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Born rigidity

Born rigidity is a concept in special relativity. It is one answer to the question of what, in special relativity, corresponds to the rigid body of non-relativistic classical mechanics.

The concept was introduced by Max Born (1909),[1][2] who gave a detailed description of the case of constant proper acceleration which he called hyperbolic motion. When subsequent authors such as Paul Ehrenfest (1909)[3] tried to incorporate rotational motions as well, it became clear that Born rigidity is a very restrictive sense of rigidity, leading to the Herglotz–Noether theorem, according to which there are severe restrictions on rotational Born rigid motions. It was formulated by Gustav Herglotz (1909, who classified all forms of rotational motions)[4] and in a less general way by Fritz Noether (1909).[5] As a result, Born (1910)[6] and others gave alternative, less restrictive definitions of rigidity.

Definition edit

Born rigidity is satisfied if the orthogonal spacetime distance between infinitesimally separated curves or worldlines is constant,[7] or equivalently, if the length of the rigid body in momentary co-moving inertial frames measured by standard measuring rods (i.e. the proper length) is constant and is therefore subjected to Lorentz contraction in relatively moving frames.[8] Born rigidity is a constraint on the motion of an extended body, achieved by careful application of forces to different parts of the body. A body rigid in itself would violate special relativity, as its speed of sound would be infinite.

A classification of all possible Born rigid motions can be obtained using the Herglotz–Noether theorem. This theorem states, that all irrotational Born rigid motions (class A) consist of hyperplanes rigidly moving through spacetime, while any rotational Born rigid motion (class B) must be isometric Killing motions. This implies that a Born rigid body only has three degrees of freedom. Thus a body can be brought in a Born rigid way from rest into any translational motion, but it cannot be brought in a Born rigid way from rest into rotational motion.[9]

Stresses and Born rigidity edit

It was shown by Herglotz (1911),[10] that a relativistic theory of elasticity can be based on the assumption, that stresses arise when the condition of Born rigidity is broken.[11]

An example of breaking Born rigidity is the Ehrenfest paradox: Even though the state of uniform circular motion of a body is among the allowed Born rigid motions of class B, a body cannot be brought from any other state of motion into uniform circular motion without breaking the condition of Born rigidity during the phase in which the body undergoes various accelerations. But if this phase is over and the centripetal acceleration becomes constant, the body can be uniformly rotating in agreement with Born rigidity. Likewise, if it is now in uniform circular motion, this state cannot be changed without again breaking the Born rigidity of the body.

Another example is Bell's spaceship paradox: If the endpoints of a body are accelerated with constant proper accelerations in rectilinear direction, then the leading endpoint must have a lower proper acceleration in order to leave the proper length constant so that Born rigidity is satisfied. It will also exhibit an increasing Lorentz contraction in an external inertial frame, that is, in the external frame the endpoints of the body are not accelerating simultaneously. However, if a different acceleration profile is chosen by which the endpoints of the body are simultaneously accelerated with same proper acceleration as seen in the external inertial frame, its Born rigidity will be broken, because constant length in the external frame implies increasing proper length in a comoving frame due to relativity of simultaneity. In this case, a fragile thread spanned between two rockets will experience stresses (which are called Herglotz–Dewan–Beran stresses[8]) and will consequently break.

Born rigid motions edit

A classification of allowed, in particular rotational, Born rigid motions in flat Minkowski spacetime was given by Herglotz,[4] which was also studied by Friedrich Kottler (1912, 1914),[12] Georges Lemaître (1924),[13] Adriaan Fokker (1940),[14] George Salzmann & Abraham H. Taub (1954).[7] Herglotz pointed out that a continuum is moving as a rigid body when the world lines of its points are equidistant curves in  . The resulting worldliness can be split into two classes:

Class A: Irrotational motions edit

Herglotz defined this class in terms of equidistant curves which are the orthogonal trajectories of a family of hyperplanes, which also can be seen as solutions of a Riccati equation[15] (this was called "plane motion" by Salzmann & Taub[7] or "irrotational rigid motion" by Boyer[16][17]). He concluded, that the motion of such a body is completely determined by the motion of one of its points.

The general metric for these irrotational motions has been given by Herglotz, whose work was summarized with simplified notation by Lemaître (1924). Also the Fermi metric in the form given by Christian Møller (1952) for rigid frames with arbitrary motion of the origin was identified as the "most general metric for irrotational rigid motion in special relativity".[18] In general, it was shown that irrotational Born motion corresponds to those Fermi congruences of which any worldline can be used as baseline (homogeneous Fermi congruence).[19]

Herglotz
1909
 [20]
Lemaître
1924
 [21]
Møller
1952
 [22]

Already Born (1909) pointed out that a rigid body in translational motion has a maximal spatial extension depending on its acceleration, given by the relation  , where   is the proper acceleration and   is the radius of a sphere in which the body is located, thus the higher the proper acceleration, the smaller the maximal extension of the rigid body.[2] The special case of translational motion with constant proper acceleration is known as hyperbolic motion, with the worldline

Born
1909
 [23]
Herglotz
1909
 [24]

 [25]

Sommerfeld
1910
 [26]
Kottler
1912, 1914
 [27]

 [28]

Class B: Rotational isometric motions edit

Herglotz defined this class in terms of equidistant curves which are the trajectories of a one-parameter motion group[29] (this was called "group motion" by Salzmann & Taub[7] and was identified with isometric Killing motion by Felix Pirani & Gareth Williams (1962)[30]). He pointed out that they consist of worldlines whose three curvatures are constant (known as curvature, torsion and hypertorsion), forming a helix.[31] Worldlines of constant curvatures in flat spacetime were also studied by Kottler (1912),[12] Petrův (1964),[32] John Lighton Synge (1967, who called them timelike helices in flat spacetime),[33] or Letaw (1981, who called them stationary worldlines)[34] as the solutions of the Frenet–Serret formulas.

