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Question

Consider two inertial frames of reference, $S$ and $S'$, sharing the $x$-axis. $S'$ is travelling at constant velocity $\vec{v}=v\hat{x}$ from S and at $t=t'=0$, the origins of the two frames coincide.

In frame $S'$, a particle is travelling at constant velocity $\vec{u'}=u'\hat{x}$. At $t'=0$, the particle is at the origin of $S'$.

(a) Calculate the velocity 4-vector $\eta^{\mu}{'}$ of the particle in the frame $S'$.

(b) Using a suitable Lorentz transformation, determine the velocity 4-vector $\eta^{\mu}$ of the particle in the frame S.

(c) Using the component $\eta^{0}$, calculate $u$, the velocity of the particle as observed from frame S, thus deriving the relativistic velocity addition formula:

$u=\frac{u'+v}{1+\frac{u'v}{c^2}}$

Attempt

(a) This part is fairly straightforward, I get:

$\eta^{\mu}{'}=\gamma_{u'}(c,u',0,0)$

by differentiating $x^{\mu}{'}$ with respect to proper time and applying the chain rule.

(b) This is where I am no longer sure of my work. I decide to use the transformation matrix

$\Lambda^{-1}= \left[ {\begin{array}{ccccc} \gamma & \beta \gamma & 0 & 0 \\ \beta \gamma & \gamma & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 1 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 & 1 \\ \end{array} } \right] $

with positive signs as this situation is viewed as $S$ travelling away from $S'$ at -v$\hat{x}$ (or, I believe it is the inverse of the standard transformation matrix). We define also $\beta = \frac{v}{c}$.

Then, using [ ] to indicate matrices, I carry out the transformation $[\eta]=\Lambda^{-1} [\eta]'$ and get, via matrix multiplication, the following, where the gamma indices indicate which velocity gamma is a function of:

$\eta^{\mu}=\gamma_v \gamma_{u'} \left( {\begin{array}{c} c+v \\ \frac{vu'}{c}+u'\\ 0\\ 0\\ \end{array} } \right) $

I'm not really sure if this is correct. I have attempted (c) with this solution, equating $\eta^{0}$ from above to $\eta^{0}=\gamma_u c$ but the velocity addition formula didn't drop out.

I appreciate any corrections, hints and guidance! Thanks.

Samalama
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2 Answers2

3

Hints :

  1. If you intend to use the matrix $\:\Lambda^{-1}\:$ given in $\:\S(\bf b)\:$ then you must swap the spatial and temporal components of $\:\eta^{\mu}{'}\:$ given in $\:\S(\bf a)$.
  2. It's not necessary to work with 3+1-dimensions.Work in 1+1-dimensions.
  3. If it's constraint to work with 4 or 2-vectors, then OK. But the exercise could be solved easily directly by the 1+1-Lorentz transformation.
  4. The way you try to solve your exercise might demand the difficult case of determining the relation between the $\:\gamma-$factors : $\:\gamma_{\upsilon},\gamma_{u},\gamma_{u'}$.

EDIT A :

1+1-Lorentz Transformation $\:S-\!\!\!-\!\!\!\longrightarrow S'\:$
\begin{align} \text{Spatial} : & \quad x'_{1}=\gamma_{\upsilon}\left(x_{1}-\beta x_{0}\right) \tag{01a}\\ \text{Temporal} : & \quad x'_{0}=\gamma_{\upsilon}\left(x_{0}-\beta x_{1}\right) \tag{01b} \end{align} so \begin{equation} \begin{bmatrix} x'_{1}\vphantom{\dfrac12}\\ x'_{0}\vphantom{\dfrac12} \end{bmatrix} =\Lambda \begin{bmatrix} x_{1}\vphantom{\dfrac12}\\ x_{0}\vphantom{\dfrac12} \end{bmatrix} \tag{02} \end{equation} where \begin{equation} \Lambda= \begin{bmatrix} \hphantom{\boldsymbol{-}\beta }\gamma_{\upsilon} & \boldsymbol{-}\beta \gamma_{\upsilon}\vphantom{\dfrac12}\\ \boldsymbol{-}\beta\gamma_{\upsilon} & \hphantom{\boldsymbol{-}\beta }\gamma_{\upsilon}\vphantom{\dfrac12} \end{bmatrix} \tag{03} \end{equation} and \begin{equation} \begin{bmatrix} x_{1}\vphantom{\dfrac12}\\ x_{0}\vphantom{\dfrac12} \end{bmatrix} =\Lambda^{-1} \begin{bmatrix} x'_{1}\vphantom{\dfrac12}\\ x'_{0}\vphantom{\dfrac12} \end{bmatrix} \tag{04} \end{equation} where \begin{equation} \Lambda^{-1}= \begin{bmatrix} \hphantom{\beta }\gamma_{\upsilon} & \beta \gamma_{\upsilon}\vphantom{\dfrac12}\\ \beta\gamma_{\upsilon} & \hphantom{\beta }\gamma_{\upsilon}\vphantom{\dfrac12} \end{bmatrix} \tag{05} \end{equation} In all above equations we have as first component the spatial with subscript *$_{1}$ and as second component the temporal with subscript *$_{0}$.

