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Born coordinates

In relativistic physics, the Born coordinate chart is a coordinate chart for (part of) Minkowski spacetime, the flat spacetime of special relativity. It is often used to analyze the physical experience of observers who ride on a ring or disk rigidly rotating at relativistic speeds, so called Langevin observers. This chart is often attributed to Max Born, due to his 1909 work on the relativistic physics of a rotating body. For overview of the application of accelerations in flat spacetime, see Acceleration (special relativity) and proper reference frame (flat spacetime).

Space-time geometry of Born coordinates. Red lines ( | ) are world lines (congruence) of points on disc (with r=z=ϕ=const.). Interlacing blue and grey stripes show change of t (stripes of simultaneity). Orange curves ( / \ ) are light-like curves (null geodesics) with fixed r.

From experience by inertial scenarios (i.e. measurements in inertial frames), Langevin observers synchronize their clocks by standard Einstein convention or by slow clock synchronization, respectively (both internal synchronizations). For a certain Langevin observer this method works perfectly. Within its immediate vicinity clocks are synchronized and light propagates isotropic in space. But the experience when the observers try to synchronize their clocks along a closed path in space is puzzling: there are always at least two neighboring clocks which have different times. To remedy the situation, the observers agree on an external synchronization procedure (coordinate time t — or for ring-riding observers, a proper coordinate time for a fixed radius r). By this agreement, Langevin observers riding on a rigidly rotating disk will conclude from measurements of small distances between themselves that the geometry of the disk is non-Euclidean. Regardless of which method they use, they will conclude that the geometry is well approximated by a certain Riemannian metric, namely the Langevin–Landau–Lifschitz metric. This is in turn very well approximated by the geometry of the hyperbolic plane (with the negative curvatures –3 ω2 and –3 ω2 r2, respectively). But if these observers measure larger distances, they will obtain different results, depending upon which method of measurement they use! In all such cases, however, they will most likely obtain results which are inconsistent with any Riemannian metric. In particular, if they use the simplest notion of distance, radar distance, owing to various effects such as the asymmetry already noted, they will conclude that the "geometry" of the disk is not only non-Euclidean, it is non-Riemannian.

The rotating disk is not a paradox. Whatever method the observers use to analyze the situation: at the end they find themselves analyzing a rotating disk and not an inertial frame.

Langevin observers in the cylindrical chart edit

To motivate the Born chart, we first consider the family of Langevin observers represented in an ordinary cylindrical coordinate chart for Minkowski spacetime. The world lines of these observers form a timelike congruence which is rigid in the sense of having a vanishing expansion tensor. They represent observers who rotate rigidly around an axis of cylindrical symmetry.

 
Fig. 1: Part of the helical world line of a typical Langevin observer (red curve), depicted in the cylindrical chart, with some future pointing light cones (gold) with the frame vectors assigned by the Langevin frame (black rods). In this figure, the Z coordinate is inessential and has been suppressed. The white cylinder shows a locus of constant radius; the dashed green line represents the symmetry axis R=0. The blue curve is an integral curve of the azimuthal unit vector  .

From the line element

 

we can immediately read off a frame field representing the local Lorentz frames of stationary (inertial) observers

 

Here,   is a timelike unit vector field while the others are spacelike unit vector fields; at each event, all four are mutually orthogonal and determine the infinitesimal Lorentz frame of the static observer whose world line passes through that event.

Simultaneously boosting these frame fields in the   direction, we obtain the desired frame field describing the physical experience of the Langevin observers, namely

 
 
 

This frame was apparently first introduced (implicitly) by Paul Langevin in 1935; its first explicit use appears to have been by T. A. Weber, as recently as 1997! It is defined on the region 0 < R < 1/ω; this limitation is fundamental, since near the outer boundary, the velocity of the Langevin observers approaches the speed of light.

 
Fig. 2: This figure shows the world lines of a fiducial Langevin observer (red curve) and his nearest neighbors (dashed navy blue curves). It shows one quarter of one orbit by the fiducial observer about the axis of symmetry (vertical green line).

Each integral curve of the timelike unit vector field   appears in the cylindrical chart as a helix with constant radius (such as the red curve in Fig. 1). Suppose we choose one Langevin observer and consider the other observers who ride on a ring of radius R which is rigidly rotating with angular velocity ω. Then if we take an integral curve (blue helical curve in Fig. 1) of the spacelike basis vector  , we obtain a curve which we might hope can be interpreted as a "line of simultaneity" for the ring-riding observers. But as we see from Fig. 1, ideal clocks carried by these ring-riding observers cannot be synchronized. This is our first hint that it is not as easy as one might expect to define a satisfactory notion of spatial geometry even for a rotating ring, much less a rotating disk!

Computing the kinematic decomposition of the Langevin congruence, we find that the acceleration vector is

 

This points radially inward and it depends only on the (constant) radius of each helical world line. The expansion tensor vanishes identically, which means that nearby Langevin observers maintain constant distance from each other. The vorticity vector is

 

which is parallel to the axis of symmetry. This means that the world lines of the nearest neighbors of each Langevin observer are twisting about its own world line, as suggested by Fig. 2. This is a kind of local notion of "swirling" or vorticity.

In contrast, note that projecting the helices onto any one of the spatial hyperslices   orthogonal to the world lines of the static observers gives a circle, which is of course a closed curve. Even better, the coordinate basis vector   is a spacelike Killing vector field whose integral curves are closed spacelike curves (circles, in fact), which moreover degenerate to zero length closed curves on the axis R = 0. This expresses the fact that our spacetime exhibits cylindrical symmetry, and also exhibits a kind of global notion of the rotation of our Langevin observers.

In Fig. 2, the magenta curve shows how the spatial vectors   are spinning about   (which is suppressed in the figure since the Z coordinate is inessential). That is, the vectors   are not Fermi–Walker transported along the world line, so the Langevin frame is spinning as well as non-inertial. In other words, in our straightforward derivation of the Langevin frame, we kept the frame aligned with the radial coordinate basis vector  . By introducing a constant rate rotation of the frame carried by each Langevin observer about  , we could, if we wished "despin" our frame to obtain a gyrostabilized version.

Transforming to the Born chart edit

 
Fig. 3: An attempt to define a notion of "space at a time" for our Langevin observers, depicted in the Born chart. This attempt is doomed to fail for at least two reasons! This figure depicts the region 0 < r < 1 when ω = 1/5, with a discontinuity at ϕ = π. The radial ray from which we have "grown" the integral curves to make the surface is at ϕ = 0 (on the far side in this image).

To obtain the Born chart, we straighten out the helical world lines of the Langevin observers using the simple coordinate transformation

 

The new line element is

 
 

Notice the "cross-terms" involving  , which show that the Born chart is not an orthogonal coordinate chart. The Born coordinates are also sometimes referred to as rotating cylindrical coordinates.

In the new chart, the world lines of the Langevin observers appear as vertical straight lines. Indeed, we can easily transform the four vector fields making up the Langevin frame into the new chart. We obtain

 
 
 

These are exactly the same vector fields as before – they are now simply represented in a different coordinate chart!

Needless to say, in the process of "unwinding" the world lines of the Langevin observers, which appear as helices in the cylindrical chart, we "wound up" the world lines of the static observers, which now appear as helices in the Born chart! Note too that, like the Langevin frame, the Born chart is only defined on the region 0 < r < 1/ω.