Herglotz further separated class B using four one-parameter groups of Lorentz transformations (loxodromic, elliptic, hyperbolic, parabolic) in analogy to hyperbolic motions (i.e. isometric automorphisms of a hyperbolic space), and pointed out that Born's hyperbolic motion (which follows from the hyperbolic group with   in the notation of Herglotz and Kottler,   in the notation of Lemaître,   in the notation of Synge; see the following table) is the only Born rigid motion that belongs to both classes A and B.

Loxodromic group (combination of hyperbolic motion and uniform rotation)
Herglotz
1909
 [35]
Kottler
1912, 1914
 [36]
Lemaître
1924
 [37]
Synge
1967
 [38]
Elliptic group (uniform rotation)
Herglotz
1909
 [39]
Kottler
1912, 1914
 [40]
de Sitter
1916
 [41]
Lemaître
1924
 [42]
Synge
1967
 [43]
Hyperbolic group (hyperbolic motion plus spacelike translation)
Herglotz
1909
 [44]
Kottler
1912, 1914
 [45]
Lemaître
1924
 [46]
Synge
1967
 [47]
Parabolic group (describing a semicubical parabola)
Herglotz
1909
 [25]
Kottler
1912, 1914
 [48]
Lemaître
1924
 [37]
Synge
1967
 [49]

General relativity edit

Attempts to extend the concept of Born rigidity to general relativity have been made by Salzmann & Taub (1954),[7] C. Beresford Rayner (1959),[50] Pirani & Williams (1962),[30] Robert H. Boyer (1964).[16] It was shown that the Herglotz–Noether theorem is not completely satisfied, because rigid rotating frames or congruences are possible which do not represent isometric Killing motions.[30]

Alternatives edit

Several weaker substitutes have also been proposed as rigidity conditions, such as by Noether (1909)[5] or Born (1910) himself.[6]

A modern alternative was given by Epp, Mann & McGrath.[51] In contrast to the ordinary Born rigid congruence consisting of the "history of a spatial volume-filling set of points", they recover the six degrees of freedom of classical mechanics by using a quasilocal rigid frame by defining a congruence in terms of the "history of the set of points on the surface bounding a spatial volume".

References edit

  1. ^ Born (1909a)
  2. ^ a b Born (1909b)
  3. ^ Ehrenfest (1909)
  4. ^ a b Herglotz (1909)
  5. ^ a b Noether (1909)
  6. ^ a b Born (1910)
  7. ^ a b c d e Salzmann & Taub (1954)
  8. ^ a b Gron (1981)
  9. ^ Giulini (2008)
  10. ^ Herglotz (1911)
  11. ^ Pauli (1921)
  12. ^ a b Kottler (1912); Kottler (1914a)
  13. ^ Lemaître (1924)
  14. ^ Fokker (1940)
  15. ^ Herglotz (1909), pp. 401, 415
  16. ^ a b Boyer (1965)
  17. ^ Giulini (2008), Theorem 18
  18. ^ Boyer (1965), p. 354
  19. ^ Bel (1995), theorem 2
  20. ^ Herglotz (1909), p. 401
  21. ^ Lemaître (1924), p. 166, 170
  22. ^ (1952), p. 254
  23. ^ Born (1909), p. 25
  24. ^ Herglotz (1909), p. 408
  25. ^ a b Herglotz (1909), p. 414
  26. ^ Sommerfled (1910), p. 670
  27. ^ Kottler (1912), p. 1714; Kottler (1914a), table 1, case IIIb
  28. ^ Kottler (1914b), p. 488
  29. ^ Herglotz (1909), pp. 402, 409-415
  30. ^ a b c Pirani & Willims (1962)
  31. ^ Herglotz (1909), p. 403
  32. ^ Petrův (1964)
  33. ^ Synge (1967)
  34. ^ Letaw (1981)
  35. ^ Herglotz (1909), p. 411
  36. ^ Kottler (1912), p. 1714; Kottler (1914a), table 1, case I
  37. ^ a b Lemaître (1924), p. 175
  38. ^ Synge (1967), Type I
  39. ^ Herglotz (1909), p. 412
  40. ^ Kottler (1912), p. 1714; Kottler (1914a), table 1, case IIb
  41. ^ DeSitter (1916), p. 178
  42. ^ Lemaître (1924), p. 173
  43. ^ Synge (1967), Type IIc
  44. ^ Herglotz (1909), p. 413
  45. ^ Kottler (1912), p. 1714; Kottler (1914a), table 1, case IIIa
  46. ^ Lemaître (1924), p. 174
  47. ^ Synge (1967), Type IIa
  48. ^ Kottler (1912), p. 1714; Kottler (1914a), table 1, case IV
  49. ^ Synge (1967), Type IIb
  50. ^ Rayner (1959)
  51. ^ Epp, Mann & McGrath (2009)

