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Proper reference frame (flat spacetime)

A proper reference frame in the theory of relativity is a particular form of accelerated reference frame, that is, a reference frame in which an accelerated observer can be considered as being at rest. It can describe phenomena in curved spacetime, as well as in "flat" Minkowski spacetime in which the spacetime curvature caused by the energy–momentum tensor can be disregarded. Since this article considers only flat spacetime—and uses the definition that special relativity is the theory of flat spacetime while general relativity is a theory of gravitation in terms of curved spacetime—it is consequently concerned with accelerated frames in special relativity.[1][2][3] (For the representation of accelerations in inertial frames, see the article Acceleration (special relativity), where concepts such as three-acceleration, four-acceleration, proper acceleration, hyperbolic motion etc. are defined and related to each other.)

A fundamental property of such a frame is the employment of the proper time of the accelerated observer as the time of the frame itself. This is connected with the clock hypothesis (which is experimentally confirmed), according to which the proper time of an accelerated clock is unaffected by acceleration, thus the measured time dilation of the clock only depends on its momentary relative velocity. The related proper reference frames are constructed using concepts like comoving orthonormal tetrads, which can be formulated in terms of spacetime Frenet–Serret formulas, or alternatively using Fermi–Walker transport as a standard of non-rotation. If the coordinates are related to Fermi–Walker transport, the term Fermi coordinates is sometimes used, or proper coordinates in the general case when rotations are also involved. A special class of accelerated observers follow worldlines whose three curvatures are constant. These motions belong to the class of Born rigid motions, i.e., the motions at which the mutual distance of constituents of an accelerated body or congruence remains unchanged in its proper frame. Two examples are Rindler coordinates or Kottler-Møller coordinates for the proper reference frame of hyperbolic motion, and Born or Langevin coordinates in the case of uniform circular motion.

In the following, Greek indices run over 0,1,2,3, Latin indices over 1,2,3, and bracketed indices are related to tetrad vector fields. The signature of the metric tensor is (-1,1,1,1).

History edit

Some properties of Kottler-Møller or Rindler coordinates were anticipated by Albert Einstein (1907)[H 1] when he discussed the uniformly accelerated reference frame. While introducing the concept of Born rigidity, Max Born (1909)[H 2] recognized that the formulas for the worldline of hyperbolic motion can be reinterpreted as transformations into a "hyperbolically accelerated reference system". Born himself, as well as Arnold Sommerfeld (1910)[H 3] and Max von Laue (1911)[H 4] used this frame to compute the properties of charged particles and their fields (see Acceleration (special relativity)#History and Rindler coordinates#History). In addition, Gustav Herglotz (1909)[H 5] gave a classification of all Born rigid motions, including uniform rotation and the worldlines of constant curvatures. Friedrich Kottler (1912, 1914)[H 6] introduced the "generalized Lorentz transformation" for proper reference frames or proper coordinates (German: Eigensystem, Eigenkoordinaten) by using comoving Frenet–Serret tetrads, and applied this formalism to Herglotz' worldlines of constant curvatures, particularly to hyperbolic motion and uniform circular motion. Herglotz' formulas were also simplified and extended by Georges Lemaître (1924).[H 7] The worldlines of constant curvatures were rediscovered by several author, for instance, by Vladimír Petrův (1964),[4] as "timelike helices" by John Lighton Synge (1967)[5] or as "stationary worldlines" by Letaw (1981).[6] The concept of proper reference frame was later reintroduced and further developed in connection with Fermi–Walker transport in the textbooks by Christian Møller (1952)[7] or Synge (1960).[8] An overview of proper time transformations and alternatives was given by Romain (1963),[9] who cited the contributions of Kottler. In particular, Misner & Thorne & Wheeler (1973)[10] combined Fermi–Walker transport with rotation, which influenced many subsequent authors. Bahram Mashhoon (1990, 2003)[11] analyzed the hypothesis of locality and accelerated motion. The relations between the spacetime Frenet–Serret formulas and Fermi–Walker transport was discussed by Iyer & C. V. Vishveshwara (1993),[12] Johns (2005)[13] or Bini et al. (2008)[14] and others. A detailed representation of "special relativity in general frames" was given by Gourgoulhon (2013).[15]

Comoving tetrads edit

Spacetime Frenet–Serret equations edit

For the investigation of accelerated motions and curved worldlines, some results of differential geometry can be used. For instance, the Frenet–Serret formulas for curves in Euclidean space have already been extended to arbitrary dimensions in the 19th century, and can be adapted to Minkowski spacetime as well. They describe the transport of an orthonormal basis attached to a curved worldline, so in four dimensions this basis can be called a comoving tetrad or vierbein   (also called vielbein, moving frame, frame field, local frame, repère mobile in arbitrary dimensions):[16][17][18][19]

 

(1)

Here,   is the proper time along the worldline, the timelike field   is called the tangent that corresponds to the four-velocity, the three spacelike fields are orthogonal to   and are called the principal normal  , the binormal   and the trinormal  . The first curvature   corresponds to the magnitude of four-acceleration (i.e., proper acceleration), the other curvatures   and   are also called torsion and hypertorsion.

Fermi–Walker transport and proper transport edit

While the Frenet–Serret tetrad can be rotating or not, it is useful to introduce another formalism in which non-rotational and rotational parts are separated. This can be done using the following equation for proper transport[20] or generalized Fermi transport[21] of tetrad  , namely[10][12][22][21][20][23]

 

(2)

where

 

or together in simplified form:

 

with   as four-velocity and   as four-acceleration, and " " indicates the dot product and " " the wedge product. The first part   represents Fermi–Walker transport,[13] which is physically realized when the three spacelike tetrad fields don't change their orientation with respect to the motion of a system of three gyroscopes. Thus Fermi–Walker transport can be seen as a standard of non-rotation. The second part   consists of an antisymmetric second rank tensor with   as the angular velocity four-vector and   as the Levi-Civita symbol. It turns out that this rotation matrix only affects the three spacelike tetrad fields, thus it can be interpreted as the spatial rotation of the spacelike fields   of a rotating tetrad (such as a Frenet–Serret tetrad) with respect to the non-rotating spacelike fields   of a Fermi–Walker tetrad along the same world line.

