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| Tags: diagram, does, minkowski, one |
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#11
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On Mar 4, 5:40 am, "harry" wrote:
"Eric Gisse" wrote in message ... On Mar 4, 4:47 am, " wrote: On Mar 4, 2:17 pm, "Artful" wrote: wrote in message ... I'm not sure I know exactly how to use the Minkowski diagram. For example, let's say you have a stationary observer and a moving observer, and an event somewhere, for which the coordinates are x and t in the stationary frame and x' and t' in the moving frame. How do you get t', for example, from the Minkowski diagram? Ram. Seehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minkowski_diagram Look at the diagram in the section entitled "Minkowski diagram in special relativity" with the caption "In the theory of relativity both observers assign the event at A to different times." Artful: I considered it, but it seems to contradict the equations for Lorentz transformation. I mean, when I tried to get x' and t' through the diagram and through Lorentz transformation, I got different things. I expressed x' and t' using trigonometry from the diagrams, and I got some kind of ugly mess. Can you point out my mistake? Or maybe there is an analysis of how Minkowski diagrams work somewhere on the web? Thanks, Ram. Lorentz transformations have nothing to do with spacetime diagrams. Lorentz transformations are a specific type of transformation between inertial reference frames, and the Minkowski/space-time diagram is a characterization of the geometry of a manifold [they generalize to conformal diagrams] by using null paths [the paths light travel along] which is unrelated to frame transformations. That's wrong. Instead, I think that the intro of the above link is quite right: I looked at the image, saw the familiar cone, and figured it was just another name for a space-time diagram. "The Minkowski diagram [...] provides an illustration of the properties of space and time in the special theory of relativity. It allows a quantitative understanding of the corresponding phenomena like time dilation and length contraction without mathematical equations." Roughly, a rotation in a Minkowski diagram corresponds to a Lorentz transformation. A different result is most likely due to either a wrong rotation or a wrong projection. There are many detailed manuals on the web that may be clearer and more detailed than Wikipedia, for example:http://www.physics.usyd.edu.au/super...ties/Mechanics... (Found with Google, haven't checked it but it looks good) Harald |
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#12
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On Mar 4, 5:33 am, "
wrote: [...] Never mind. Look at harry's response to me. |
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On Mar 4, 10:52*am, "Dirk Van de moortel" dirkvandemoor...@ThankS-NO-
SperM.hotmail.com wrote: PD wrote in message * On Mar 4, 6:08 am, " wrote: I'm not sure I know exactly how to use the Minkowski diagram. For example, let's say you have a stationary observer and a moving observer, and an event somewhere, for which the coordinates are x and t in the stationary frame and x' and t' in the moving frame. How do you get t', for example, from the Minkowski diagram? Ram. No, you can't. Of course you can. OK, you can if you are VERY careful. For example, note the effect of the a boost, which is called a "rotation" in Minkowski space. However, this is not your garden-variety rotation, in that both axes get rotated, say, clockwise, to do the transformation. In fact, the x-axis rotates one way and the t-axis rotates the other way. All sorts of mapping issues result from this shift from Euclidean to hyperbolic geometry. For example, trig relations get replaced by hyperbolic trig relations (sinh, cosh, tanh, rather than sin, cos, tan). All of these are trackable if you are careful and understand what is fundamentally different about the Minkowski diagram from the usual pair of axes on a flat piece of paper. The temptation is to use a Minkowski diagram like a 2D Euclidean geometry, which would allow you to do all sorts of Euclidean geometrical constructions (with a compass and a straight edge) and trigonometric relations. But the relationship between x and t in a Minkowski diagram is NOT Euclidean, and you will quickly run into problems if you try to apply Euclidean rules to it. It is a linear transformation, remember? See my other reply to ram :-) Dirk Vdm |