If we recompute the kinematic decomposition of the Langevin observers, that is of the timelike congruence  , we will of course obtain the same answer that we did before, only expressed in terms of the new chart. Specifically, the acceleration vector is

 

the expansion tensor vanishes, and the vorticity vector is

 

The dual covector field of the timelike unit vector field in any frame field represents infinitesimal spatial hyperslices. However, the Frobenius integrability theorem gives a strong restriction on whether or not these spatial hyperplane elements can be "knit together" to form a family of spatial hypersurfaces which are everywhere orthogonal to the world lines of the congruence. Indeed, it turns out that this is possible, in which case we say the congruence is hypersurface orthogonal, if and only if the vorticity vector vanishes identically. Thus, while the static observers in the cylindrical chart admits a unique family of orthogonal hyperslices  , the Langevin observers admit no such hyperslices. In particular, the spatial surfaces   in the Born chart are orthogonal to the static observers, not to the Langevin observers. This is our second (and much more pointed) indication that defining "the spatial geometry of a rotating disk" is not as simple as one might expect.

To better understand this crucial point, consider integral curves of the third Langevin frame vector

 

which pass through the radius  . (For convenience, we will suppress the inessential coordinate z from our discussion.) These curves lie in the surface

 

shown in Fig. 3. We would like to regard this as a "space at a time" for our Langevin observers. But two things go wrong.

First, the Frobenius theorem tells us that   are tangent to no spatial hyperslice whatever. Indeed, except on the initial radius, the vectors   do not lie in our slice. Thus, while we found a spatial hypersurface, it is orthogonal to the world lines of only some our Langevin observers. Because the obstruction from the Frobenius theorem can be understood in terms of the failure of the vector fields   to form a Lie algebra, this obstruction is differential, in fact Lie theoretic. That is, it is a kind of infinitesimal obstruction to the existence of a satisfactory notion of spatial hyperslices for our rotating observers.

Second, as Fig. 3 shows, our attempted hyperslice would lead to a discontinuous notion of "time" due to the "jumps" in the integral curves (shown as a blue colored grid discontinuity). Alternatively, we could try to use a multivalued time. Neither of these alternatives seems very attractive! This is evidently a global obstruction. It is of course a consequence of our inability to synchronize the clocks of the Langevin observers riding even a single ring – say the rim of a disk – much less an entire disk.

The Sagnac effect edit

Imagine that we have fastened a fiber-optic cable around the circumference of a ring of radius   which is rotating with steady angular velocity ω. We wish to compute the round trip travel time, as measured by a ring-riding observer, for a laser pulse sent clockwise and counterclockwise around the cable. For simplicity, we will ignore the fact that light travels through a fiber optic cable at somewhat less than the speed of light in vacuum, and will pretend that the world line of our laser pulse is a null curve (but certainly not a null geodesic!).

In the Born line element, let us put  . This gives

 

or

 

We obtain for the round trip travel time

 

Putting  , we find   (positive ω means counter-clockwise rotation, negative ω means clockwise rotation) so that the ring-riding observers can determine the angular velocity of the ring (as measured by a static observer) from the difference between clockwise and counterclockwise travel times. This is known as the Sagnac effect. It is evidently a global effect.

Null geodesics edit

 
Fig. 4: Two radial null geodesic tracks (green curve: outward bound, red curve: inward bound) depicted in the Born chart. The track of a Langevin observer L orbiting counter-clockwise at radius R = R0, i.e. riding a counter-clockwise rotating ring, is also shown (navy blue circle). Parameters: ω = +0.2, R0=r0=1

We wish to compare the appearance of null geodesics in the cylindrical chart and the Born chart.

In the cylindrical chart, the geodesic equations read

 

We immediately obtain the first integrals

 

Plugging these into the expression obtained from the line element by setting  , we obtain

 

from which we see that the minimal radius of a null geodesic is given by

  i.e.,  

hence

 
 
Fig. 5: Null geodesics depicted in the Born chart between ring riding Langevin observers (r = r0 = 1). Null geodesics propagating with the rotation are bent inward (green curve), null geodesics propagating against the rotation are bent outward (red curve). The proper light-travel time from L1 to L2 Δt12 is 1.311, from L2 to L1 Δt21 is 1.510, the proper light-travel times are not symmetrical but the radar distance (Δt12 + Δt21)/2 is. For ω → 0 both proper light-travel times tend toward 2 = 1.414. Null geodesics between opposite Langevin observers (L1 and L3) bend symmetrically around the center of rotation. Parameters: ω = +0.1, R0=r0=1, Δϕ(L1,L2)=π/2, Δϕ(L1,L3)=π

We can now solve to obtain the null geodesics as curves parameterized by an affine parameter, as follows:

 

More useful for our purposes is the observation that the trajectory of a null geodesic (its projection into any spatial hyperslice  ) is of course a straight line, given by

 

To obtain the minimal radius of the line through two points (on the same side of the point of closest approach to the origin), we solve

 

which gives

 

Now consider the simplest case, the radial null geodesics (Rmin = L = 0, E = 1, P = 0). An outward bound radial null geodesic may be written in the form

 
 

with the radius R0 of the ring riding Langevin observer (see Fig. 4). Transforming to the Born chart, we find that the trajectory can be written as

 

The tracks turn out to appear slightly bent in the Born chart (see green curve in Fig. 4). From section Transforming to the Born chart we see, that in the Born chart we cannot properly refer to these "tracks" as "projections" as for the Langevin observer an orthogonal hyperslice for t = t0 does not exist (see Fig. 3).

Similarly for inward bound radial null geodesics we get

 

depicted as red curve in Fig. 4.

Notice that to send a laser pulse toward the stationary observer S at R = 0, the Langevin observer L has to aim slightly behind to correct for its own motion. Turning things around, just as a duck hunter would expect, to send a laser pulse toward the Langevin observer riding a counterclockwise rotating ring, the central observer has to aim, not at this observer's current position, but at the position at which he will arrive just in time to intercept the signal. These families of inward and outward bound radial null geodesics represent very different curves in spacetime and their projections do not agree for ω > 0.

 
Fig. 6: A null geodesic arc, depicted in the Born chart, which models a signal sent from one ring-riding observer to another. The world lines of these observers are shown as blue vertical lines; the center of symmetry as a green vertical line. Notice that our null geodesic (amber arc) appears to bend slightly inward (see also green curve in Fig. 5).

Similarly, null geodesics between ring-riding Langevin observers appear slightly bent inward in the Born chart, if the geodesics propagate with the direction of the rotation (see green curve in Fig. 5). To see this, write the equation of a null geodesic in the cylindrical chart in the form

 
 

Transforming to Born coordinates, we obtain the equations

 
 

Eliminating ϕ gives

 

which shows that the geodesic does indeed appear to bend inward (see Fig. 6). We also find that

 

For null geodesics propagating against the rotation (red curve in Fig. 5) we get

 
 

and the geodesic bends slightly outward. This completes the description of the appearance of null geodesics in the Born chart, since every null geodesic is either radial or else has some point of closest approach to the axis of cylindrical symmetry.

Note (see Fig. 5) that a ring-riding observer trying to send a laser pulse to another ring-riding observer must aim slightly ahead or behind of his angular coordinate as given in the Born chart, in order to compensate for the rotational motion of the target. Note too that the picture presented here is fully compatible with our expectation (see appearance of the night sky) that a moving observer will see the apparent position of other objects on his celestial sphere to be displaced toward the direction of his motion.