Deriving Fermi–Walker tetrads from Frenet–Serret tetrads edit

Since   and   on the same worldline are connected by a rotation matrix, it is possible to construct non-rotating Fermi–Walker tetrads using rotating Frenet–Serret tetrads,[24][25] which not only works in flat spacetime but for arbitrary spacetimes as well, even though the practical realization can be hard to achieve.[26] For instance, the angular velocity vector between the respective spacelike tetrad fields   and   can be given in terms of torsions   and  :[12][13][27][28]

  and  

(3a)

Assuming that the curvatures are constant (which is the case in helical motion in flat spacetime, or in the case of stationary axisymmetric spacetimes), one then proceeds by aligning the spacelike Frenet–Serret vectors in the   plane by constant counter-clockweise rotation, then the resulting intermediary spatial frame   is constantly rotated around the   axis by the angle  , which finally gives the spatial Fermi–Walker frame   (note that the timelike field remains the same):[25]

 

(3b)

For the special case   and  , it follows   and   and  , therefore (3b) is reduced to a single constant rotation around the  -axis:[29][30][31][24]

 

(3c)

Proper coordinates or Fermi coordinates edit

In flat spacetime, an accelerated object is at any moment at rest in a momentary inertial frame  , and the sequence of such momentary frames which it traverses corresponds to a successive application of Lorentz transformations  , where   is an external inertial frame and   the Lorentz transformation matrix. This matrix can be replaced by the proper time dependent tetrads   defined above, and if   is the time track of the particle indicating its position, the transformation reads:[32]

 

(4a)

Then one has to put   by which   is replaced by   and the timelike field   vanishes, therefore only the spacelike fields   are present anymore. Subsequently, the time in the accelerated frame is identified with the proper time of the accelerated observer by  . The final transformation has the form[33][34][35][36]

 , 

(4b)

These are sometimes called proper coordinates, and the corresponding frame is the proper reference frame.[20] They are also called Fermi coordinates in the case of Fermi–Walker transport[37] (even though some authors use this term also in the rotational case[38]). The corresponding metric has the form in Minkowski spacetime (without Riemannian terms):[39][40][41][42][43][44][45][46]

 

(4c)

However, these coordinates are not globally valid, but are restricted to[43]

 

(4d)

Proper reference frames for timelike helices edit

In case all three Frenet–Serret curvatures are constant, the corresponding worldlines are identical to those that follow from the Killing motions in flat spacetime. They are of particular interest since the corresponding proper frames and congruences satisfy the condition of Born rigidity, that is, the spacetime distance of two neighbouring worldlines is constant.[47][48] These motions correspond to "timelike helices" or "stationary worldlines", and can be classified into six principal types: two with zero torsions (uniform translation, hyperbolic motion) and four with non-zero torsions (uniform rotation, catenary, semicubical parabola, general case):[49][50][4][5][6][51][52][53][54]

Case   produces uniform translation without acceleration. The corresponding proper reference frame is therefore given by ordinary Lorentz transformations. The other five types are:

Hyperbolic motion edit

The curvatures    , where   is the constant proper acceleration in the direction of motion, produce hyperbolic motion because the worldline in the Minkowski diagram is a hyperbola:[55][56][57][58][59][60]

 

(5a)

The corresponding orthonormal tetrad is identical to an inverted Lorentz transformation matrix with hyperbolic functions   as Lorentz factor and   as proper velocity and   as rapidity (since the torsions   and   are zero, the Frenet–Serret formulas and Fermi–Walker formulas produce the same tetrad):[56][61][62][63][64][65][66]

 

(5b)

Inserted into the transformations (4b) and using the worldline (5a) for  , the accelerated observer is always located at the origin, so the Kottler-Møller coordinates follow[67][68][62][69][70]

 

which are valid within  , with the metric

 .

Alternatively, by setting   the accelerated observer is located at   at time  , thus the Rindler coordinates follow from (4b) and (5a, 5b):[71][72][73]

 

which are valid within  , with the metric

 

Uniform circular motion edit

The curvatures  ,   produce uniform circular motion, with the worldline[74][75][76][77][78][79][80]

 

(6a)

where

 

(6b)

with   as orbital radius,   as coordinate angular velocity,   as proper angular velocity,   as tangential velocity,   as proper velocity,   as Lorentz factor, and   as angle of rotation. The tetrad can be derived from the Frenet–Serret equations (1),[74][76][77][80] or more simply be obtained by a Lorentz transformation of the tetrad   of ordinary rotating coordinates:[81][82]

 

(6c)

The corresponding non-rotating Fermi–Walker tetrad   on the same worldline can be obtained by solving the Fermi–Walker part of equation (2).[83][84] Alternatively, one can use (6b) together with (3a), which gives

 

The resulting angle of rotation   together with (6c) can now be inserted into (3c), by which the Fermi–Walker tetrad follows[31][24]

 

In the following, the Frenet–Serret tetrad is used to formulate the transformation. Inserting (6c) into the transformations (4b) and using the worldline (6a) for   gives the coordinates[74][76][85][86][87][38]

 

(6d)

which are valid within  , with the metric

 

If an observer resting in the center of the rotating frame is chosen with  , the equations reduce to the ordinary rotational transformation[88][89][90]

 

(6e)

which are valid within  , and the metric

 .

The last equations can also be written in rotating cylindrical coordinates (Born coordinates):[91][92][93][94][95]

 

(6f)

which are valid within  , and the metric

 

Frames (6d, 6e, 6f) can be used to describe the geometry of rotating platforms, including the Ehrenfest paradox and the Sagnac effect.

Catenary edit

The curvatures  ,   produce a catenary, i.e., hyperbolic motion combined with a spacelike translation[96][97][98][99][100][101][102]

 

(7a)

where

 

(7b)

where   is the velocity,   the proper velocity,   as rapidity,   is the Lorentz factor. The corresponding Frenet–Serret tetrad is:[97][99]

 

The corresponding non-rotating Fermi–Walker tetrad   on the same worldline can be obtained by solving the Fermi–Walker part of equation (2).[102] The same result follows from (3a), which gives

 

which together with (7a) can now be inserted into (3c), resulting in the Fermi–Walker tetrad

 

The proper coordinates or Fermi coordinates follow by inserting   or   into (4b).

Semicubical parabola edit

The curvatures  ,   produce a semicubical parabola or cusped motion[103][104][105][106][107][108][109]

  with  

(8)

The corresponding Frenet–Serret tetrad with   is:[104][106]

 

The corresponding non-rotating Fermi–Walker tetrad   on the same worldline can be obtained by solving the Fermi–Walker part of equation (2).[109] The same result follows from (3a), which gives

 

which together with (8) can now be inserted into (3c), resulting in the Fermi–Walker tetrad (note that   in this case):

 

The proper coordinates or Fermi coordinates follow by inserting   or   into (4b).

General case edit

The curvatures  ,  ,   produce hyperbolic motion combined with uniform circular motion. The worldline is given by[110][111][112][113][114][115][116]

 

(9a)

where

 

(9b)

with   as tangential velocity,   as proper tangential velocity,   as rapidity,   as orbital radius,   as coordinate angular velocity,   as proper angular velocity,   as angle of rotation,   is the Lorentz factor. The Frenet–Serret tetrad is[111][113]

 

The corresponding non-rotating Fermi–Walker tetrad   on the same worldline is as follows: First inserting (9b) into (3a) gives the angular velocity, which together with (9a) can now be inserted into (3b, left), and finally inserted into (3b, right) produces the Fermi–Walker tetrad. The proper coordinates or Fermi coordinates follow by inserting   or   into (4b) (the resulting expressions are not indicated here because of their length).

Overview of historical formulas edit

In addition to the things described in the previous #History section, the contributions of Herglotz, Kottler, and Møller are described in more detail, since these authors gave extensive classifications of accelerated motion in flat spacetime.