So for the 2-velocity \begin{equation} \boldsymbol{\eta'}= \begin{bmatrix} \eta'_{1}\vphantom{\dfrac12}\\ \eta'_{0}\vphantom{\dfrac12} \end{bmatrix} =\gamma_{u'} \begin{bmatrix} u'\vphantom{\dfrac12}\\ c\vphantom{\dfrac12} \end{bmatrix} \ne \underbrace{ \gamma_{u'} \begin{bmatrix} c\vphantom{\dfrac12}\\ u'\vphantom{\dfrac12} \end{bmatrix} = \begin{bmatrix} \eta'_{0}\vphantom{\dfrac12}\\ \eta'_{1}\vphantom{\dfrac12} \end{bmatrix}}_{\textbf{yours in}\:\boldsymbol{\S(a)} } \tag{06} \end{equation}


EDIT B :

Difficult to prove but you must try. If you succeed to prove them I suggest to post them as an answer to your own question herein : \begin{equation} \dfrac{\gamma_{u'}}{\gamma_{u}}=\gamma_{\upsilon}\left(1-\dfrac{\upsilon\, u}{c^{2}}\right) \tag{07} \end{equation} or for the inverse transformation \begin{equation} \dfrac{\gamma_{u}}{\gamma_{u'}}=\gamma_{\upsilon}\left(1+\dfrac{\upsilon\, u'}{c^{2}}\right) \tag{08} \end{equation}


EDIT C :

Strange or not the easy way to prove equation (07), or equivalently equation (08), is not algebraic. Instead of many pages of algebra I like very much the following game with the $\:\mathrm dt'$s (I post the proof since this doesn't answer your question)

So, let a third system $\:S''\:$ attached to the particle. This system is moving with velocity $\:u'\:$ with respect to $\:S'\:$ and with velocity $\:u\:$ with respect to $\:S$. In system $\:S''\:$ the time $\:t''\:$ is the proper time $\:\tau\:$. In this system let two events 1 and 2, the particle at rest ($\:\mathrm dx''=x''_{2}-x''_{1}=0\:$) at time moments $\:\mathrm t''_{1},\mathrm t''_{2}\:$ apart by the infinitesimal (proper) time interval $\:\mathrm dt''=t''_{2}-t''_{1}=\mathrm d\tau\:$.

From the Lorentz Transformation $\:S''\longleftarrow\!\!\!-\!\!\!-\!\!\!\longrightarrow S'\:$ \begin{equation} \dfrac{\mathrm dt'}{\:\mathrm dt''}=\dfrac{\,\mathrm dt'}{\mathrm d\tau}=\gamma_{u'} \tag{09} \end{equation} and from the Lorentz Transformation $\:S''\longleftarrow\!\!\!-\!\!\!-\!\!\!\longrightarrow S\:$ \begin{equation} \dfrac{\mathrm dt}{\:\:\mathrm dt''}=\dfrac{\mathrm dt}{\mathrm d\tau}=\gamma_{u} \tag{10} \end{equation} But from the Lorentz Transformation $\:S'\longleftarrow\!\!\!-\!\!\!-\!\!\!\longrightarrow S\:$ we have \begin{equation} \dfrac{\,\mathrm dt'}{\mathrm dt}=\gamma_{\upsilon}\left(1-\dfrac{\upsilon\, u}{c^{2}}\right) \tag{11} \end{equation} Dividing (09) by (10) and using (11) we have (07).

Frobenius
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  • Thanks for the response!
    1. I don't quite follow the reasoning, why is that the case?
    2. True, thanks!
    3. Would this involve deriving and applying the velocity addition formula in part (b)? I have thought about this but since I am asked to verify it in part (c), so I presume that I should not use it in part (b).
    4. Correct, I have tried to do this but cannot see an easy way out.
    – Samalama Jan 09 '18 at 12:12
  • Thanks, all clear now! I actually realised that I also made a basic matrix multiplication error previously ... Certainly that didn't help either. I now have the relations as shown in edit B, but after a page or two of algebra I cannot see how this might work. See my answer for what I did. – Samalama Jan 09 '18 at 15:05
  • Re edit C, that's very neat! It would have taken me time to get that. Really appreciate your help and detail - thanks! – Samalama Jan 10 '18 at 13:47
2

For part (c), after playing around with the transformed 4-vector a little, I found that the velocity addition formula neatly drops out by dividing the spatial 4-velocity by the its temporal component:

$$ \frac{\eta^1}{\eta^0}=\frac{\gamma_{u}u}{\gamma_{u}c}=\frac{\gamma_v \gamma_{u'}(v+u')}{\gamma_v \gamma_{u'}(c+\frac{vu'}{c})}$$

All gamma factors neatly cancel and multiplying by $c$ yields the velocity addition formula. I'm not sure if this is the method as suggested by the question but it is much simpler than trying to equate the three gammas.

Samalama
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