Bibliography edit

  • Born, Max (1909a), "Die Theorie des starren Elektrons in der Kinematik des Relativitätsprinzips" [Wikisource translation: The Theory of the Rigid Electron in the Kinematics of the Principle of Relativity], Annalen der Physik, 335 (11): 1–56, Bibcode:1909AnP...335....1B, doi:10.1002/andp.19093351102
  • Born, Max (1909b), "Über die Dynamik des Elektrons in der Kinematik des Relativitätsprinzips" [Wikisource translation: Concerning the Dynamics of the Electron in the Kinematics of the Principle of Relativity], Physikalische Zeitschrift, 10: 814–817
  • Born, Max (1910), "Zur Kinematik des starren Körpers im System des Relativitätsprinzips" [Wikisource translation: On the Kinematics of the Rigid Body in the System of the Principle of Relativity], Göttinger Nachrichten, 2: 161–179
  • Ehrenfest, Paul (1909), "Gleichförmige Rotation starrer Körper und Relativitätstheorie"  [Wikisource translation: Uniform Rotation of Rigid Bodies and the Theory of Relativity], Physikalische Zeitschrift, 10: 918, Bibcode:1909PhyZ...10..918E
  • Franklin, Jerrold (2013), "Rigid Body Motion in Special Relativity", Foundations of Physics, 95 (12): 1489–1501, arXiv:1105.3899, Bibcode:2013FoPh...43.1489F, doi:10.1007/s10701-013-9757-x, S2CID 254514424
  • Herglotz, Gustav (1910) [1909], "Über den vom Standpunkt des Relativitätsprinzips aus als starr zu bezeichnenden Körper" [Wikisource translation: On bodies that are to be designated as "rigid" from the standpoint of the relativity principle], Annalen der Physik, 336 (2): 393–415, Bibcode:1910AnP...336..393H, doi:10.1002/andp.19103360208
  • Herglotz, Gustav (1911), "Über die Mechanik des deformierbaren Körpers vom Standpunkte der Relativitätstheorie", Annalen der Physik, 341 (13): 493–533, Bibcode:1911AnP...341..493H, doi:10.1002/andp.19113411303; English translation by David Delphenich: On the mechanics of deformable bodies from the standpoint of relativity theory.
  • Noether, Fritz (1910) [1909]. "Zur Kinematik des starren Körpers in der Relativtheorie". Annalen der Physik. 336 (5): 919–944. Bibcode:1910AnP...336..919N. doi:10.1002/andp.19103360504.
  • Sommerfeld, Arnold (1910). "Zur Relativitätstheorie II: Vierdimensionale Vektoranalysis" [Wikisource translation: On the Theory of Relativity II: Four-dimensional Vector Analysis]. Annalen der Physik. 338 (14): 649–689. Bibcode:1910AnP...338..649S. doi:10.1002/andp.19103381402.
  • Kottler, Friedrich (1912). "Über die Raumzeitlinien der Minkowski'schen Welt" [Wikisource translation: On the spacetime lines of a Minkowski world]. Wiener Sitzungsberichte 2a. 121: 1659–1759. hdl:2027/mdp.39015051107277.
  • Kottler, Friedrich (1914a). "Relativitätsprinzip und beschleunigte Bewegung". Annalen der Physik. 349 (13): 701–748. Bibcode:1914AnP...349..701K. doi:10.1002/andp.19143491303.
  • Kottler, Friedrich (1914b). "Fallende Bezugssysteme vom Standpunkte des Relativitätsprinzips". Annalen der Physik. 350 (20): 481–516. Bibcode:1914AnP...350..481K. doi:10.1002/andp.19143502003.
  • De Sitter, W. (1916). "On Einstein's theory of gravitation and its astronomical consequences. Second paper". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 77 (2): 155–184. Bibcode:1916MNRAS..77..155D. doi:10.1093/mnras/77.2.155.
  • Pauli, Wolfgang (1921), "Die Relativitätstheorie", Encyclopädie der Mathematischen Wissenschaften, 5 (2): 539–776
In English: Pauli, W. (1981) [1921]. Theory of Relativity. Vol. 165. Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-64152-X. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Lemaître, G. (1924), "The motion of a rigid solid according to the relativity principle", Philosophical Magazine, Series 6, 48 (283): 164–176, doi:10.1080/14786442408634478
  • Fokker, A. D. (1949), "On the space-time geometry of a moving rigid body", Reviews of Modern Physics, 21 (3): 406–408, Bibcode:1949RvMP...21..406F, doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.21.406
  • Møller, C. (1955) [1952]. The theory of relativity. Oxford Clarendon Press.
  • Salzman, G., & Taub, A. H. (1954), "Born-type rigid motion in relativity", Physical Review, 95 (6): 1659–1669, Bibcode:1954PhRv...95.1659S, doi:10.1103/PhysRev.95.1659{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Rayner, C. B. (1959), "Le corps rigide en relativité générale", Séminaire Janet. Mécanique Analytique et Mécanique Céleste, 2: 1–15
  • Pirani, F. A. E., & Williams, G. (1962), "Rigid motion in a gravitational field", Séminaire Janet. Mécanique Analytique et Mécanique Céleste, 5: 1–16{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Petrův, V. (1964). "Die Lösung der Formeln von Frenet im Falle konstanter Krümmungen". Aplikace Matematiky. 9 (4): 239–240.
  • Boyer, R. H. (1965), "Rigid frames in general relativity", Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A, 28 (1394): 343–355, Bibcode:1965RSPSA.283..343B, doi:10.1098/rspa.1965.0025, S2CID 120278621
  • Synge, J. L. (1967) [1966]. "Timelike helices in flat space-time". Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Section A. 65: 27–42. JSTOR 20488646.
  • Grøn, Ø. (1981), "Covariant formulation of Hooke's law", American Journal of Physics, 49 (1): 28–30, Bibcode:1981AmJPh..49...28G, doi:10.1119/1.12623
  • Letaw, J. R. (1981). "Stationary world lines and the vacuum excitation of noninertial detectors". Physical Review D. 23 (8): 1709–1714. Bibcode:1981PhRvD..23.1709L. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.23.1709.
  • Bel, L. (1995) [1993], "Born's group and Generalized isometries", Relativity in General: Proceedings of the Relativity Meeting'93, Atlantica Séguier Frontières: 47, arXiv:1103.2509, Bibcode:2011arXiv1103.2509B
  • Giulini, Domenico (2008). "The Rich Structure of Minkowski Space". Minkowski Spacetime: A Hundred Years Later. Vol. 165. Springer. p. 83. arXiv:0802.4345. Bibcode:2008arXiv0802.4345G. ISBN 978-90-481-3474-8. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Epp, R. J., Mann, R. B., & McGrath, P. L. (2009), "Rigid motion revisited: rigid quasilocal frames", Classical and Quantum Gravity, 26 (3): 035015, arXiv:0810.0072, Bibcode:2009CQGra..26c5015E, doi:10.1088/0264-9381/26/3/035015, S2CID 118856653{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links edit