Herglotz edit

Herglotz (1909)[H 5] argued that the metric

 

where

 

satisfies the condition of Born rigidity when  . He pointed out that the motion of a Born rigid body is in general determined by the motion of one of its point (class A), with the exception of those worldlines whose three curvatures are constant, thus representing a helix (class B). For the latter, Herglotz gave the following coordinate transformation corresponding to the trajectories of a family of motions:

(H1)  ,

where   and   are functions of proper time  . By differentiation with respect to  , and assuming   as constant, he obtained

(H2)  

Here,

proper, reference, frame, flat, spacetime, proper, reference, frame, theory, relativity, particular, form, accelerated, reference, frame, that, reference, frame, which, accelerated, observer, considered, being, rest, describe, phenomena, curved, spacetime, wel. A proper reference frame in the theory of relativity is a particular form of accelerated reference frame that is a reference frame in which an accelerated observer can be considered as being at rest It can describe phenomena in curved spacetime as well as in flat Minkowski spacetime in which the spacetime curvature caused by the energy momentum tensor can be disregarded Since this article considers only flat spacetime and uses the definition that special relativity is the theory of flat spacetime while general relativity is a theory of gravitation in terms of curved spacetime it is consequently concerned with accelerated frames in special relativity 1 2 3 For the representation of accelerations in inertial frames see the article Acceleration special relativity where concepts such as three acceleration four acceleration proper acceleration hyperbolic motion etc are defined and related to each other A fundamental property of such a frame is the employment of the proper time of the accelerated observer as the time of the frame itself This is connected with the clock hypothesis which is experimentally confirmed according to which the proper time of an accelerated clock is unaffected by acceleration thus the measured time dilation of the clock only depends on its momentary relative velocity The related proper reference frames are constructed using concepts like comoving orthonormal tetrads which can be formulated in terms of spacetime Frenet Serret formulas or alternatively using Fermi Walker transport as a standard of non rotation If the coordinates are related to Fermi Walker transport the term Fermi coordinates is sometimes used or proper coordinates in the general case when rotations are also involved A special class of accelerated observers follow worldlines whose three curvatures are constant These motions belong to the class of Born rigid motions i e the motions at which the mutual distance of constituents of an accelerated body or congruence remains unchanged in its proper frame Two examples are Rindler coordinates or Kottler Moller coordinates for the proper reference frame of hyperbolic motion and Born or Langevin coordinates in the case of uniform circular motion In the following Greek indices run over 0 1 2 3 Latin indices over 1 2 3 and bracketed indices are related to tetrad vector fields The signature of the metric tensor is 1 1 1 1 Contents 1 History 2 Comoving tetrads 2 1 Spacetime Frenet Serret equations 2 2 Fermi Walker transport and proper transport 2 3 Deriving Fermi Walker tetrads from Frenet Serret tetrads 3 Proper coordinates or Fermi coordinates 4 Proper reference frames for timelike helices 4 1 Hyperbolic motion 4 2 Uniform circular motion 4 3 Catenary 4 4 Semicubical parabola 4 5 General case 5 Overview of historical formulas 5 1 Herglotz 5 2 Kottler 5 3 Moller 5 4 Worldlines of constant curvatures by Herglotz and Kottler 6 References 7 Bibliography 7 1 Textbooks 7 2 Journal articles 8 Historical sources 9 External linksHistory editFor the historical formulas of Herglotz Kottler and Moller in original notation see the section Overview of historical formulas Some properties of Kottler Moller or Rindler coordinates were anticipated by Albert Einstein 1907 H 1 when he discussed the uniformly accelerated reference frame While introducing the concept of Born rigidity Max Born 1909 H 2 recognized that the formulas for the worldline of hyperbolic motion can be reinterpreted as transformations into a hyperbolically accelerated reference system Born himself as well as Arnold Sommerfeld 1910 H 3 and Max von Laue 1911 H 4 used this frame to compute the properties of charged particles and their fields see Acceleration special relativity History and Rindler coordinates History In addition Gustav Herglotz 1909 H 5 gave a classification of all Born rigid motions including uniform rotation and the worldlines of constant curvatures Friedrich Kottler 1912 1914 H 6 introduced the generalized Lorentz transformation for proper reference frames or proper coordinates German Eigensystem Eigenkoordinaten by using comoving Frenet Serret tetrads and applied this formalism to Herglotz worldlines of constant curvatures particularly to hyperbolic motion and uniform circular motion Herglotz formulas were also simplified and extended by Georges Lemaitre 1924 H 7 The worldlines of constant curvatures were rediscovered by several author for instance by Vladimir Petruv 1964 4 as timelike helices by John Lighton Synge 1967 5 or as stationary worldlines by Letaw 1981 6 The concept of proper reference frame was later reintroduced and further developed in connection with Fermi Walker transport in the textbooks by Christian Moller 1952 7 or Synge 1960 8 An overview of proper time transformations and alternatives was given by Romain 1963 9 who cited the contributions of Kottler In particular Misner amp Thorne amp Wheeler 1973 10 combined Fermi Walker transport with rotation which influenced many subsequent authors Bahram Mashhoon 1990 2003 11 analyzed the hypothesis of locality and accelerated motion The relations between the