Radar distance in the large edit

 
Fig. 7: This schematic figure illustrates the notion of radar distance between a ring-riding observer and a static central observer (with the same Z coordinate).

Even in flat spacetime, it turns out that accelerating observers (even linearly accelerating observers; see Rindler coordinates) can employ various distinct but operationally significant notions of distance. Perhaps the simplest of these is radar distance.

Consider how a static observer at R=0 might determine his distance to a ring riding observer at R = R0. At event C he sends a radar pulse toward the ring, which strikes the world line of a ring-riding observer at A′ and then returns to the central observer at event C″. (See the right hand diagram in Fig. 7.) He then divides the elapsed time (as measured by an ideal clock he carries) by two. It is not hard to see that he obtains for this distance simply R0 (in the cylindrical chart), or r0 (in the Born chart).

Similarly, a ring-riding observer can determine his distance to the central observer by sending a radar pulse, at event A toward the central observer, which strikes his world line at event C′ and returns to the ring-riding observer at event A″. (See the left hand diagram in Fig. 7.) It is not hard to see that he obtains for this distance   (in the cylindrical chart) or   (in the Born chart), a result which is somewhat smaller than the one obtained by the central observer. This is a consequence of time dilation: the elapsed time for a ring riding observer is smaller by the factor   than the time for the central observer. Thus, while radar distance has a simple operational significance, it is not even symmetric.

 
Fig. 8: This schematic figure illustrates the notion of radar distance between two Langevin observers riding a ring with radius R0 which is rotating with angular velocity ω. In the left hand diagram, the ring is rotating counter-clockwise; in the right hand diagram, it is rotating clockwise.

To drive home this crucial point, compare the radar distances obtained by two ring-riding observers with radial coordinate R = R0. In the left hand diagram at Fig. 8, we can write the coordinates of event A as

 

and we can write the coordinates of event B′ as

 
 

Writing the unknown elapsed proper time as  , we now write the coordinates of event A″ as

 
 

By requiring that the line segments connecting these events be null, we obtain an equation which in principle we can solve for Δ s. It turns out that this procedure gives a rather complicated nonlinear equation, so we simply present some representative numerical results. With R0 = 1, Φ = π/2, and ω = 1/10, we find that the radar distance from A to B is about 1.311, while the distance from B to A is about 1.510. As ω tends to zero, both results tend toward 2 = 1.414 (see also Fig. 5).

Despite these possibly discouraging discrepancies, it is by no means impossible to devise a coordinate chart which is adapted to describing the physical experience of a single Langevin observer, or even a single arbitrarily accelerating observer in Minkowski spacetime. Pauri and Vallisneri have adapted the Märzke-Wheeler clock synchronization procedure to devise adapted coordinates they call Märzke-Wheeler coordinates (see the paper cited below). In the case of steady circular motion, this chart is in fact very closely related to the notion of radar distance "in the large" from a given Langevin observer.

Radar distance in the small edit

As was mentioned above, for various reasons the family of Langevin observers admits no family of orthogonal hyperslices. Therefore, these observers simply cannot be associated with any slicing of spacetime into a family of successive "constant time slices".

However, because the Langevin congruence is stationary, we can imagine replacing each world line in this congruence by a point. That is, we can consider the quotient space of Minkowski spacetime (or rather, the region 0 < R < 1/ω) by the Langevin congruence, which is a three-dimensional topological manifold. Even better, we can place a Riemannian metric on this quotient manifold, turning it into a three-dimensional Riemannian manifold, in such a way that the metric has a simple operational significance.

To see this, consider the Born line element

 
 

Setting ds2 = 0 and solving for dt we obtain

 
 

The elapsed proper time for a roundtrip radar blip emitted by a Langevin observer is then

 

Therefore, in our quotient manifold, the Riemannian line element

 
 

corresponds to distance between infinitesimally nearby Langevin observers. We will call it the Langevin-Landau-Lifschitz metric, and we can call this notion of distance radar distance "in the small".

This metric was first given by Langevin, but the interpretation in terms of radar distance "in the small" is due to Lev Landau and Evgeny Lifshitz, who generalized the construction to work for the quotient of any Lorentzian manifold by a stationary timelike congruence.

If we adopt the coframe

 

we can easily compute the Riemannian curvature tensor of our three-dimensional quotient manifold. It has only two independent nontrivial components,

 
 

Thus, in some sense, the geometry of a rotating disk is curved, as Theodor Kaluza claimed (without proof) as early as 1910. In fact, to second order in ω it has the geometry of the hyperbolic plane, just as Kaluza claimed.

Warning: as we have seen, there are many possible notions of distance which can be employed by Langevin observers riding on a rigidly rotating disk, so statements referring to "the geometry of a rotating disk" always require careful qualification.

To drive home this important point, let us use the Landau-Lifschitz metric to compute the distance between a Langevin observer riding a ring with radius R0 and a central static observer. To do this, we need only integrate our line element over the appropriate null geodesic track. From our earlier work, we see that we must plug

 

into our line element and integrate

 

This gives

 

Because we are now dealing with a Riemannian metric, this notion of distance is of course symmetric under interchanging the two observers, unlike radar distance "in the large". The values given by this notion are in contradiction to the radar distances "in the large" computed in the previous section. Also, because up to second order the Landau-Lifschitz metric agrees with the Einstein synchronization convention, we see that the curvature tensor we just computed does have operational significance: while radar distance "in the large" between pairs of Langevin observers is certainly not a Riemannian notion of distance, the distance between pairs of nearby Langevin observers does correspond to a Riemannian distance, given by the Langevin-Landau-Lifschitz metric. (In the felicitous phrase of Howard Percy Robertson, this is kinematics im Kleinen.)

One way to see that all reasonable notions of spatial distance for our Langevin observers agree for nearby observers is to show, following Nathan Rosen, that for any one Langevin observer, an instantaneously co-moving inertial observer will also obtain the distances given by the Langevin-Landau-Lifschitz metric, for very small distances.

See also edit

References edit

A few papers of historical interest:

  • Born, M. (1909). "Die Theorie des starren Elektrons in der Kinematik des Relativitäts-Prinzipes". Ann. Phys. 30 (11): 1–56. Bibcode:1909AnP...335....1B. doi:10.1002/andp.19093351102.
    • Wikisource translation: The Theory of the Rigid Electron in the Kinematics of the Principle of Relativity
  • Ehrenfest, P. (1909). "Gleichförmige Rotation starrer Körper und Relativitätstheorie". Phys. Z. 10: 918. Bibcode:1909PhyZ...10..918E.
    • Wikisource translation: Uniform Rotation of Rigid Bodies and the Theory of Relativity
  • Langevin, P. (1935). "Remarques au sujet de la Note de Prunier". C. R. Acad. Sci. Paris. 200: 48.

A few classic references:

  • Grøn, Ø. (1975). "Relativistic description of a rotating disk". Am. J. Phys. 43 (10): 869–876. Bibcode:1975AmJPh..43..869G. doi:10.1119/1.9969.
  • Landau, L. D. & Lifschitz, E. M. (1980). The Classical Theory of Fields (4th ed.). London: Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 0-7506-2768-9. See Section 84 for the Landau-Lifschitz metric on the quotient of a Lorentzian manifold by a stationary congruence; see the problem at the end of Section 89 for the application to Langevin observers.