  • Born Rigidity, Acceleration, and Inertia at mathpages.com
  • The Rigid Rotating Disk in Relativity in the USENET Physics FAQ

born, rigidity, concept, special, relativity, answer, question, what, special, relativity, corresponds, rigid, body, relativistic, classical, mechanics, concept, introduced, born, 1909, gave, detailed, description, case, constant, proper, acceleration, which, . Born rigidity is a concept in special relativity It is one answer to the question of what in special relativity corresponds to the rigid body of non relativistic classical mechanics The concept was introduced by Max Born 1909 1 2 who gave a detailed description of the case of constant proper acceleration which he called hyperbolic motion When subsequent authors such as Paul Ehrenfest 1909 3 tried to incorporate rotational motions as well it became clear that Born rigidity is a very restrictive sense of rigidity leading to the Herglotz Noether theorem according to which there are severe restrictions on rotational Born rigid motions It was formulated by Gustav Herglotz 1909 who classified all forms of rotational motions 4 and in a less general way by Fritz Noether 1909 5 As a result Born 1910 6 and others gave alternative less restrictive definitions of rigidity Contents 1 Definition 2 Stresses and Born rigidity 3 Born rigid motions 3 1 Class A Irrotational motions 3 2 Class B Rotational isometric motions 4 General relativity 5 Alternatives 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksDefinition editBorn rigidity is satisfied if the orthogonal spacetime distance between infinitesimally separated curves or worldlines is constant 7 or equivalently if the length of the rigid body in momentary co moving inertial frames measured by standard measuring rods i e the proper length is constant and is therefore subjected to Lorentz contraction in relatively moving frames 8 Born rigidity is a constraint on the motion of an extended body achieved by careful application of forces to different parts of the body A body rigid in itself would violate special relativity as its speed of sound would be infinite A classification of all possible Born rigid motions can be obtained using the Herglotz Noether theorem This theorem states that all irrotational Born rigid motions class A consist of hyperplanes rigidly moving through spacetime while any rotational Born rigid motion class B must be isometric Killing motions This implies that a Born rigid body only has three degrees of freedom Thus a body can be brought in a Born rigid way from rest into any translational motion but it cannot be brought in a Born rigid way from rest into rotational motion 9 Stresses and Born rigidity editIt was shown by Herglotz 1911 10 that a relativistic theory of elasticity can be based on the assumption that stresses arise when the condition of Born rigidity is broken 11 An example of breaking Born rigidity is the Ehrenfest paradox Even though the state of uniform circular motion of a body is among the allowed Born rigid motions of class B a body cannot be brought from any other state of motion into uniform circular motion without breaking the condition of Born rigidity during the phase in which the body undergoes various accelerations But if this phase is over and the centripetal acceleration becomes constant the body can be uniformly rotating in agreement with Born rigidity Likewise if it is now in uniform circular motion this state cannot be changed without again breaking the Born rigidity of the body Another example is Bell s spaceship paradox If the endpoints of a body are accelerated with constant proper accelerations in rectilinear direction then the leading endpoint must have a lower proper acceleration in order to leave the proper length constant so that Born rigidity is satisfied It will also exhibit an increasing Lorentz contraction in an external inertial frame that is in the external frame the endpoints of the body are not accelerating simultaneously However if a different acceleration profile is chosen by which the endpoints of the body are simultaneously accelerated with same proper acceleration as seen in the external inertial frame its Born rigidity will be broken because constant length in the external frame implies increasing proper length in a comoving frame due to relativity of simultaneity In this case a fragile thread spanned between two rockets will experience stresses which are called Herglotz Dewan Beran stresses 