spacetime Frenet Serret formulas and Fermi Walker transport was discussed by Iyer amp C V Vishveshwara 1993 12 Johns 2005 13 or Bini et al 2008 14 and others A detailed representation of special relativity in general frames was given by Gourgoulhon 2013 15 Comoving tetrads editSpacetime Frenet Serret equations edit For the investigation of accelerated motions and curved worldlines some results of differential geometry can be used For instance the Frenet Serret formulas for curves in Euclidean space have already been extended to arbitrary dimensions in the 19th century and can be adapted to Minkowski spacetime as well They describe the transport of an orthonormal basis attached to a curved worldline so in four dimensions this basis can be called a comoving tetrad or vierbein e h displaystyle mathbf e eta nbsp also called vielbein moving frame frame field local frame repere mobile in arbitrary dimensions 16 17 18 19 d e 0 d t k 1 e 1 d e 1 d t k 1 e 0 k 2 e 2 d e 2 d t k 2 e 1 k 3 e 3 d e 3 d t k 3 e 2 displaystyle begin aligned frac d mathbf e 0 d tau amp kappa 1 mathbf e 1 amp frac d mathbf e 1 d tau amp kappa 1 mathbf e 0 kappa 2 mathbf e 2 frac d mathbf e 2 d tau amp kappa 2 mathbf e 1 kappa 3 mathbf e 3 quad amp frac d mathbf e 3 d tau amp kappa 3 mathbf e 2 end aligned nbsp 1 Here t displaystyle tau nbsp is the proper time along the worldline the timelike field e 0 displaystyle mathbf e 0 nbsp is called the tangent that corresponds to the four velocity the three spacelike fields are orthogonal to e 0 displaystyle mathbf e 0 nbsp and are called the principal normal e 1 displaystyle mathbf e 1 nbsp the binormal e 2 displaystyle mathbf e 2 nbsp and the trinormal e 3 displaystyle mathbf e 3 nbsp The first curvature k 1 displaystyle kappa 1 nbsp corresponds to the magnitude of four acceleration i e proper acceleration the other curvatures k 2 displaystyle kappa 2 nbsp and k 3 displaystyle kappa 3 nbsp are also called torsion and hypertorsion Fermi Walker transport and proper transport edit While the Frenet Serret tetrad can be rotating or not it is useful to introduce another formalism in which non rotational and rotational parts are separated This can be done using the following equation for proper transport 20 or generalized Fermi transport 21 of tetrad e h displaystyle mathbf e eta nbsp namely 10 12 22 21 20 23 d e h d t ϑ e h displaystyle frac d mathbf e eta d tau boldsymbol vartheta mathbf e eta nbsp 2 where ϑ m n A m U n A n U m Fermi Walker U a w b ϵ a b m n spatial rotation displaystyle vartheta mu nu underset text Fermi Walker underbrace A mu U nu A nu U mu underset mathrm text spatial rotation underbrace U alpha omega beta epsilon alpha beta mu nu nbsp or together in simplified form d e h d t U A e h R e h displaystyle frac d mathbf e eta d tau left mathbf U wedge mathbf A mathbf e eta mathbf R cdot mathbf e eta right nbsp with U displaystyle mathbf U nbsp as four velocity and A displaystyle mathbf A nbsp as four acceleration and displaystyle cdot nbsp indicates the dot product and displaystyle wedge nbsp the wedge product The first part U A e h A U e h U A e h displaystyle mathbf U wedge mathbf A mathbf e eta mathbf A left mathbf U cdot mathbf e eta right mathbf U left mathbf A cdot mathbf e eta right nbsp represents Fermi Walker transport 13 which is physically realized when the three spacelike tetrad fields don t change their orientation with respect to the motion of a system of three gyroscopes Thus Fermi Walker transport can be seen as a standard of non rotation The second part R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp consists of an antisymmetric second rank tensor with w displaystyle omega nbsp as the angular velocity four vector and ϵ displaystyle epsilon nbsp as the Levi Civita symbol It turns out that this rotation matrix only affects the three spacelike tetrad fields thus it can be interpreted as the spatial rotation of the spacelike fields e i displaystyle mathbf e i nbsp of a rotating tetrad such as a Frenet Serret tetrad with respect to the non rotating spacelike fields f i displaystyle mathbf f i nbsp of a Fermi Walker tetrad along the same world line Deriving Fermi Walker tetrads from Frenet Serret tetrads edit Since f i displaystyle mathbf f i nbsp and e i displaystyle mathbf e i nbsp on the same worldline are connected by a rotation matrix it is possible to construct non rotating Fermi Walker tetrads using rotating Frenet Serret tetrads 24 25 which not only works in flat spacetime but for arbitrary spacetimes as well even though the practical realization can be hard to achieve 26 For instance the angular velocity vector between the respective spacelike tetrad fields f i displaystyle mathbf f i nbsp and e i displaystyle mathbf e i nbsp can be given in terms of torsions k 2 displaystyle kappa 2 nbsp and k 3 displaystyle kappa 3 nbsp 12 13 27 28 w k 3 e 1 k 2 e 3 displaystyle boldsymbol omega kappa 3 mathbf e 1 kappa 2 mathbf e 3 nbsp and w k 2 2 k 3 2 displaystyle left boldsymbol omega right sqrt kappa 2 2 kappa 3 2 nbsp 3a Assuming that the curvatures are constant which is the case in helical motion in flat spacetime or in the case of stationary axisymmetric spacetimes one then proceeds by aligning the spacelike Frenet Serret vectors in the e 1 e 3 displaystyle mathbf e 1 mathbf e 3 nbsp plane by constant counter clockweise rotation then the resulting intermediary spatial frame h i displaystyle mathbf h i nbsp is constantly rotated around the h 3 displaystyle mathbf h 3 nbsp axis by the angle 8 w t displaystyle Theta left boldsymbol omega right tau nbsp which finally gives the spatial Fermi Walker frame f i displaystyle mathbf f i nbsp note that the timelike field remains the same 25 h 1 k 2 e 1 k 3 e 3 w h 2 e 2 h 3 w w f 1 h 1 cos 8 h 2 sin 8 f 2 h 1 sin 8 h 2 cos 8 f 3 h 3 e 0 h 0 f 0 displaystyle begin array c c c begin aligned mathbf h 1 amp frac kappa 2 mathbf e 1 kappa 3 mathbf e 3 left boldsymbol omega right mathbf h 2 amp mathbf e 2 mathbf