Selected recent sources:

  • Rizzi, G. & Ruggiero, M. L. (2004). Relativity in Rotating Frames. Dordrecht: Kluwer. ISBN 1-4020-1805-3. This book contains a valuable historical survey by Øyvind Grøn and some other papers on the Ehrenfest paradox and related controversies and a paper by Lluis Bel discussing the Langevin congruence. Hundreds of additional references may be found in this book.
  • Pauri, Massimo & Vallisneri, Michele (2000). "Märzke-Wheeler coordinates for accelerated observers in special relativity". Found. Phys. Lett. 13 (5): 401–425. arXiv:gr-qc/0006095. Bibcode:2000gr.qc.....6095P. doi:10.1023/A:1007861914639. S2CID 15097773. Studies a coordinate chart constructed using radar distance "in the large" from a single Langevin observer. See also the eprint version.

External links edit

  • The Rigid Rotating Disk in Relativity, by Michael Weiss (1995), from the sci.physics FAQ.

born, coordinates, relativistic, physics, born, coordinate, chart, coordinate, chart, part, minkowski, spacetime, flat, spacetime, special, relativity, often, used, analyze, physical, experience, observers, ride, ring, disk, rigidly, rotating, relativistic, sp. In relativistic physics the Born coordinate chart is a coordinate chart for part of Minkowski spacetime the flat spacetime of special relativity It is often used to analyze the physical experience of observers who ride on a ring or disk rigidly rotating at relativistic speeds so called Langevin observers This chart is often attributed to Max Born due to his 1909 work on the relativistic physics of a rotating body For overview of the application of accelerations in flat spacetime see Acceleration special relativity and proper reference frame flat spacetime Space time geometry of Born coordinates Red lines are world lines congruence of points on disc with r z ϕ const Interlacing blue and grey stripes show change of t stripes of simultaneity Orange curves are light like curves null geodesics with fixed r From experience by inertial scenarios i e measurements in inertial frames Langevin observers synchronize their clocks by standard Einstein convention or by slow clock synchronization respectively both internal synchronizations For a certain Langevin observer this method works perfectly Within its immediate vicinity clocks are synchronized and light propagates isotropic in space But the experience when the observers try to synchronize their clocks along a closed path in space is puzzling there are always at least two neighboring clocks which have different times To remedy the situation the observers agree on an external synchronization procedure coordinate time t or for ring riding observers a proper coordinate time for a fixed radius r By this agreement Langevin observers riding on a rigidly rotating disk will conclude from measurements of small distances between themselves that the geometry of the disk is non Euclidean Regardless of which method they use they will conclude that the geometry is well approximated by a certain Riemannian metric namely the Langevin Landau Lifschitz metric This is in turn very well approximated by the geometry of the hyperbolic plane with the negative curvatures 3 w2 and 3 w2 r2 respectively But if these observers measure larger distances they will obtain different results depending upon which method of measurement they use In all such cases however they will most likely obtain results which are inconsistent with any Riemannian metric In particular if they use the simplest notion of distance radar distance owing to various effects such as the asymmetry already noted they will conclude that the geometry of the disk is not only non Euclidean it is non Riemannian The rotating disk is not a paradox Whatever method the observers use to analyze the situation at the end they find themselves analyzing a rotating disk and not an inertial frame Contents 1 Langevin observers in the cylindrical chart 2 Transforming to the Born chart 3 The Sagnac effect 4 Null geodesics 5 Radar distance in the large 6 Radar distance in the small 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksLangevin observers in the cylindrical chart editThe following chart is formulated in cylindrical coordinates For an alternative formulation using Cartesian coordinates see Proper reference frame flat spacetime Uniform circular motion To motivate the Born chart we first consider the family of Langevin observers represented in an ordinary cylindrical coordinate chart for Minkowski spacetime The world lines of these observers form a timelike congruence which is rigid in the sense of having a vanishing expansion tensor They represent observers who rotate rigidly around an axis of cylindrical symmetry nbsp Fig 1 Part of the helical world line of a typical Langevin observer red curve depicted in the cylindrical chart with some future pointing light cones gold with the frame vectors assigned by the Langevin frame black rods In this figure the Z coordinate is inessential and has been suppressed The white cylinder shows a locus of constant radius the dashed green line represents the symmetry axis R 0 The blue curve is an integral curve of the azimuthal unit vector p 3 displaystyle vec p 3 nbsp From the line element d s 2 d T 2 d Z 2 d R 2 R 2 d F 2 lt T Z lt 0 lt R lt p lt F lt p displaystyle begin aligned amp mathrm d s 2 mathrm d T 2 mathrm d Z 2 mathrm d R 2 R 2 mathrm d Phi 2 amp infty lt T Z lt infty 0 lt R lt infty pi lt Phi lt pi end aligned nbsp we can immediately read off a frame field representing the local Lorentz frames of stationary inertial observers e 0 T e 1 Z e 2 R e 3 1 R F displaystyle vec e 0 partial T vec e 1 partial Z vec e 2 partial R vec e 3 frac 1 R partial Phi nbsp Here e 0 displaystyle vec e 0 nbsp is a timelike unit vector field while the others are spacelike unit vector fields at each event all four are mutually orthogonal and determine the infinitesimal Lorentz frame of the static observer whose world line passes through that event Simultaneously boosting these frame fields in the e 3 displaystyle vec e 3 nbsp direction we obtain the desired frame field describing the physical experience of the Langevin observers namely p 0 1 1 w 2 R 2 T w R 1 w 2 R 2 1 R F displaystyle vec p 0 frac 1 sqrt 1 omega 2 R 2 partial T frac omega R sqrt 1 omega 2 R 2 frac 1 R partial Phi nbsp p 1 Z p 2 R displaystyle vec p 1 partial Z vec p 2 partial R nbsp p 3 1 1 w 2 R 2 1 R F w R 1 w 2 R 2 T displaystyle vec p 3 frac 1 sqrt 1 omega 2 R 2 frac 1 R partial Phi frac omega R sqrt 1 omega 2 R 2 partial T nbsp This frame was apparently first introduced implicitly by Paul Langevin in 1935 its first explicit use appears to have been by T A Weber as recently as 1997 It is defined on the region 0 lt R lt 1 w this limitation is fundamental since near the outer boundary the velocity of the Langevin observers approaches the speed of light nbsp Fig 2 This figure shows the world lines of a fiducial Langevin observer red curve and his nearest neighbors dashed navy blue curves It shows one quarter of one orbit by the fiducial observer about the axis of symmetry vertical green line Each integral curve of the timelike unit vector field p 0 displaystyle vec p 0 nbsp appears in the cylindrical chart as a helix with constant radius such as the red curve in Fig 1 Suppose we choose one Langevin observer and consider the