In non-relativistic physics, physical quantities $Q$ are characterized by how they transform under a Galilean transformation $g \in \mathcal{G}$. $$ Q \rightarrow Q' = D[g]Q$$ where $D[g]$ is the linear representation of g.
Let $r$ be a rotation, $a$ be a spacial translation, $t$ be a time translation and $b$ be a boost.
Scalars take the trivial representation for everything: \begin{align*} D[r] = 1, D[a] = 1, D[t] = 1, D[b] = 1 \end{align*}
If we accept force $\vec{F}$ to be the model example of a vector, then it transforms under the following representations: $$D[a] = 1, D[t] = 1, D[b] = 1\\ D[r] = R, \text{for some $R \in \mathcal{O}(3)$} $$
But 3-velocity does not transform trivially under boosts; the boost velocity just adds up. Does that mean that velocity is not a vector?
Is there a representation where we can see that force and velocity are both the same kind of object? (vectors), or are they just different?
In special relativity where the symmetry group concerned is the Poincaré group 4-force and 4-velocity transform exactly the same way, so they are the same type of objects (vectors).
– Aiman Al-Eryani Aug 07 '19 at 15:29