h 3 amp frac boldsymbol omega left boldsymbol omega right end aligned amp begin aligned mathbf f 1 amp mathbf h 1 cos Theta h 2 sin Theta mathbf f 2 amp mathbf h 1 sin Theta h 2 cos Theta mathbf f 3 amp mathbf h 3 end aligned amp mathbf e 0 mathbf h 0 mathbf f 0 end array nbsp 3b For the special case k 3 0 displaystyle kappa 3 0 nbsp and e 3 0 0 0 1 displaystyle mathbf e 3 0 0 0 1 nbsp it follows w 0 0 0 k 2 displaystyle boldsymbol omega left 0 0 0 kappa 2 right nbsp and 8 w t k 2 t displaystyle Theta left boldsymbol omega right tau kappa 2 tau nbsp and h i e i displaystyle mathbf h i mathbf e i nbsp therefore 3b is reduced to a single constant rotation around the e 3 displaystyle mathbf e 3 nbsp axis 29 30 31 24 f 1 e 1 cos 8 e 2 sin 8 f 2 e 1 sin 8 e 2 cos 8 f 3 e 3 e 0 f 0 displaystyle begin array c c begin aligned mathbf f 1 amp mathbf e 1 cos Theta mathbf e 2 sin Theta mathbf f 2 amp mathbf e 1 sin Theta mathbf e 2 cos Theta mathbf f 3 amp mathbf e 3 end aligned amp mathbf e 0 mathbf f 0 end array nbsp 3c Proper coordinates or Fermi coordinates editIn flat spacetime an accelerated object is at any moment at rest in a momentary inertial frame x x 0 x 1 x 2 x 3 displaystyle mathbf x x prime 0 x prime 1 x prime 2 x prime 3 nbsp and the sequence of such momentary frames which it traverses corresponds to a successive application of Lorentz transformations X L x displaystyle mathbf X boldsymbol Lambda mathbf x nbsp where X displaystyle mathbf X nbsp is an external inertial frame and L displaystyle boldsymbol Lambda nbsp the Lorentz transformation matrix This matrix can be replaced by the proper time dependent tetrads e n t displaystyle mathbf e nu tau nbsp defined above and if q t displaystyle mathbf mathbf q tau nbsp is the time track of the particle indicating its position the transformation reads 32 X q e n x displaystyle mathbf X mathbf mathbf q mathbf e nu mathbf x nbsp 4a Then one has to put x 0 t 0 displaystyle x prime 0 t 0 nbsp by which x displaystyle mathbf x nbsp is replaced by r x 1 x 2 x 3 displaystyle mathbf r x 1 x 2 x 3 nbsp and the timelike field e 0 displaystyle mathbf e 0 nbsp vanishes therefore only the spacelike fields e i displaystyle mathbf e i nbsp are present anymore Subsequently the time in the accelerated frame is identified with the proper time of the accelerated observer by x 0 t t displaystyle x 0 t tau nbsp The final transformation has the form 33 34 35 36 X q e i r displaystyle mathbf X mathbf q mathbf e i mathbf r nbsp x 0 t displaystyle quad left x 0 tau right nbsp 4b These are sometimes called proper coordinates and the corresponding frame is the proper reference frame 20 They are also called Fermi coordinates in the case of Fermi Walker transport 37 even though some authors use this term also in the rotational case 38 The corresponding metric has the form in Minkowski spacetime without Riemannian terms 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 d s 2 1 a r 2 w r 2 d t 2 2 w r d t d r d i j d x i d x j displaystyle ds 2 left 1 mathbf a cdot mathbf r 2 boldsymbol omega times mathbf r 2 right d tau 2 2 boldsymbol omega times mathbf r d tau d mathbf r delta ij dx i dx j nbsp 4c However these coordinates are not globally valid but are restricted to 43 1 a r 2 w r 2 lt 0 displaystyle 1 mathbf a cdot mathbf r 2 boldsymbol omega times mathbf r 2 lt 0 nbsp 4d Proper reference frames for timelike helices editIn case all three Frenet Serret curvatures are constant the corresponding worldlines are identical to those that follow from the Killing motions in flat spacetime They are of particular interest since the corresponding proper frames and congruences satisfy the condition of Born rigidity that is the spacetime distance of two neighbouring worldlines is constant 47 48 These motions correspond to timelike helices or stationary worldlines and can be classified into six principal types two with zero torsions uniform translation hyperbolic motion and four with non zero torsions uniform rotation catenary semicubical parabola general case 49 50 4 5 6 51 52 53 54 Case k 1 k 2 k 3 0 displaystyle kappa 1 kappa 2 kappa 3 0 nbsp produces uniform translation without acceleration The corresponding proper reference frame is therefore given by ordinary Lorentz transformations The other five types are Hyperbolic motion edit Further information Hyperbolic motion relativity and Rindler coordinates The curvatures k 1 a displaystyle kappa 1 alpha nbsp k 2 k 3 0 displaystyle kappa 2 kappa 3 0 nbsp where a displaystyle alpha nbsp is the constant proper acceleration in the direction of motion produce hyperbolic motion because the worldline in the Minkowski diagram is a hyperbola 55 56 57 58 59 60 X 1 a sinh a t 1 a cosh a t 1 0 0 displaystyle mathbf X left frac 1 alpha sinh alpha tau quad frac 1 alpha left cosh alpha tau 1 right quad 0 quad 0 right nbsp 5a The corresponding orthonormal tetrad is identical to an inverted Lorentz transformation matrix with hyperbolic functions g cosh h displaystyle gamma cosh eta nbsp as Lorentz factor and v g sinh h displaystyle v gamma sinh eta nbsp as proper velocity and h artanh v a t displaystyle eta operatorname artanh v alpha tau nbsp as rapidity since the torsions k 2 displaystyle kappa 2 nbsp and k 3 displaystyle kappa 3 nbsp are zero the Frenet Serret formulas and Fermi Walker formulas produce the same tetrad 56 61 62 63 64 65 66 e 0 cosh a t sinh a t 0 0 e 1 sinh a t cosh a t 0 0 e 2 0 0 1 0 e 3 0 0 0 1 displaystyle begin aligned mathbf e 0 amp cosh alpha tau sinh alpha tau 0 0 mathbf e 1 amp sinh alpha tau cosh alpha tau 0 0 mathbf e 2 amp 0 0 1 0 mathbf e 3 amp 0 0 0 1 end aligned nbsp 5b Inserted into the transformations 4b and using the worldline 5a for q displaystyle mathbf q nbsp the accelerated observer is always located at the origin so the Kottler Moller coordinates follow 67 68 62 69 70 T x 1 a sinh a t X x 1 a cosh a t 1 a Y y Z z t 1 a artanh T X 1 a x X 1 a 2 T 2 1 a y Y z Z displaystyle begin array c c begin aligned T