8 and will consequently break Born rigid motions editA classification of allowed in particular rotational Born rigid motions in flat Minkowski spacetime was given by Herglotz 4 which was also studied by Friedrich Kottler 1912 1914 12 Georges Lemaitre 1924 13 Adriaan Fokker 1940 14 George Salzmann amp Abraham H Taub 1954 7 Herglotz pointed out that a continuum is moving as a rigid body when the world lines of its points are equidistant curves in R 4 displaystyle mathbf R 4 nbsp The resulting worldliness can be split into two classes Class A Irrotational motions edit Herglotz defined this class in terms of equidistant curves which are the orthogonal trajectories of a family of hyperplanes which also can be seen as solutions of a Riccati equation 15 this was called plane motion by Salzmann amp Taub 7 or irrotational rigid motion by Boyer 16 17 He concluded that the motion of such a body is completely determined by the motion of one of its points The general metric for these irrotational motions has been given by Herglotz whose work was summarized with simplified notation by Lemaitre 1924 Also the Fermi metric in the form given by Christian Moller 1952 for rigid frames with arbitrary motion of the origin was identified as the most general metric for irrotational rigid motion in special relativity 18 In general it was shown that irrotational Born motion corresponds to those Fermi congruences of which any worldline can be used as baseline homogeneous Fermi congruence 19 Herglotz1909 d s 2 d a 2 f d b d c 8 2 d ϑ 2 displaystyle ds 2 da 2 varphi db dc Theta 2 d vartheta 2 nbsp 20 Lemaitre1924 d s 2 d x 2 d y 2 d z 2 ϕ 2 d t 2 ϕ l x m y n z p displaystyle begin aligned amp ds 2 dx 2 dy 2 dz 2 phi 2 dt 2 amp quad left phi lx my nz p right end aligned nbsp 21 Moller1952 d s 2 d x 2 d y 2 d z 2 c 2 d t 2 1 g k x k c 2 2 displaystyle ds 2 dx 2 dy 2 dz 2 c 2 dt 2 left 1 frac g kappa x kappa c 2 right 2 nbsp 22 Already Born 1909 pointed out that a rigid body in translational motion has a maximal spatial extension depending on its acceleration given by the relation b lt c 2 R displaystyle b lt c 2 R nbsp where b displaystyle b nbsp is the proper acceleration and R displaystyle R nbsp is the radius of a sphere in which the body is located thus the higher the proper acceleration the smaller the maximal extension of the rigid body 2 The special case of translational motion with constant proper acceleration is known as hyperbolic motion with the worldline Born1909 x q 3 y h z z t p c 2 3 p d x d t q d t d t 1 p 2 c 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp x q xi quad y eta quad z zeta quad t frac p c 2 xi amp quad left p frac dx d tau quad q frac dt d tau sqrt 1 p 2 c 2 right end aligned nbsp 23 Herglotz1909 x x y y t z t z e ϑ t z t z e ϑ displaystyle x x quad y y quad t z t z e vartheta quad t z t z e vartheta nbsp 24 x x 0 y y 0 z z 0 2 t 2 displaystyle x x 0 quad y y 0 quad z sqrt z 0 2 t 2 nbsp 25 Sommerfeld1910 x r cos f y y z z l r sin f l i c t f i ps displaystyle begin aligned amp x r cos varphi quad y y quad z z quad l r sin varphi amp quad left l ict quad varphi i psi right end aligned nbsp 26 Kottler1912 1914 x 1 x 0 1 x 2 x 0 2 x 3 b cos i u x 4 b sin i u d s 2 c 2 d t 2 b 2 d u 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp x 1 x 0 1 quad x 2 x 0 2 quad x 3 b cos iu quad x 4 b sin iu amp ds 2 c 2 d tau 2 b 2 du 2 end aligned nbsp 27 x x 0 y y 0 z b cosh u c t b sinh u displaystyle x x 0 quad y y 0 quad z b cosh u quad ct b sinh u nbsp 28 Class B Rotational isometric motions edit For the corresponding proper reference frames for these rotational motions see Proper reference frame flat spacetime Proper reference frames for timelike helices Herglotz defined this class in terms of equidistant curves which are the trajectories of a one parameter motion group 29 this was called group motion by Salzmann amp Taub 7 and was identified with isometric Killing motion by Felix Pirani amp Gareth Williams 1962 30 He pointed out that they consist of worldlines whose three curvatures are constant known as curvature torsion and hypertorsion forming a helix 31 Worldlines of constant curvatures in flat spacetime were also studied by Kottler 1912 12 Petruv 1964 32 John Lighton Synge 1967 who called them timelike helices in flat spacetime 33 or Letaw 1981 who called them stationary worldlines 34 as the solutions of the Frenet Serret formulas Herglotz further separated class B using four one