenvectors in the transformation. (Sorry if I'm not using the math lingo exactly correctly.) But those directions have to be preserved but the scale has to change.

Then, to produce the actual matrices, what I did was rotate 45 degrees, scale (by s) along x axis, and rotate back, and for the other matrix, I rotated, scaled (by 1/s) along y axis, and rotated back. (That's essentially what I did--if you're a stickler, I might have some detail out of order.)
 
  • #14
Thank you for all your responses. A further question: (Excuse the MATLAB notation, I don't know latex.)

Transformations of the form {cosh a, -sinh a; -sinh a, cosh a} leaves the Minkowski metric invariant. How are we to determine 'a' from this knowledge? How would I know that 'a' is a function of relative velocity, let alone 'a = tanh^-1(v/c).

Also @dx. I don't understand your notation. You have terms which are gamma(v) * d/dt. It seems you have equated a differential operator with a velocity. Can you explain what is meant by this notation?
 
  • #15
telegramsam1 said:
Also @dx. I don't understand your notation. You have terms which are gamma(v) * d/dt. It seems you have equated a differential operator with a velocity. Can you explain what is meant by this notation?

It's the usual notation in differential geometry. The differential operators (∂t) are to be interpreted as tangent vectors, and objects like dt' and dx' are to be interpreted as 1-forms.

For example, in a reference frame {t, x} which is comoving with some inertial observer, his world-line is simply φ(τ) = (τ, 0), and the tengent vector (4-velocity) to his world-line is ∂t.

The vectors ∂μ and the 1-forms dxμ form bases for the tangent and cotangent spaces respectively, at each point of Minkowski space. The metric tensor can be represented in terms of them:

[tex] \mathcal{G} = dt \otimes dt - dx \otimes dx [/tex]

[tex] \mathcal{G}^{-1} = \partial_t \otimes \partial_t - \partial_x \otimes \partial_x [/tex]
 
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  • #16
[tex] \begin{pmatrix} ct' \\ x'\ \end{pmatrix}= \begin{pmatrix} \gamma & -\beta\gamma \\ -\beta\gamma & \gamma \end{pmatrix} \begin{pmatrix} c t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix} = \begin{pmatrix} \cosh(\theta) & -sinh(\theta) \\ -sinh(\theta) & \cosh\theta \end{pmatrix} \begin{pmatrix} c t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix}= \begin{pmatrix} \frac {1+s}{2} & \frac {1-s}{2} \\ \frac {1-s}{2}& \frac {1+s}{2} \end{pmatrix} \begin{pmatrix} \frac {s^{-1}+1}{2} & \frac {s^{-1} -1}{2} \\ \frac {s^{-1}-1}{2}& \frac {s^{-1}+1}{2} \end{pmatrix} \begin{pmatrix} c t \\ x\ \end{pmatrix} [/tex]​

It's not immediately clear that the last two matrices represent scaling on the x=c t axis and the x=-c t axis. The http://ysfine.com/articles/dircone.pdf" has made the tranformation much more elegant (though I may have a sign or two wrong somewhere)

[tex]
\left(
\begin{array}{c}
\text{ct}' \\
z'
\end{array}
\right)
=
\left(
\begin{array}{cc}
\cos (45) & -\sin (45) \\
\sin (45) & \cos (45)
\end{array}
\right)

\left(
\begin{array}{cc}
e^{\eta } & 0 \\
0 & e^{-\eta }
\end{array}
\right)

\left(
\begin{array}{cc}
\cos (45) & \sin (45) \\
-\sin (45) & \cos (45)
\end{array}
\right)

\left(
\begin{array}{c}
\text{ct} \\
z
\end{array}
\right)
[/tex]​
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Related to How Does the Minkowski Metric Explain Special Relativistic Effects?

1. What is the geometric description of special relativity (SR)?

The geometric description of SR is a mathematical framework that describes the effects of relative motion and the constancy of the speed of light. It is based on the principles of special relativity, which state that the laws of physics are the same for all observers in uniform motion and that the speed of light is constant in all inertial frames of reference.

2. How is space and time described in the geometric description of SR?

In the geometric description of SR, space and time are combined into a four-dimensional spacetime continuum. This means that events are described using four coordinates: three for space (length, width, and height) and one for time. This allows for a more unified understanding of the universe, where space and time are not independent but rather interconnected.

3. What is the role of the Lorentz transformation in the geometric description of SR?

The Lorentz transformation is a mathematical equation that describes how the coordinates of an event in one frame of reference relate to the coordinates of the same event in a different frame of reference. In the geometric description of SR, this transformation is used to show how space and time measurements vary between observers in different frames of reference, taking into account the effects of relative motion.

4. How does the geometric description of SR explain time dilation and length contraction?

The geometric description of SR explains time dilation and length contraction as consequences of the Lorentz transformation. As an object moves at high speeds, its measurements of time and distance are affected by the relative motion of the observer. This results in time appearing to slow down for the moving object and lengths appearing to shrink along the direction of motion.

5. How does the geometric description of SR relate to general relativity?

The geometric description of SR serves as the foundation for general relativity, which is a theory of gravity. While SR only describes the effects of relative motion, general relativity expands on this to explain the effects of gravity on spacetime. This theory shows that gravity is not a force between masses, but rather a curvature of spacetime caused by the presence of mass and energy.

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