amp left x frac 1 alpha right sinh alpha tau X amp left x frac 1 alpha right cosh alpha tau frac 1 alpha Y amp y Z amp z end aligned amp begin aligned tau amp frac 1 alpha operatorname artanh left frac T X frac 1 alpha right x amp sqrt left X frac 1 alpha right 2 T 2 frac 1 alpha y amp Y z amp Z end aligned end array nbsp which are valid within 1 a lt X lt displaystyle 1 alpha lt X lt infty nbsp with the metric d s 2 1 a x 2 d t 2 d x 2 d y 2 d z 2 displaystyle ds 2 1 alpha x 2 d tau 2 dx 2 dy 2 dz 2 nbsp Alternatively by setting q 0 displaystyle mathbf mathbf q 0 nbsp the accelerated observer is located at X 1 a displaystyle X 1 alpha nbsp at time t T 0 displaystyle tau T 0 nbsp thus the Rindler coordinates follow from 4b and 5a 5b 71 72 73 T x sinh a t X x cosh a t Y y Z z t 1 a artanh T X x X 2 T 2 y Y z Z displaystyle begin array c c begin aligned T amp x sinh alpha tau X amp x cosh alpha tau Y amp y Z amp z end aligned amp begin aligned tau amp frac 1 alpha operatorname artanh frac T X x amp sqrt X 2 T 2 y amp Y z amp Z end aligned end array nbsp which are valid within 0 lt X lt displaystyle 0 lt X lt infty nbsp with the metric d s 2 a 2 x 2 d t 2 d x 2 d y 2 d z 2 displaystyle ds 2 alpha 2 x 2 d tau 2 dx 2 dy 2 dz 2 nbsp Uniform circular motion edit In the following the orthonormal tetrad and its corresponding proper reference frame are written in Cartesian coordinates For an alternative formulation using cylindrical coordinates see the Langevin observers in the article Born coordinates The curvatures k 2 2 k 1 2 gt 0 displaystyle kappa 2 2 kappa 1 2 gt 0 nbsp k 3 0 displaystyle kappa 3 0 nbsp produce uniform circular motion with the worldline 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 X g t n p cos p t n p sin p t 0 displaystyle X left gamma tau frac n p cos p tau frac n p sin p tau 0 right nbsp 6a where k 1 g 2 h p 0 2 k 2 g 2 p 0 p k 2 2 k 1 2 k 2 g g p 0 p 0 k 2 2 k 1 2 k 2 k 2 g 2 p g 8 p t p 0 t g p 0 t n k 1 p v g g 2 1 h k 1 k 2 2 k 1 2 n p v k 1 k 2 h p 0 n g g k 2 p 1 1 v 2 n 2 1 displaystyle begin array c c c begin aligned kappa 1 amp gamma 2 hp 0 2 kappa 2 amp gamma 2 p 0 end aligned amp begin aligned p amp sqrt kappa 2 2 kappa 1 2 frac kappa 2 gamma gamma p 0 p 0 amp frac kappa 2 2 kappa 1 2 kappa 2 frac kappa 2 gamma 2 frac p gamma theta amp p tau p 0 t gamma p 0 tau end aligned amp begin aligned n amp frac kappa 1 p v gamma sqrt gamma 2 1 h amp frac kappa 1 kappa 2 2 kappa 1 2 frac n p v amp frac kappa 1 kappa 2 hp 0 frac n gamma gamma amp frac kappa 2 p frac 1 sqrt 1 v 2 sqrt n 2 1 end aligned end array nbsp 6b with h displaystyle h nbsp as orbital radius p 0 displaystyle p 0 nbsp as coordinate angular velocity p displaystyle p nbsp as proper angular velocity v displaystyle v nbsp as tangential velocity n displaystyle n nbsp as proper velocity g displaystyle gamma nbsp as Lorentz factor and 8 displaystyle theta nbsp as angle of rotation The tetrad can be derived from the Frenet Serret equations 1 74 76 77 80 or more simply be obtained by a Lorentz transformation of the tetrad d n displaystyle d nu nbsp of ordinary rotating coordinates 81 82 d 0 1 0 0 0 d 1 0 cos 8 sin 8 0 d 2 0 sin 8 cos 8 0 d 3 0 0 0 1 e 0 g d 0 v d 2 g 1 v sin 8 v cos 8 0 e 1 d 1 0 cos 8 sin 8 0 e 2 g d 2 v d 0 g v sin 8 cos 8 0 e 3 d 3 0 0 0 1 displaystyle begin array c c begin aligned d 0 amp 1 0 0 0 d 1 amp 0 cos theta sin theta 0 d 2 amp 0 sin theta cos theta 0 d 3 amp 0 0 0 1 end aligned amp begin alignedat 1 mathbf e 0 amp gamma left d 0 vd 2 right amp gamma 1 v sin theta v cos theta 0 mathbf e 1 amp d 1 amp 0 cos theta sin theta 0 mathbf e 2 amp gamma left d 2 vd 0 right amp gamma left v sin theta cos theta 0 right mathbf e 3 amp d 3 amp 0 0 0 1 end alignedat end array nbsp 6c The corresponding non rotating Fermi Walker tetrad f h displaystyle mathbf f eta nbsp on the same worldline can be obtained by solving the Fermi Walker part of equation 2 83 84 Alternatively one can use 6b together with 3a which gives w 0 0 0 g 2 p w g 2 p 8 w t g 2 p 0 t g p t g 8 displaystyle boldsymbol omega left 0 0 0 gamma 2 p right quad left boldsymbol omega right gamma 2 p quad Theta left boldsymbol omega right tau gamma 2 p 0 tau gamma p tau gamma theta nbsp The resulting angle of rotation 8 displaystyle Theta nbsp together with 6c can now be inserted into 3c by which the Fermi Walker tetrad follows 31 24 f 0 e 0 g 1 v sin 8 v cos 8 0 f 1 e 1 cos 8 e 2 sin 8 g v sin 8 cos 8 cos 8 g sin 8 sin 8 sin 8 cos 8 g cos 8 sin 8 0 f 2 e 1 sin 8 e 2 cos 8 g v cos 8 cos 8 sin 8 g sin 8 cos 8 sin 8 sin 8 g cos 8 cos 8 0 f 3 e 3 0 0 0 1 displaystyle begin alignedat 1 mathbf f 0 amp mathbf e 0 amp gamma 1 v sin theta v cos theta 0 mathbf f 1 amp mathbf e 1 cos Theta mathbf e 2 sin Theta amp left gamma v sin Theta cos theta cos Theta gamma sin theta sin Theta sin theta cos Theta gamma cos theta sin Theta 0 right mathbf f 2 amp mathbf e 1 sin Theta mathbf e 2 cos Theta amp left gamma v cos Theta cos theta sin Theta gamma sin theta cos Theta sin theta sin Theta gamma cos theta cos Theta 0 right mathbf f 3 amp mathbf e 3 amp 0 0 0 1 end alignedat nbsp In the following the Frenet Serret tetrad is used to formulate the transformation Inserting 6c into the transformations 4b and using the worldline 6a for q displaystyle mathbf q nbsp gives the coordinates 74 76 85 86 87 38 T g t g y v X x h cos 8 y g sin 8 Y x h sin 8 y g cos 8 Z z t g 1 T g y v x X cos 8 Y sin 8 h y g 1 X sin 8 Y cos 8 z Z displaystyle begin array c c begin aligned T amp gamma left tau gamma yv right X amp x h cos theta y gamma sin theta Y amp x h sin theta y gamma cos theta Z amp z end aligned amp begin aligned tau amp gamma 1 left T gamma yv right x amp X cos theta Y sin theta h y amp gamma 1 left X sin theta Y cos theta right z amp Z end aligned end array nbsp 6d which are valid within X h 2 g Y 2 1 p 0 2 displaystyle X h 2 gamma Y 2 leqq 1 p 0 2 nbsp with the metric d s 2 g 2 1 x h 2 p 0 2 g 2 p 0 2 y 2 d t 2 2 g 2 p 0 x d y y d x d t d x 2 d y 2 d z 