parameter groups of Lorentz transformations loxodromic elliptic hyperbolic parabolic in analogy to hyperbolic motions i e isometric automorphisms of a hyperbolic space and pointed out that Born s hyperbolic motion which follows from the hyperbolic group with a 0 displaystyle alpha 0 nbsp in the notation of Herglotz and Kottler l 0 displaystyle lambda 0 nbsp in the notation of Lemaitre q 0 displaystyle q 0 nbsp in the notation of Synge see the following table is the only Born rigid motion that belongs to both classes A and B Loxodromic group combination of hyperbolic motion and uniform rotation Herglotz1909 x i y x i y e i l ϑ x i y x i y e i l ϑ t z t z e ϑ t z t z e ϑ displaystyle x iy x iy e i lambda vartheta quad x iy x iy e i lambda vartheta quad t z t z e vartheta quad t z t z e vartheta nbsp 35 Kottler1912 1914 x 1 a cos l u u 0 x 2 a sin l u u 0 x 3 b cos i u x 4 b sin i u d s 2 c 2 d t 2 b 2 a 2 l 2 d u 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp x 1 a cos lambda left u u 0 right quad x 2 a sin lambda left u u 0 right quad x 3 b cos iu quad x 4 b sin iu amp ds 2 c 2 d tau 2 left b 2 a 2 lambda 2 right du 2 end aligned nbsp 36 Lemaitre1924 3 x cos l t y sin l t h x sin l t y cos l t z z cosh t t z sinh t d s 2 d r 2 r 2 d 8 2 d z 2 2 l r 2 d 8 d t z 2 l 2 r 2 d t 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp xi x cos lambda t y sin lambda t quad eta x sin lambda t y cos lambda t quad zeta z cosh t quad tau z sinh t amp ds 2 dr 2 r 2 d theta 2 dz 2 2 lambda r 2 d theta dt left z 2 lambda 2 r 2 right dt 2 end aligned nbsp 37 Synge1967 x q w 1 sin w s y q w 1 cos w s z r x 1 cosh x s t r x 1 sinh x s displaystyle x q omega 1 sin omega s quad y q omega 1 cos omega s quad z r chi 1 cosh chi s quad t r chi 1 sinh chi s nbsp 38 Elliptic group uniform rotation Herglotz1909 x i y x i y e i ϑ x i y x i y e i ϑ z z t t d ϑ displaystyle x iy x iy e i vartheta quad x iy x iy e i vartheta quad z z quad t t delta vartheta nbsp 39 Kottler1912 1914 x 1 a cos l u u 0 x 2 a sin l u u 0 x 3 x 0 3 x 4 i u d s 2 c 2 d t 2 1 a 2 l 2 d u 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp x 1 a cos lambda left u u 0 right quad x 2 a sin lambda left u u 0 right quad x 3 x 0 3 quad x 4 iu amp ds 2 c 2 d tau 2 left 1 a 2 lambda 2 right du 2 end aligned nbsp 40 de Sitter1916 8 8 w c t d s 2 d r 2 r 2 d 8 2 d z 2 d s 2 d s 2 2 r 2 w d 8 c d t 1 r 2 w 2 c 2 d t 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp theta theta omega ct left d sigma prime 2 dr prime 2 r prime 2 d theta prime 2 dz prime 2 right amp ds 2 d sigma prime 2 2r prime 2 omega d theta cdt left 1 r prime 2 omega 2 right c 2 dt 2 end aligned nbsp 41 Lemaitre1924 3 x cos l t y sin l t h x sin l t y cos l t z z t t d s 2 d r 2 r 2 d 8 2 d z 2 2 l r 2 d 8 d t 1 l 2 r 2 d t 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp xi x cos lambda t y sin lambda t quad eta x sin lambda t y cos lambda t quad zeta z quad tau t amp ds 2 dr 2 r 2 d theta 2 dz 2 2 lambda r 2 d theta dt left 1 lambda 2 r 2 right dt 2 end aligned nbsp 42 Synge1967 x q w 1 sin w s y q w 1 cos w s z 0 t s r displaystyle x q omega 1 sin omega s quad y q omega 1 cos omega s quad z 0 quad t sr nbsp 43 Hyperbolic group hyperbolic motion plus spacelike translation Herglotz1909 x x a ϑ y y t z t z e ϑ t z t z e ϑ displaystyle x x alpha vartheta quad y y quad t z t z e vartheta quad t z t z e vartheta nbsp 44 Kottler1912 1914 x 1 x 0 1 a u x 2 x 0 2 x 3 b cos i u x 4 b sin i u d s 2 c 2 d t 2 b 2 a 2 d u 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp x 1 x 0 1 alpha u quad x 2 x 0 2 quad x 3 b cos iu quad x 4 b sin iu amp ds 2 c 2 d tau 2 left b 2 alpha 2 right du 2 end aligned nbsp 45 Lemaitre1924 3 x l t h y z z cosh t t z sinh t d s 2 d x 2 d y 2 d z 2 2 l d x d t z 2 l 2 d t 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp xi x lambda t quad eta y quad zeta z cosh t quad tau z sinh t amp ds 2 dx 2 dy 2 dz 2 2 lambda dx dt left z 2 lambda 2 right dt 2 end aligned nbsp 46 Synge1967 x s q y 0 z r x 1 cosh x s t r x 1 sinh x s displaystyle x sq quad y 0 quad z r chi 1 cosh chi s quad t r chi 1 sinh chi s nbsp 47 Parabolic group describing a semicubical parabola Herglotz1909 x x 0 1 2 d ϑ 2 y y 0 b ϑ z z 0 x 0 ϑ 1 6 d ϑ 3 t z d ϑ displaystyle x x 0 frac 1 2 delta vartheta 2 quad y y 0 beta vartheta quad z z 0 x 0 vartheta frac 1 6 delta vartheta 3 quad t z delta vartheta nbsp 25 Kottler1912 1914 x 1 x 0 1 1 2 a u 2 x 2 x 0 2 x 3 x 0 3 x 0 1 