other observers who ride on a ring of radius R which is rigidly rotating with angular velocity w Then if we take an integral curve blue helical curve in Fig 1 of the spacelike basis vector p 3 displaystyle vec p 3 nbsp we obtain a curve which we might hope can be interpreted as a line of simultaneity for the ring riding observers But as we see from Fig 1 ideal clocks carried by these ring riding observers cannot be synchronized This is our first hint that it is not as easy as one might expect to define a satisfactory notion of spatial geometry even for a rotating ring much less a rotating disk Computing the kinematic decomposition of the Langevin congruence we find that the acceleration vector is p 0 p 0 w 2 R 1 w 2 R 2 p 2 displaystyle nabla vec p 0 vec p 0 frac omega 2 R 1 omega 2 R 2 vec p 2 nbsp This points radially inward and it depends only on the constant radius of each helical world line The expansion tensor vanishes identically which means that nearby Langevin observers maintain constant distance from each other The vorticity vector is W w 1 w 2 R 2 p 1 displaystyle vec Omega frac omega 1 omega 2 R 2 vec p 1 nbsp which is parallel to the axis of symmetry This means that the world lines of the nearest neighbors of each Langevin observer are twisting about its own world line as suggested by Fig 2 This is a kind of local notion of swirling or vorticity In contrast note that projecting the helices onto any one of the spatial hyperslices T T 0 displaystyle T T 0 nbsp orthogonal to the world lines of the static observers gives a circle which is of course a closed curve Even better the coordinate basis vector F displaystyle partial Phi nbsp is a spacelike Killing vector field whose integral curves are closed spacelike curves circles in fact which moreover degenerate to zero length closed curves on the axis R 0 This expresses the fact that our spacetime exhibits cylindrical symmetry and also exhibits a kind of global notion of the rotation of our Langevin observers In Fig 2 the magenta curve shows how the spatial vectors p 2 p 3 displaystyle vec p 2 vec p 3 nbsp are spinning about p 1 displaystyle vec p 1 nbsp which is suppressed in the figure since the Z coordinate is inessential That is the vectors p 2 p 3 displaystyle vec p 2 vec p 3 nbsp are not Fermi Walker transported along the world line so the Langevin frame is spinning as well as non inertial In other words in our straightforward derivation of the Langevin frame we kept the frame aligned with the radial coordinate basis vector R displaystyle partial R nbsp By introducing a constant rate rotation of the frame carried by each Langevin observer about p 1 displaystyle vec p 1 nbsp we could if we wished despin our frame to obtain a gyrostabilized version Transforming to the Born chart edit nbsp Fig 3 An attempt to define a notion of space at a time for our Langevin observers depicted in the Born chart This attempt is doomed to fail for at least two reasons This figure depicts the region 0 lt r lt 1 when w 1 5 with a discontinuity at ϕ p The radial ray from which we have grown the integral curves to make the surface is at ϕ 0 on the far side in this image To obtain the Born chart we straighten out the helical world lines of the Langevin observers using the simple coordinate transformation t T z Z r R ϕ F w T displaystyle t T z Z r R phi Phi omega T nbsp The new line element is d s 2 1 w 2 r 2 d t 2 2 w r 2 d t d ϕ d z 2 d r 2 r 2 d ϕ 2 displaystyle mathrm d s 2 left 1 omega 2 r 2 right mathrm d t 2 2 omega r 2 mathrm d t mathrm d phi mathrm d z 2 mathrm d r 2 r 2 mathrm d phi 2 nbsp lt t z lt 0 lt r lt 1 w p lt ϕ lt p displaystyle infty lt t z lt infty 0 lt r lt frac 1 omega pi lt phi lt pi nbsp Notice the cross terms involving d t d ϕ displaystyle mathrm d t mathrm d phi nbsp which show that the Born chart is not an orthogonal coordinate chart The Born coordinates are also sometimes referred to as rotating cylindrical coordinates In the new chart the world lines of the Langevin observers appear as vertical straight lines Indeed we can easily transform the four vector fields making up the Langevin frame into the new chart We obtain p 0 1 1 w 2 r 2 t displaystyle vec p 0 frac 1 sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 partial t nbsp p 1 z p 2 r displaystyle vec p 1 partial z vec p 2 partial r nbsp p 3 1 w 2 r 2 r ϕ w r 1 w 2 r 2 t displaystyle vec p 3 frac sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 r partial phi frac omega r sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 partial t nbsp These are exactly the same vector fields as before they are now simply represented in a different coordinate chart Needless to say in the process of unwinding the world lines of the Langevin observers which appear as helices in the cylindrical chart we wound up the world lines of the static observers which now appear as helices in the Born chart Note too that like the Langevin frame the Born chart is only defined on the region 0 lt r lt 1 w If we recompute the kinematic decomposition of the Langevin observers that is of the timelike congruence p 0 1 1 w 2 r 2 t displaystyle vec p 0 frac 1 sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 partial t nbsp we will of course obtain the same answer that we did before only expressed in terms of the new chart Specifically the acceleration vector is p 0 p 0 w 2 r 1 w 2 r 2 p 2 displaystyle nabla vec p 0 vec p 0 frac omega 2 r 1 omega 2 r 2 vec p 2 nbsp the expansion tensor vanishes and the vorticity vector is W w 1 w 2 r 2 p 1 displaystyle vec Omega frac omega 1 omega 2 r 2 vec p 1 nbsp The dual covector field of the timelike unit vector field in any frame field represents infinitesimal spatial hyperslices However the Frobenius integrability theorem gives a strong restriction on whether or not these spatial hyperplane elements can be knit together to form a family of spatial hypersurfaces which are everywhere orthogonal to the world lines of the congruence Indeed it turns out that this is possible in which case we say the congruence is hypersurface orthogonal if and only if the vorticity vector vanishes identically Thus while the static observers in the cylindrical chart admits a unique family of orthogonal hyperslices T T 0 displaystyle T T 0 nbsp the Langevin observers admit no such hyperslices In particular the spatial surfaces t t 0 displaystyle t t 0 nbsp in the Born chart are orthogonal to the static observers not to the Langevin observers This is our second and much more pointed indication that defining the spatial geometry of a rotating disk is not as simple as one might expect To better understand this crucial point consider integral curves of the third Langevin frame vector p 3 1 w 2 r 2 1 r ϕ w r 1 w 2 r 2 t displaystyle vec p 3 sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 frac 1 r partial phi frac omega r sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 partial t nbsp which pass through the radius ϕ 0 t 0 displaystyle phi 0 t 0 nbsp For convenience we will suppress the inessential coordinate z from our discussion These curves lie in the surface ϕ w t t w r 2 0 p lt ϕ lt p displaystyle phi omega t frac t omega r 2 0 pi lt phi lt pi nbsp shown in Fig 3 We would like to regard this as a space at a time for our Langevin observers But two things go wrong First the Frobenius theorem tells us that p 