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#17
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Dirk Van de moortel wrote in message
wrote in message I'm not sure I know exactly how to use the Minkowski diagram. For example, let's say you have a stationary observer and a moving observer, and an event somewhere, for which the coordinates are x and t in the stationary frame and x' and t' in the moving frame. How do you get t', for example, from the Minkowski diagram? Ram. Yes! See http://users.telenet.be/vdmoortel/di...es/Lorentz.htm Measuse slope of x'-axis w.r.t. x-axis. That gives you v. Measure Ox' and Ot' (for instance in cm), multiply with the calculated value sqrt(1-v^2)/sqrt(1+v^2) and you have the transformed coordinates x' and t'. Verofy with the transformed values of the measured x and t. See http://users.telenet.be/vdmoortel/di...es/Lorentz.png and a somewhat interactive version http://users.telenet.be/vdmoortel/di...es/Lorentz.htm You can drag the point H around a bit, and also the 'top points' of the t-axis and the t'axis. Enjoy. Dirk Found my notes. Take the standard drawing of the Minkovski diagram with perp. x-axis and t-axis, and do some kid's analytic geometry.... The t-axis is represented by t = 1/v x. The x-axis is represented by t = v x. Take a point H with coordinates (X,T). Take line through H, parallel with t'-axis: t - T = 1/v ( x - X ) Intersection of this line with the x'-axis gives: x = (T-X/v) / (v-1/v) t = T + 1/v ( (T-X/v)/(v-1/v) - X ) The distance between (0,0) and this intersection is given by D = sqrt( x^2 + t^2 ) . Simplify this to D = sqrt( (1+v^2)/(1-v^2) ) 1/sqrt(1-v^2) ( X - v T ) = sqrt(1+v^2)/sqrt(1-v^2) X' where X' = 1/sqrt(1-v^2) ( X - v T ) Lorentz! So, to find X', just multiply this distance D with the scale factor sqrt(1-v^2)/sqrt(1+v^2) Likewise for the T'. Dirk Vdm |
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#18
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On Mar 4, 7:21*pm, "Dirk Van de moortel" dirkvandemoor...@ThankS-NO-
SperM.hotmail.com wrote: PD wrote in message * On Mar 4, 10:52 am, "Dirk Van de moortel" dirkvandemoor...@ThankS-NO- SperM.hotmail.com wrote: PD wrote in message On Mar 4, 6:08 am, " wrote: I'm not sure I know exactly how to use the Minkowski diagram. For example, let's say you have a stationary observer and a moving observer, and an event somewhere, for which the coordinates are x and t in the stationary frame and x' and t' in the moving frame. How do you get t', for example, from the Minkowski diagram? Ram. No, you can't. Of course you can. OK, you can if you are VERY careful. For example, note the effect of the a boost, which is called a "rotation" in Minkowski space. However, this is not your garden-variety rotation, in that both axes get rotated, say, clockwise, to do the transformation. In fact, the x-axis rotates one way and the t-axis rotates the other way. All sorts of mapping issues result from this shift from Euclidean to hyperbolic geometry. For example, trig relations get replaced by hyperbolic trig relations (sinh, cosh, tanh, rather than sin, cos, tan). All of these are trackable if you are careful and understand what is fundamentally different about the Minkowski diagram from the usual pair of axes on a flat piece of paper. Since in Euclidean terms we don't allow imaginary angles, we shouldn't really call this a "real" rotation ("real" like in The Real Numbers). I made this thing some time ago. It just took some straightforward standard high school level analytic geometry with lines, slopes, and intersections, and as you can see, even if you're not careful, once you have that scale factor, one can easilily "read" the transformed coordinates from the Minkovski diagram :-) Dirk Vdm Dirk -- You are a godsend. That Java thing rocks. I tried some values, and I checked it and it gives the same result as the Lorentz Transformation. However, I tried to get x' and t' analytically from the graph, but it didn't come out like the x' and t' that the app said. Do I have a computation mistake, or did I not understand how x' and t' are retirieved? I'll tell you how I retrieved them: For x', for example I took the point x' on the graph and calculated its distance from O. Is that what I'm supposed to do? Thanks, Ram. |
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#19
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wrote in message