u 1 6 a u 3 x 4 i x 3 i a u d s 2 c 2 d t 2 a 2 2 x 0 1 d u 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp x 1 x 0 1 frac 1 2 alpha u 2 quad x 2 x 0 2 quad x 3 x 0 3 x 0 1 u frac 1 6 alpha u 3 quad x 4 ix 3 i alpha u amp ds 2 c 2 d tau 2 left alpha 2 2x 0 1 right du 2 end aligned nbsp 48 Lemaitre1924 3 x 1 2 l t 2 h y m t z z x t 1 6 l t 3 t l t z x t 1 6 l t 3 d s 2 d x 2 d y 2 2 m d y d t 2 l d z d t 2 l x l 2 m 2 d t 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp xi x frac 1 2 lambda t 2 quad eta y mu t quad zeta z xt frac 1 6 lambda t 3 quad tau lambda t z xt frac 1 6 lambda t 3 amp ds 2 dx 2 dy 2 2 mu dy dt 2 lambda dz dt left 2 lambda x lambda 2 mu 2 right dt 2 end aligned nbsp 37 Synge1967 x 1 6 b 2 s 3 y 0 z 1 2 b s 2 t s 1 6 b 2 s 3 displaystyle x frac 1 6 b 2 s 3 quad y 0 quad z frac 1 2 bs 2 quad t s frac 1 6 b 2 s 3 nbsp 49 General relativity editAttempts to extend the concept of Born rigidity to general relativity have been made by Salzmann amp Taub 1954 7 C Beresford Rayner 1959 50 Pirani amp Williams 1962 30 Robert H Boyer 1964 16 It was shown that the Herglotz Noether theorem is not completely satisfied because rigid rotating frames or congruences are possible which do not represent isometric Killing motions 30 Alternatives editSeveral weaker substitutes have also been proposed as rigidity conditions such as by Noether 1909 5 or Born 1910 himself 6 A modern alternative was given by Epp Mann amp McGrath 51 In contrast to the ordinary Born rigid congruence consisting of the history of a spatial volume filling set of points they recover the six degrees of freedom of classical mechanics by using a quasilocal rigid frame by defining a congruence in terms of the history of the set of points on the surface bounding a spatial volume References edit Born 1909a a b Born 1909b Ehrenfest 1909 a b Herglotz 1909 a b Noether 1909 a b Born 1910 a b c d e Salzmann amp Taub 1954 a b Gron 1981 Giulini 2008 Herglotz 1911 Pauli 1921 a b Kottler 1912 Kottler 1914a Lemaitre 1924 Fokker 1940 Herglotz 1909 pp 401 415 a b Boyer 1965 Giulini 2008 Theorem 18 Boyer 1965 p 354 Bel 1995 theorem 2 Herglotz 1909 p 401 Lemaitre 1924 p 166 170 1952 p 254 Born 1909 p 25 Herglotz 1909 p 408 a b Herglotz 1909 p 414 Sommerfled 1910 p 670 Kottler 1912 p 1714 Kottler 1914a table 1 case IIIb Kottler 1914b p 488 Herglotz 1909 pp 402 409 415 a b c Pirani amp Willims 1962 Herglotz 1909 p 403 Petruv 1964 Synge 1967 Letaw 1981 Herglotz 1909 p 411 Kottler 1912 p 1714 Kottler 1914a table 1 case I a b Lemaitre 1924 p 175 Synge 1967 Type I Herglotz 1909 p 412 Kottler 1912 p 1714 Kottler 1914a table 1 case IIb DeSitter 1916 p 178 Lemaitre 1924 p 173 Synge 1967 Type IIc Herglotz 1909 p 413 Kottler 1912 p 1714 Kottler 1914a table 1 case IIIa Lemaitre 1924 p 174 Synge 1967 Type IIa Kottler 1912 p 1714 Kottler 1914a table 1 case IV Synge 1967 Type IIb Rayner 1959 Epp Mann amp McGrath 2009 Bibliography editBorn Max 1909a Die Theorie des starren Elektrons in der Kinematik des Relativitatsprinzips Wikisource translation The Theory of the Rigid Electron in the Kinematics of the Principle of Relativity Annalen der Physik 335 11 1 56 Bibcode 1909AnP 335 1B doi 10 1002 andp 19093351102 Born Max 1909b Uber die Dynamik des Elektrons in der Kinematik des Relativitatsprinzips Wikisource translation Concerning the Dynamics of the Electron in the Kinematics of the Principle of Relativity Physikalische Zeitschrift 10 814 817 Born Max 1910 Zur Kinematik des starren Korpers im System des Relativitatsprinzips Wikisource translation On the Kinematics of the Rigid Body in the System of the Principle of Relativity Gottinger Nachrichten 2 161 179 Ehrenfest Paul 1909 Gleichformige Rotation starrer Korper und Relativitatstheorie Wikisource translation Uniform Rotation of Rigid Bodies and the Theory of Relativity Physikalische Zeitschrift 10 918 Bibcode 1909PhyZ 10 918E Franklin Jerrold 2013 Rigid Body Motion in Special Relativity Foundations of Physics 95 12 1489 1501 arXiv 1105 3899 Bibcode 2013FoPh 43 1489F doi 10 1007 s10701 013 9757 x S2CID 254514424 Herglotz Gustav 1910 1909 Uber den vom Standpunkt des Relativitatsprinzips aus als starr zu bezeichnenden Korper Wikisource translation On bodies that are to be designated as rigid from the standpoint of the relativity principle Annalen der Physik 336 2 393 415 Bibcode 1910AnP 336 393H doi 10 1002 andp 19103360208 Herglotz Gustav 1911 Uber die Mechanik des deformierbaren Korpers vom