2 p 3 displaystyle vec p 2 vec p 3 nbsp are tangent to no spatial hyperslice whatever Indeed except on the initial radius the vectors p 2 displaystyle vec p 2 nbsp do not lie in our slice Thus while we found a spatial hypersurface it is orthogonal to the world lines of only some our Langevin observers Because the obstruction from the Frobenius theorem can be understood in terms of the failure of the vector fields p 2 p 3 displaystyle vec p 2 vec p 3 nbsp to form a Lie algebra this obstruction is differential in fact Lie theoretic That is it is a kind of infinitesimal obstruction to the existence of a satisfactory notion of spatial hyperslices for our rotating observers Second as Fig 3 shows our attempted hyperslice would lead to a discontinuous notion of time due to the jumps in the integral curves shown as a blue colored grid discontinuity Alternatively we could try to use a multivalued time Neither of these alternatives seems very attractive This is evidently a global obstruction It is of course a consequence of our inability to synchronize the clocks of the Langevin observers riding even a single ring say the rim of a disk much less an entire disk The Sagnac effect editImagine that we have fastened a fiber optic cable around the circumference of a ring of radius r 0 displaystyle r 0 nbsp which is rotating with steady angular velocity w We wish to compute the round trip travel time as measured by a ring riding observer for a laser pulse sent clockwise and counterclockwise around the cable For simplicity we will ignore the fact that light travels through a fiber optic cable at somewhat less than the speed of light in vacuum and will pretend that the world line of our laser pulse is a null curve but certainly not a null geodesic In the Born line element let us put d s d z d r 0 displaystyle mathrm d s mathrm d z mathrm d r 0 nbsp This gives 1 w 2 r 0 2 d t 2 2 w r 0 2 d t d ϕ r 0 2 d ϕ 2 displaystyle 1 omega 2 r 0 2 mathrm d t 2 2 omega r 0 2 mathrm d t mathrm d phi r 0 2 mathrm d phi 2 nbsp or d t r 0 d ϕ 1 w r 0 d t r 0 d ϕ 1 w r 0 displaystyle mathrm d t frac r 0 mathrm d phi 1 omega r 0 quad mathrm d t frac r 0 mathrm d phi 1 omega r 0 nbsp We obtain for the round trip travel time D t 0 2 p r 0 d ϕ 1 w r 0 2 p r 0 1 w r 0 D t 0 2 p r 0 d ϕ 1 w r 0 2 p r 0 1 w r 0 displaystyle Delta t int 0 2 pi frac r 0 mathrm d phi 1 omega r 0 frac 2 pi r 0 1 omega r 0 quad Delta t int 0 2 pi frac r 0 mathrm d phi 1 omega r 0 frac 2 pi r 0 1 omega r 0 nbsp Putting d D t D t 2 p r 0 displaystyle delta frac Delta t Delta t 2 pi r 0 nbsp we find w 1 1 d 2 r 0 d displaystyle omega frac 1 pm sqrt 1 delta 2 r 0 delta nbsp positive w means counter clockwise rotation negative w means clockwise rotation so that the ring riding observers can determine the angular velocity of the ring as measured by a static observer from the difference between clockwise and counterclockwise travel times This is known as the Sagnac effect It is evidently a global effect Null geodesics edit nbsp Fig 4 Two radial null geodesic tracks green curve outward bound red curve inward bound depicted in the Born chart The track of a Langevin observer L orbiting counter clockwise at radius R R0 i e riding a counter clockwise rotating ring is also shown navy blue circle Parameters w 0 2 R0 r0 1We wish to compare the appearance of null geodesics in the cylindrical chart and the Born chart In the cylindrical chart the geodesic equations read T 0 Z 0 R R F 2 0 F 2 R F R 0 displaystyle ddot T 0 ddot Z 0 ddot R R dot Phi 2 0 ddot Phi frac 2 R dot Phi dot R 0 nbsp We immediately obtain the first integrals T E Z P F L R 2 displaystyle dot T E dot Z P dot Phi frac L R 2 nbsp Plugging these into the expression obtained from the line element by setting d s 2 0 displaystyle mathrm d s 2 0 nbsp we obtain R 2 E 2 P 2 L 2 R 2 0 displaystyle dot R 2 E 2 P 2 frac L 2 R 2 geq 0 nbsp from which we see that the minimal radius of a null geodesic is given by E 2 P 2 L 2 R m i n 2 0 displaystyle E 2 P 2 frac L 2 R mathrm min 2 0 quad nbsp i e R m i n L E 2 P 2 displaystyle quad R mathrm min frac L sqrt E 2 P 2 nbsp hence R 2 L 2 1 R m i n 2 1 R 2 displaystyle dot R 2 L 2 left frac 1 R mathrm min 2 frac 1 R 2 right nbsp nbsp Fig 5 Null geodesics depicted in the Born chart between ring riding Langevin observers r r0 1 Null geodesics propagating with the rotation are bent inward green curve null geodesics propagating against the rotation are bent outward red curve The proper light travel time from L1 to L2 Dt12 is 1 311 from L2 to L1 Dt21 is 1 510 the proper light travel times are not symmetrical but the radar distance Dt12 Dt21 2 is For w 0 both proper light travel times tend toward 2 1 414 Null geodesics between opposite Langevin observers L1 and L3 bend symmetrically around the center of rotation Parameters w 0 1 R0 r0 1 Dϕ L1 L2 p 2 Dϕ L1 L3 pWe can now solve to obtain the null geodesics as curves parameterized by an affine parameter as follows R E 2 P 2 s 2 L 2 E 2 P 2 E 2 P 2 s 2 R m i n 2 T T 0 E s Z Z 0 P s F F 0 arctan E 2 P 2 L s F 0 arctan E 2 P 2 R m i n sgn L s displaystyle begin aligned R amp sqrt E 2 P 2 s 2 L 2 E 2 P 2 amp sqrt E 2 P 2 s 2 R mathrm min 2 T amp T 0 E s 1em Z amp Z 0 P s Phi amp Phi 0 operatorname arctan left frac E 2 P 2 L s right amp Phi 0 operatorname arctan left frac sqrt E 2 P 2 R mathrm min operatorname sgn L s right end aligned nbsp More useful for our purposes is the observation that the trajectory of a null geodesic its projection into any spatial hyperslice T T 0 displaystyle T T 0 nbsp is of course a straight line given by R R m i n sec F F 0 displaystyle R R mathrm min sec Phi Phi 0 nbsp To obtain the minimal radius of the line through two points on the same side of the point of closest approach to the origin we solve R 1 R m i n sec F 1 F 0 R 2 R m i n sec F 2 F 0 displaystyle R 1 R mathrm min sec Phi 1 Phi 0 R 2 R mathrm min sec Phi 2 Phi 0 nbsp which gives R m i n R 1 R 2 sin F 2 F 1 R 1 2 2 R 1 R 2 cos F 2 F 1 R 2 2 displaystyle R mathrm min frac R 1 R 2 sin Phi 2 Phi 1 sqrt R 1 2 2 R 1 R 2 cos Phi 2 Phi 1 R 2 2 nbsp Now consider the simplest case the radial null geodesics Rmin L 0 E 1 P 0 An outward bound radial null geodesic may be written in the form T s Z Z 0 R s displaystyle T s Z Z 0 R s nbsp F c o n s t w R 0 displaystyle Phi mathrm const omega R 0 nbsp with the radius R0 of the ring riding Langevin observer see Fig 4 Transforming to the Born chart we find that the trajectory can be written as r r 0 ϕ w displaystyle r r 0 frac phi omega nbsp The tracks turn out to appear slightly bent in the Born chart see green curve in Fig 4 From section Transforming to the Born chart we see that in the Born chart we cannot properly refer to these tracks as projections as for the Langevin observer an orthogonal hyperslice for t t0 does not exist see Fig 3 Similarly for inward bound radial null geodesics we get r ϕ w displaystyle r frac phi omega nbsp depicted as red curve in Fig 4 Notice that to send a laser pulse toward the stationary observer S at R 0 the Langevin observer L has to aim slightly behind to correct for its own motion Turning things around just as a duck hunter would expect to send a laser pulse toward the Langevin observer riding a counterclockwise rotating ring the central observer has to aim not at this observer s current position but at the position at which