On Mar 4, 7:21 pm, "Dirk Van de moortel" dirkvandemoor...@ThankS-NO- SperM.hotmail.com wrote: PD wrote in message On Mar 4, 10:52 am, "Dirk Van de moortel" dirkvandemoor...@ThankS-NO- SperM.hotmail.com wrote: PD wrote in message On Mar 4, 6:08 am, " wrote: I'm not sure I know exactly how to use the Minkowski diagram. For example, let's say you have a stationary observer and a moving observer, and an event somewhere, for which the coordinates are x and t in the stationary frame and x' and t' in the moving frame. How do you get t', for example, from the Minkowski diagram? Ram. No, you can't. Of course you can. OK, you can if you are VERY careful. For example, note the effect of the a boost, which is called a "rotation" in Minkowski space. However, this is not your garden-variety rotation, in that both axes get rotated, say, clockwise, to do the transformation. In fact, the x-axis rotates one way and the t-axis rotates the other way. All sorts of mapping issues result from this shift from Euclidean to hyperbolic geometry. For example, trig relations get replaced by hyperbolic trig relations (sinh, cosh, tanh, rather than sin, cos, tan). All of these are trackable if you are careful and understand what is fundamentally different about the Minkowski diagram from the usual pair of axes on a flat piece of paper. Since in Euclidean terms we don't allow imaginary angles, we shouldn't really call this a "real" rotation ("real" like in The Real Numbers). I made this thing some time ago. It just took some straightforward standard high school level analytic geometry with lines, slopes, and intersections, and as you can see, even if you're not careful, once you have that scale factor, one can easilily "read" the transformed coordinates from the Minkovski diagram :-) Dirk Vdm Dirk -- You are a godsend. That Java thing rocks. I tried some values, and I checked it and it gives the same result as the Lorentz Transformation. However, I tried to get x' and t' analytically from the graph, but it didn't come out like the x' and t' that the app said. Do I have a computation mistake, or did I not understand how x' and t' are retirieved? I'll tell you how I retrieved them: For x', for example I took the point x' on the graph and calculated its distance from O. Is that what I'm supposed to do? See my last message where I calculated the scale factor for X' when X and T are known. I'll leave the calculation of T' as an exercise. Let me know if you get stuck :-) Dirk Vdm |
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#20
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On Tue, 4 Mar 2008 04:08:59 -0800 (PST),
" wrote: I'm not sure I know exactly how to use the Minkowski diagram. For example, let's say you have a stationary observer and a moving observer, and an event somewhere, for which the coordinates are x and t in the stationary frame and x' and t' in the moving frame. How do you get t', for example, from the Minkowski diagram? Ram. [Hammond] Only an amateur would try to use a Minkowski diagram (rotation diagram) to study a Lorentz transformation. The EXPERTS use OBLIQUE COORDINATE DIAGRAMS.... you've probaly seen these in professional publications. The Minkowski diagram does not show "true lengths" and as someone pointed out you CANNOT use Euclidean Geometry in the diagram.... and it does NOT give you ture picture of the transformation. The EXPERTS use the LOEDEL (oblique) diagram. Understanding this diagram is equivalent to MASTERING SR, and it can be done in a few minutes. It turns out that the Lorentz Transformation is IDENTICAL to the coordinate transformation between two OBLIQUE coordinate systems... one obtuse and the other acute. Euclidean geometry applies, the scales are true length,... the whole thing is a miracle! The CLASSIC text on this is SHADOWITZ'S book, which only costs $6.95 in the ppbk Dover edition....one of the all time best book bargains ever! DON'T LEAVE HOME WITHOUT IT!!! SPECIAL RELATIVITY, Albert Shadowitz, 1968, Dover ppbk, ISBN 0-486-65743-4 only $6.95 a few years ago. By the way, you can Google the Loedel diagram but all you get is amateur crap explanations..... for chrissakes spend the $6.95 and buy Shadowitz'a classic book and wrap up your studies of SR in a couple of hours! ===================================== SCIENTIFIC PROOF OF GOD WEBSITE http://geocities.com/scientific_proof_of_god mirror site: http://proof-of-god.freewebsitehosting.com GOD=G_uv (a folk song on mp3) http://interrobang.jwgh.org/songs/hammond.mp3 ===================================== |
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