Standpunkte der Relativitatstheorie Annalen der Physik 341 13 493 533 Bibcode 1911AnP 341 493H doi 10 1002 andp 19113411303 English translation by David Delphenich On the mechanics of deformable bodies from the standpoint of relativity theory Noether Fritz 1910 1909 Zur Kinematik des starren Korpers in der Relativtheorie Annalen der Physik 336 5 919 944 Bibcode 1910AnP 336 919N doi 10 1002 andp 19103360504 Sommerfeld Arnold 1910 Zur Relativitatstheorie II Vierdimensionale Vektoranalysis Wikisource translation On the Theory of Relativity II Four dimensional Vector Analysis Annalen der Physik 338 14 649 689 Bibcode 1910AnP 338 649S doi 10 1002 andp 19103381402 Kottler Friedrich 1912 Uber die Raumzeitlinien der Minkowski schen Welt Wikisource translation On the spacetime lines of a Minkowski world Wiener Sitzungsberichte 2a 121 1659 1759 hdl 2027 mdp 39015051107277 Kottler Friedrich 1914a Relativitatsprinzip und beschleunigte Bewegung Annalen der Physik 349 13 701 748 Bibcode 1914AnP 349 701K doi 10 1002 andp 19143491303 Kottler Friedrich 1914b Fallende Bezugssysteme vom Standpunkte des Relativitatsprinzips Annalen der Physik 350 20 481 516 Bibcode 1914AnP 350 481K doi 10 1002 andp 19143502003 De Sitter W 1916 On Einstein s theory of gravitation and its astronomical consequences Second paper Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 77 2 155 184 Bibcode 1916MNRAS 77 155D doi 10 1093 mnras 77 2 155 Pauli Wolfgang 1921 Die Relativitatstheorie Encyclopadie der Mathematischen Wissenschaften 5 2 539 776In English Pauli W 1981 1921 Theory of Relativity Vol 165 Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 64152 X a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help dd Lemaitre G 1924 The motion of a rigid solid according to the relativity principle Philosophical Magazine Series 6 48 283 164 176 doi 10 1080 14786442408634478 Fokker A D 1949 On the space time geometry of a moving rigid body Reviews of Modern Physics 21 3 406 408 Bibcode 1949RvMP 21 406F doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 21 406 Moller C 1955 1952 The theory of relativity Oxford Clarendon Press Salzman G amp Taub A H 1954 Born type rigid motion in relativity Physical Review 95 6 1659 1669 Bibcode 1954PhRv 95 1659S doi 10 1103 PhysRev 95 1659 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Rayner C B 1959 Le corps rigide en relativite generale Seminaire Janet Mecanique Analytique et Mecanique Celeste 2 1 15 Pirani F A E amp Williams G 1962 Rigid motion in a gravitational field Seminaire Janet Mecanique Analytique et Mecanique Celeste 5 1 16 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Petruv V 1964 Die Losung der Formeln von Frenet im Falle konstanter Krummungen Aplikace Matematiky 9 4 239 240 Boyer R H 1965 Rigid frames in general relativity Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A 28 1394 343 355 Bibcode 1965RSPSA 283 343B doi 10 1098 rspa 1965 0025 S2CID 120278621 Synge J L 1967 1966 Timelike helices in flat space time Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy Section A 65 27 42 JSTOR 20488646 Gron O 1981 Covariant formulation of Hooke s law American Journal of Physics 49 1 28 30 Bibcode 1981AmJPh 49 28G doi 10 1119 1 12623 Letaw J R 1981 Stationary world lines and the vacuum excitation of noninertial detectors Physical Review D 23 8 1709 1714 Bibcode 1981PhRvD 23 1709L doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 23 1709 Bel L 1995 1993 Born s group and Generalized isometries Relativity in General Proceedings of the Relativity Meeting 93 Atlantica Seguier Frontieres 47 arXiv 1103 2509 Bibcode 2011arXiv1103 2509B Giulini Domenico 2008 The Rich Structure of Minkowski Space Minkowski Spacetime A Hundred Years Later Vol 165 Springer p 83 arXiv 0802 4345 Bibcode 2008arXiv0802 4345G ISBN 978 90 481 3474 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Epp R J Mann R B amp McGrath P L 2009 Rigid motion revisited rigid quasilocal frames Classical and Quantum Gravity 26 3 035015 arXiv 0810 0072 Bibcode 2009CQGra 26c5015E doi 10 1088 0264 9381 26 3 035015 S2CID 118856653 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links editBorn Rigidity Acceleration and Inertia at mathpages com The Rigid Rotating Disk in Relativity in the USENET Physics FAQ Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Born rigidity amp oldid 1145936959, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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