2 displaystyle ds 2 gamma 2 left 1 x h 2 p 0 2 gamma 2 p 0 2 y 2 right d tau 2 2 gamma 2 p 0 x dy y dx d tau dx 2 dy 2 dz 2 nbsp If an observer resting in the center of the rotating frame is chosen with h 0 displaystyle h 0 nbsp the equations reduce to the ordinary rotational transformation 88 89 90 T t X x cos 8 y sin 8 Y x sin 8 y cos 8 Z z t T x X cos 8 Y sin 8 y X sin 8 Y cos 8 z Z or T t X i Y x i y e i 8 Z z displaystyle begin array c c c begin aligned T amp t X amp x cos theta y sin theta Y amp x sin theta y cos theta Z amp z end aligned amp begin aligned t amp T x amp X cos theta Y sin theta y amp X sin theta Y cos theta z amp Z end aligned amp text or quad begin aligned T amp t X iY amp x iy e i theta Z amp z end aligned end array nbsp 6e which are valid within 0 lt X 2 Y 2 lt 1 p 0 displaystyle 0 lt sqrt X 2 Y 2 lt 1 p 0 nbsp and the metric d s 2 1 p 0 2 x 2 y 2 d t 2 2 p 0 y d x x d y d t d x 2 d y 2 d z 2 displaystyle ds 2 left 1 p 0 2 left x 2 y 2 right right dt 2 2p 0 y dx x dy dt dx 2 dy 2 dz 2 nbsp The last equations can also be written in rotating cylindrical coordinates Born coordinates 91 92 93 94 95 T t X r cos ϕ 8 Y r sin ϕ 8 Z z t T x r cos F 8 y r sin F 8 z Z T t R r F ϕ 8 Z z t T r R ϕ F 8 z Z displaystyle begin array c c c c begin aligned T amp t X amp r cos phi theta Y amp r sin phi theta Z amp z end aligned amp begin aligned t amp T x amp r cos Phi theta y amp r sin Phi theta z amp Z end aligned rightarrow amp begin aligned T amp t R amp r Phi amp phi theta Z amp z end aligned amp begin aligned t amp T r amp R phi amp Phi theta z amp Z end aligned end array nbsp 6f which are valid within 0 lt r lt 1 p 0 displaystyle 0 lt r lt 1 p 0 nbsp and the metric d s 2 1 p 0 2 r 2 d t 2 2 p 0 r 2 d t d ϕ d r 2 r 2 d ϕ 2 d z 2 displaystyle ds 2 left 1 p 0 2 r 2 right dt 2 2p 0 r 2 dt d phi dr 2 r 2 d phi 2 dz 2 nbsp Frames 6d 6e 6f can be used to describe the geometry of rotating platforms including the Ehrenfest paradox and the Sagnac effect Catenary edit The curvatures k 1 2 k 2 2 gt 0 displaystyle kappa 1 2 kappa 2 2 gt 0 nbsp k 3 0 displaystyle kappa 3 0 nbsp produce a catenary i e hyperbolic motion combined with a spacelike translation 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 X g a sinh a t g a cosh a t n t 0 displaystyle X left frac gamma a sinh a tau quad frac gamma a cosh a tau quad n tau quad 0 right nbsp 7a where k 1 g a k 2 n a a k 1 2 k 2 2 n k 2 a v g g 2 1 h a t v k 2 k 1 n g g k 1 a 1 1 v 2 n 2 1 displaystyle begin array c c c begin aligned kappa 1 amp gamma a kappa 2 amp na end aligned amp begin aligned a amp sqrt kappa 1 2 kappa 2 2 n amp frac kappa 2 a v gamma sqrt gamma 2 1 eta amp a tau end aligned amp begin aligned v amp frac kappa 2 kappa 1 frac n gamma gamma amp frac kappa 1 a frac 1 sqrt 1 v 2 sqrt n 2 1 end aligned end array nbsp 7b where v displaystyle v nbsp is the velocity n displaystyle n nbsp the proper velocity h displaystyle eta nbsp as rapidity g displaystyle gamma nbsp is the Lorentz factor The corresponding Frenet Serret tetrad is 97 99 e 0 g cosh h g sinh h n 0 e 1 sinh h cosh h 0 0 e 2 n cosh h n sinh h g 0 e 3 0 0 0 1 displaystyle begin aligned mathbf e 0 amp left gamma cosh eta gamma sinh eta n 0 right mathbf e 1 amp left sinh eta cosh eta 0 0 right mathbf e 2 amp left n cosh eta n sinh eta gamma 0 right mathbf e 3 amp left 0 0 0 1 right end aligned nbsp The corresponding non rotating Fermi Walker tetrad f h displaystyle mathbf f eta nbsp on the same worldline can be obtained by solving the Fermi Walker part of equation 2 102 The same result follows from 3a which gives w 0 0 0 n a w n a 8 w t n a t displaystyle boldsymbol omega left 0 0 0 na right quad left boldsymbol omega right na quad Theta left boldsymbol omega right tau na tau nbsp which together with 7a can now be inserted into 3c resulting in the Fermi Walker tetrad f 0 e 0 g cosh h g sinh h n 0 f 1 e 1 cos 8 e 2 sin 8 sinh h cos 8 n cosh h sin 8 cosh h cos 8 n sinh h sin 8 g sin 8 0 f 2 e 1 sin 8 e 2 cos 8 sinh h sin 8 n cosh h cos 8 cosh h sin 8 n sinh h cos 8 g cos 8 0 f 3 e 3 0 0 0 1 displaystyle begin alignedat 1 mathbf f 0 amp mathbf e 0 amp left gamma cosh eta gamma sinh eta n 0 right mathbf f 1 amp mathbf e 1 cos Theta mathbf e 2 sin Theta amp left sinh eta cos Theta n cosh eta sin Theta cosh eta cos Theta n sinh eta sin Theta gamma sin Theta 0 right mathbf f 2 amp mathbf e 1 sin Theta mathbf e 2 cos Theta amp left sinh eta sin Theta n cosh eta cos Theta cosh eta sin Theta n sinh eta cos Theta gamma cos Theta 0 right mathbf f 3 amp mathbf e 3 amp left 0 0 0 1 right end alignedat nbsp The proper coordinates or Fermi coordinates follow by inserting e h displaystyle mathbf e eta nbsp or f h displaystyle mathbf f eta nbsp into 4b Semicubical parabola edit The curvatures k 1 2 k 2 2 0 displaystyle kappa 1 2 kappa 2 2 0 nbsp k 3 0 displaystyle kappa 3 0 nbsp produce a semicubical parabola or cusped motion 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 X t 1 6 a 2 t 3 1 2 a t 2 1 6 a 2 t 3 0 displaystyle X left tau frac 1 6 a 2 tau 3 frac 1 2 a tau 2 frac 1 6 a 2 tau 3 0 right nbsp with a k 1 k 2 displaystyle a kappa 1 kappa 2 nbsp 8 The corresponding Frenet Serret tetrad with 8 a t displaystyle theta a tau nbsp is 104 106 e 0 1 1 2 8 2 8 1 2 8 2 0 e 1 8 1 8 0 e 2 1 2 8 2 8 1 1 2 8 2 0 e 3 0 0 0 1 displaystyle begin aligned mathbf e 0 amp left 1 frac 1 2 theta 2 theta frac 1 2 theta 2 0 right mathbf e 1 amp left theta 1 theta 0 right mathbf e 2 amp left frac 1 2 theta 2 theta 1 frac 1 2 theta 2 0 right mathbf e 3 amp left 0 0 0 1 right end aligned nbsp The corresponding non rotating Fermi Walker tetrad f h displaystyle mathbf f eta nbsp on the same worldline can be obtained by solving the Fermi Walker part of equation 2 109 The same result follows from 3a which gives w 0 0 0 a w a 8 w t a t 8 displaystyle boldsymbol omega left 0 0 0 a right quad left boldsymbol omega right a quad Theta left boldsymbol omega right tau a tau theta nbsp which together with 8 can