he will arrive just in time to intercept the signal These families of inward and outward bound radial null geodesics represent very different curves in spacetime and their projections do not agree for w gt 0 nbsp Fig 6 A null geodesic arc depicted in the Born chart which models a signal sent from one ring riding observer to another The world lines of these observers are shown as blue vertical lines the center of symmetry as a green vertical line Notice that our null geodesic amber arc appears to bend slightly inward see also green curve in Fig 5 Similarly null geodesics between ring riding Langevin observers appear slightly bent inward in the Born chart if the geodesics propagate with the direction of the rotation see green curve in Fig 5 To see this write the equation of a null geodesic in the cylindrical chart in the form T R m i n tan F displaystyle T R mathrm min tan Phi nbsp R R m i n sec F displaystyle R R mathrm min sec Phi nbsp Transforming to Born coordinates we obtain the equations t r m i n tan ϕ w t displaystyle t r mathrm min tan phi omega t nbsp r r m i n sec ϕ w t displaystyle r r mathrm min sec phi omega t nbsp Eliminating ϕ gives r r m i n 2 t 2 displaystyle r sqrt r mathrm min 2 t 2 nbsp which shows that the geodesic does indeed appear to bend inward see Fig 6 We also find that ϕ w t arctan t r m i n displaystyle phi omega t operatorname arctan t r mathrm min nbsp For null geodesics propagating against the rotation red curve in Fig 5 we get r r m i n 2 t 2 displaystyle r sqrt r mathrm min 2 t 2 nbsp ϕ w t arctan t r m i n displaystyle phi omega t operatorname arctan t r mathrm min nbsp and the geodesic bends slightly outward This completes the description of the appearance of null geodesics in the Born chart since every null geodesic is either radial or else has some point of closest approach to the axis of cylindrical symmetry Note see Fig 5 that a ring riding observer trying to send a laser pulse to another ring riding observer must aim slightly ahead or behind of his angular coordinate as given in the Born chart in order to compensate for the rotational motion of the target Note too that the picture presented here is fully compatible with our expectation see appearance of the night sky that a moving observer will see the apparent position of other objects on his celestial sphere to be displaced toward the direction of his motion Radar distance in the large edit nbsp Fig 7 This schematic figure illustrates the notion of radar distance between a ring riding observer and a static central observer with the same Z coordinate Even in flat spacetime it turns out that accelerating observers even linearly accelerating observers see Rindler coordinates can employ various distinct but operationally significant notions of distance Perhaps the simplest of these is radar distance Consider how a static observer at R 0 might determine his distance to a ring riding observer at R R0 At event C he sends a radar pulse toward the ring which strikes the world line of a ring riding observer at A and then returns to the central observer at event C See the right hand diagram in Fig 7 He then divides the elapsed time as measured by an ideal clock he carries by two It is not hard to see that he obtains for this distance simply R0 in the cylindrical chart or r0 in the Born chart Similarly a ring riding observer can determine his distance to the central observer by sending a radar pulse at event A toward the central observer which strikes his world line at event C and returns to the ring riding observer at event A See the left hand diagram in Fig 7 It is not hard to see that he obtains for this distance R 0 1 w 2 R 0 2 displaystyle R 0 sqrt 1 omega 2 R 0 2 nbsp in the cylindrical chart or r 0 1 w 2 r 0 2 displaystyle r 0 sqrt 1 omega 2 r 0 2 nbsp in the Born chart a result which is somewhat smaller than the one obtained by the central observer This is a consequence of time dilation the elapsed time for a ring riding observer is smaller by the factor 1 w 2 r 0 2 displaystyle sqrt 1 omega 2 r 0 2 nbsp than the time for the central observer Thus while radar distance has a simple operational significance it is not even symmetric nbsp Fig 8 This schematic figure illustrates the notion of radar distance between two Langevin observers riding a ring with radius R0 which is rotating with angular velocity w In the left hand diagram the ring is rotating counter clockwise in the right hand diagram it is rotating clockwise To drive home this crucial point compare the radar distances obtained by two ring riding observers with radial coordinate R R0 In the left hand diagram at Fig 8 we can write the coordinates of event A as T 0 Z 0 X R 0 Y 0 displaystyle T 0 Z 0 X R 0 Y 0 nbsp and we can write the coordinates of event B as T 2 R 0 sin F 2 Z 0 displaystyle T 2 R 0 sin left frac Phi 2 right Z 0 nbsp X R 0 cos F Y R 0 sin F displaystyle X R 0 cos Phi Y R 0 sin Phi nbsp Writing the unknown elapsed proper time as D s displaystyle Delta s nbsp we now write the coordinates of event A as T D s 1 w 2 R 0 2 Z 0 displaystyle T frac Delta s sqrt 1 omega 2 R 0 2 Z 0 nbsp X R 0 cos w D s 1 w 2 R 0 2 Y R 0 sin w D s 1 w 2 R 0 2 displaystyle X R 0 cos left frac omega Delta s sqrt 1 omega 2 R 0 2 right Y R 0 sin left frac omega Delta s sqrt 1 omega 2 R 0 2 right nbsp By requiring that the line segments connecting these events be null we obtain an equation which in principle we can solve for D s It turns out that this procedure gives a rather complicated nonlinear equation so we simply present some representative numerical results With R0 1 F p 2 and w 1 10 we find that the radar distance from A to B is about 1 311 while the distance from B to A is about 1 510 As w tends to zero both results tend toward 2 1 414 see also Fig 5 Despite these possibly discouraging discrepancies it is by no means impossible to devise a coordinate chart which is adapted to describing the physical experience of a single Langevin observer or even a single arbitrarily accelerating observer in Minkowski spacetime Pauri and Vallisneri have adapted the Marzke Wheeler clock synchronization procedure to devise adapted coordinates they call Marzke Wheeler coordinates see the paper cited below In the case of steady circular motion this chart is in fact very closely related to the notion of radar distance in the large from a given Langevin observer Radar distance in the small editAs was mentioned above for various reasons the family of Langevin observers admits no family of orthogonal hyperslices Therefore these observers simply cannot be associated with any slicing of spacetime into a family of successive constant time slices However because the Langevin congruence is stationary we can imagine replacing each world line in this congruence by a point That is we can consider the quotient space of Minkowski spacetime or rather the region 0 lt R lt 1 w by the Langevin congruence which is a three dimensional topological manifold Even better we can place a Riemannian metric on this quotient manifold turning it into a three dimensional Riemannian manifold in such a way that the metric has a simple operational significance To see this consider the Born line element d s 2 1 w 2 r 2 d t 2 2 w r 2 d t d ϕ d z 2 d r 2 r 2 d ϕ 2 displaystyle mathrm d s 2 1 omega 2 r 2 mathrm d t 2 2 omega r 2 mathrm d t mathrm d phi