now be inserted into 3c resulting in the Fermi Walker tetrad note that 8 8 displaystyle Theta theta nbsp in this case f 0 e 0 1 1 2 8 2 8 1 2 8 2 0 f 1 e 1 cos 8 e 2 sin 8 8 cos 8 1 2 8 2 sin 8 cos 8 8 sin 8 8 cos 8 1 2 8 2 1 sin 8 0 f 2 e 1 sin 8 e 2 cos 8 8 sin 8 1 2 8 2 cos 8 sin 8 8 cos 8 8 sin 8 1 2 8 2 1 cos 8 0 f 3 e 3 0 0 0 1 displaystyle begin alignedat 1 mathbf f 0 amp mathbf e 0 amp left 1 frac 1 2 theta 2 theta frac 1 2 theta 2 0 right mathbf f 1 amp mathbf e 1 cos Theta mathbf e 2 sin Theta amp left theta cos theta frac 1 2 theta 2 sin theta cos theta theta sin theta theta cos theta left frac 1 2 theta 2 1 right sin theta 0 right mathbf f 2 amp mathbf e 1 sin Theta mathbf e 2 cos Theta amp left theta sin theta frac 1 2 theta 2 cos theta sin theta theta cos theta theta sin theta left frac 1 2 theta 2 1 right cos theta 0 right mathbf f 3 amp mathbf e 3 amp left 0 0 0 1 right end alignedat nbsp The proper coordinates or Fermi coordinates follow by inserting e h displaystyle mathbf e eta nbsp or f h displaystyle mathbf f eta nbsp into 4b General case edit The curvatures k 1 0 displaystyle kappa 1 neq 0 nbsp k 2 0 displaystyle kappa 2 neq 0 nbsp k 3 0 displaystyle kappa 3 neq 0 nbsp produce hyperbolic motion combined with uniform circular motion The worldline is given by 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 X g a sinh a t g a cosh a t n p sin p t n p cos p t displaystyle X left frac gamma a sinh a tau quad frac gamma a cosh a tau quad frac n p sin p tau quad frac n p cos p tau right nbsp 9a where k 1 n 2 p 2 g 2 a 2 k 2 1 k 1 a 2 p 2 g n k 3 1 k 1 a p a 1 2 k 1 2 k 2 2 k 3 2 r p 1 2 k 1 2 k 2 2 k 3 2 r g p 0 n 1 2 1 r k 1 2 k 2 2 k 3 2 1 k 1 2 a 2 p 2 a 2 v g g 2 1 g 1 2 1 r k 1 2 k 2 2 k 3 2 1 k 1 2 p 2 p 2 a 2 1 1 v 2 n 2 1 r k 1 2 k 2 2 k 3 2 2 4 k 1 2 k 3 2 p 0 p g v h p 0 n g h n p h a t 8 p t p 0 t g p 0 t displaystyle begin array c c begin aligned kappa 1 amp sqrt n 2 p 2 gamma 2 a 2 kappa 2 amp frac 1 kappa 1 left a 2 p 2 right gamma n kappa 3 amp frac 1 kappa 1 ap end aligned amp begin aligned a amp sqrt frac 1 2 left kappa 1 2 kappa 2 2 kappa 3 2 r right p amp sqrt frac 1 2 left kappa 1 2 kappa 2 2 kappa 3 2 r right gamma p 0 n amp sqrt frac 1 2 left frac 1 r left kappa 1 2 kappa 2 2 kappa 3 2 right 1 right sqrt frac kappa 1 2 a 2 p 2 a 2 v gamma sqrt gamma 2 1 gamma amp sqrt frac 1 2 left frac 1 r left kappa 1 2 kappa 2 2 kappa 3 2 right 1 right sqrt frac kappa 1 2 p 2 p 2 a 2 frac 1 sqrt 1 v 2 sqrt n 2 1 r amp sqrt left kappa 1 2 kappa 2 2 kappa 3 2 right 2 4 kappa 1 2 kappa 3 2 amp p 0 frac p gamma quad v hp 0 frac n gamma quad h frac n p quad eta a tau quad theta p tau p 0 t gamma p 0 tau end aligned end array nbsp 9b with v displaystyle v nbsp as tangential velocity n displaystyle n nbsp as proper tangential velocity h displaystyle eta nbsp as rapidity h displaystyle h nbsp as orbital radius p 0 displaystyle p 0 nbsp as coordinate angular velocity p displaystyle p nbsp as proper angular velocity 8 displaystyle theta nbsp as angle of rotation g displaystyle gamma nbsp is the Lorentz factor The Frenet Serret tetrad is 111 113 e 0 g cosh h g sinh h n sin 8 n cos 8 e 1 1 k 1 g a sinh h g a cosh h n p cos 8 n p sin 8 e 2 n cosh h n sinh h g sin 8 g cos 8 e 3 1 k 1 n p sinh h n p cosh h g a cos 8 g a sin 8 displaystyle begin aligned mathbf e 0 amp left gamma cosh eta gamma sinh eta n sin theta n cos theta right mathbf e 1 amp frac 1 kappa 1 left gamma a sinh eta gamma a cosh eta np cos theta np sin theta right mathbf e 2 amp left n cosh eta n sinh eta gamma sin theta gamma cos theta right mathbf e 3 amp frac 1 kappa 1 left np sinh eta np cosh eta gamma a cos theta gamma a sin theta right end aligned nbsp The corresponding non rotating Fermi Walker tetrad f h displaystyle mathbf f eta nbsp on the same worldline is as follows First inserting 9b into 3a gives the angular velocity which together with 9a can now be inserted into 3b left and finally inserted into 3b right produces the Fermi Walker tetrad The proper coordinates or Fermi coordinates follow by inserting e h displaystyle mathbf e eta nbsp or f h displaystyle mathbf f eta nbsp into 4b the resulting expressions are not indicated here because of their length Overview of historical formulas editIn addition to the things described in the previous History section the contributions of Herglotz Kottler and Moller are described in more detail since these authors gave extensive classifications of accelerated motion in flat spacetime Herglotz edit Herglotz 1909 H 5 argued that the metric d s 2 d s 2 1 A 44 d n 2 displaystyle ds 2 d sigma 2 frac 1 A 44 d nu 2 nbsp where d n A 14 d 3 1 A 24 d 3 2 A 34 d 3 3 A 44 d 3 4 d s 2 1 3 i j A i j d 3 i d 3 j 1 A 44 A 14 d 3 1 A 24 d 3 2 A 34 d 3 3 2 displaystyle begin aligned d nu amp A 14 d xi 1 A 24 d xi 2 A 34 d xi 3 A 44 d xi 4 d sigma 2 amp sum 1 3 ij A ij d xi i d xi j frac 1 A 44 left A 14 d xi 1 A 24 d xi 2 A 34 d xi 3 right 2 end aligned nbsp satisfies the condition of Born rigidity when t d s 2 0 displaystyle frac partial partial tau d sigma 2 0 nbsp He pointed out that the motion of a Born rigid body is in general determined by the motion of one of its point class A with the exception of those worldlines whose three curvatures are constant thus representing a helix class B For the latter Herglotz gave the following coordinate transformation corresponding to the trajectories of a family of motions H1 x i a i 1 4 a i j x j i 1 2 3 4 displaystyle x i a i sum 1 4 a ij x j prime qquad i 1 2 3 4 nbsp where a i displaystyle a i nbsp and a i j displaystyle a ij nbsp are functions of proper time ϑ displaystyle vartheta nbsp By differentiation with respect to ϑ displaystyle vartheta nbsp and assuming x i displaystyle x i nbsp as constant he obtained H2 d x i d ϑ q i 1 4 p i j x j 0 displaystyle frac dx i prime d vartheta q i sum 1 4 p ij x j prime 0 nbsp Here span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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