mathrm d z 2 mathrm d r 2 r 2 mathrm d phi 2 nbsp lt t z lt 0 lt r lt 1 w p lt ϕ lt p displaystyle infty lt t z lt infty 0 lt r lt frac 1 omega pi lt phi lt pi nbsp Setting ds2 0 and solving for dt we obtain d t w r 2 d ϕ 1 w 2 r 2 d z 2 d r 2 r 2 d ϕ 2 1 w 2 r 2 displaystyle mathrm d t frac omega r 2 mathrm d phi sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 mathrm d z 2 mathrm d r 2 r 2 mathrm d phi 2 1 omega 2 r 2 nbsp d t w r 2 d ϕ 1 w 2 r 2 d z 2 d r 2 r 2 d ϕ 2 1 w 2 r 2 displaystyle mathrm d t frac omega r 2 mathrm d phi sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 mathrm d z 2 mathrm d r 2 r 2 mathrm d phi 2 1 omega 2 r 2 nbsp The elapsed proper time for a roundtrip radar blip emitted by a Langevin observer is then 1 w 2 r 2 d t d t 2 d z 2 d r 2 r 2 d ϕ 2 1 w 2 r 2 displaystyle sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 frac mathrm d t mathrm d t 2 sqrt mathrm d z 2 mathrm d r 2 frac r 2 mathrm d phi 2 1 omega 2 r 2 nbsp Therefore in our quotient manifold the Riemannian line element d s 2 d z 2 d r 2 r 2 d ϕ 2 1 w 2 r 2 displaystyle mathrm d sigma 2 mathrm d z 2 mathrm d r 2 frac r 2 mathrm d phi 2 1 omega 2 r 2 nbsp lt t lt 0 lt r lt 1 w p lt ϕ lt p displaystyle infty lt t lt infty 0 lt r lt frac 1 omega pi lt phi lt pi nbsp corresponds to distance between infinitesimally nearby Langevin observers We will call it the Langevin Landau Lifschitz metric and we can call this notion of distance radar distance in the small This metric was first given by Langevin but the interpretation in terms of radar distance in the small is due to Lev Landau and Evgeny Lifshitz who generalized the construction to work for the quotient of any Lorentzian manifold by a stationary timelike congruence If we adopt the coframe 8 1 d z 8 2 d r 8 3 r d ϕ 1 w 2 r 2 displaystyle theta hat 1 mathrm d z theta hat 2 mathrm d r theta hat 3 frac r mathrm d phi sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 nbsp we can easily compute the Riemannian curvature tensor of our three dimensional quotient manifold It has only two independent nontrivial components R 2 3 2 3 3 w 2 1 w 2 r 2 2 3 w 2 O w 4 r 2 displaystyle R hat 2 hat 3 hat 2 hat 3 frac 3 omega 2 1 omega 2 r 2 2 3 omega 2 O omega 4 r 2 nbsp R 3 2 3 2 3 w 2 r 2 1 w 2 r 2 3 3 w 2 r 2 O w 4 r 4 displaystyle R hat 3 hat 2 hat 3 hat 2 frac 3 omega 2 r 2 1 omega 2 r 2 3 3 omega 2 r 2 O omega 4 r 4 nbsp Thus in some sense the geometry of a rotating disk is curved as Theodor Kaluza claimed without proof as early as 1910 In fact to second order in w it has the geometry of the hyperbolic plane just as Kaluza claimed Warning as we have seen there are many possible notions of distance which can be employed by Langevin observers riding on a rigidly rotating disk so statements referring to the geometry of a rotating disk always require careful qualification To drive home this important point let us use the Landau Lifschitz metric to compute the distance between a Langevin observer riding a ring with radius R0 and a central static observer To do this we need only integrate our line element over the appropriate null geodesic track From our earlier work we see that we must plug d r d ϕ w d z 0 displaystyle mathrm d r frac mathrm d phi omega mathrm d z 0 nbsp into our line element and integrate 0 D d s 0 r 0 1 w 2 r 2 1 w 2 r 2 1 2 d r displaystyle int 0 Delta mathrm d sigma int limits 0 r 0 left 1 frac omega 2 r 2 1 omega 2 r 2 right frac 1 2 mathrm d r nbsp This gives D 0 r 0 d r 1 w 2 r 2 arcsin w r 0 w r 0 w 2 r 0 3 6 O r 0 5 displaystyle Delta int 0 r 0 frac mathrm d r sqrt 1 omega 2 r 2 frac arcsin omega r 0 omega r 0 frac omega 2 r 0 3 6 O r 0 5 nbsp Because we are now dealing with a Riemannian metric this notion of distance is of course symmetric under interchanging the two observers unlike radar distance in the large The values given by this notion are in contradiction to the radar distances in the large computed in the previous section Also because up to second order the Landau Lifschitz metric agrees with the Einstein synchronization convention we see that the curvature tensor we just computed does have operational significance while radar distance in the large between pairs of Langevin observers is certainly not a Riemannian notion of distance the distance between pairs of nearby Langevin observers does correspond to a Riemannian distance given by the Langevin Landau Lifschitz metric In the felicitous phrase of Howard Percy Robertson this is kinematics im Kleinen One way to see that all reasonable notions of spatial distance for our Langevin observers agree for nearby observers is to show following Nathan Rosen that for any one Langevin observer an instantaneously co moving inertial observer will also obtain the distances given by the Langevin Landau Lifschitz metric for very small distances See also editEhrenfest paradox for a sometimes controversial topic often studied using the Born chart Fibre optic gyroscope Rindler coordinates for another useful coordinate chart adapted to another important family of accelerated observers in Minkowski spacetime this article also emphasizes the existence of distinct notions of distance which may be employed by such observers Sagnac effectReferences editA few papers of historical interest Born M 1909 Die Theorie des starren Elektrons in der Kinematik des Relativitats Prinzipes Ann Phys 30 11 1 56 Bibcode 1909AnP 335 1B doi 10 1002 andp 19093351102 Wikisource translation The Theory of the Rigid Electron in the Kinematics of the Principle of Relativity Ehrenfest P 1909 Gleichformige Rotation starrer Korper und Relativitatstheorie Phys Z 10 918 Bibcode 1909PhyZ 10 918E Wikisource translation Uniform Rotation of Rigid Bodies and the Theory of Relativity Langevin P 1935 Remarques au sujet de la Note de Prunier C R Acad Sci Paris 200 48 A few classic references Gron O 1975 Relativistic description of a rotating disk Am J Phys 43 10 869 876 Bibcode 1975AmJPh 43 869G doi 10 1119 1 9969 Landau L D amp Lifschitz E M 1980 The Classical Theory of Fields 4th ed London Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 0 7506 2768 9 See Section 84 for the Landau Lifschitz metric on the quotient of a Lorentzian manifold by a stationary congruence see the problem at the end of Section 89 for the application to Langevin observers Selected recent sources Rizzi G amp Ruggiero M L 2004 Relativity in Rotating Frames Dordrecht Kluwer ISBN 1 4020 1805 3 This book contains a valuable historical survey by Oyvind Gron and some other papers on the Ehrenfest paradox and related controversies and a paper by Lluis Bel discussing the Langevin congruence Hundreds of additional references may be found in this book Pauri Massimo amp Vallisneri Michele 2000 Marzke Wheeler coordinates for accelerated observers in special relativity Found Phys Lett 13 5 401 425 arXiv gr qc 0006095 Bibcode 2000gr qc 6095P doi 10 1023 A 1007861914639 S2CID 15097773 Studies a coordinate chart constructed using radar distance in the large from a single Langevin observer See also the eprint version External links editThe Rigid Rotating Disk in Relativity by Michael Weiss 1995 from the sci physics FAQ Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Born coordinates amp oldid 1182375953, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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