Questions tagged [reference-frames]

A reference frame is a particular coordinate system chosen to represent physical entities. The notion is most often used in special and general relativity to denote particular coordinates chosen on the spacetime manifold.

Reference frames are a concept most often used in special and general relativity, but they are also relevant to Galilean systems. They are essentially coordinate choices on a (spacetime) manifold.

Often they refer to a particular observer, who is chosen to be (momentarily) stationary in the spatial coordinates in the frame considered. This is then called the observer's frame of reference.

A frame in which no forces act on the observer in question, and which is time-independent as well as homogeneous and isotropic in its spatial coordinates is called an inertial reference frame. Every observer travelling with uniform velocity below the speed of light possesses such a frame.

If the observer is accelerated and therefore not uniformly moving, it is nevertheless possible to choose a so-called momentarily comoving reference frame, sometimes also called the proper frame.

This tag should be applied to questions that deal with the differing perceptions of observers in special and general relativity, as these arise from the observers using different frames of reference, often leading to situations someone not familiar with relativistic thinking might think to be paradoxical. The tag is also suitable for those cases in non-relativistic mechanics where the properties of Galilean transformations are discussed.

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Calculation of center of mass of a bar with linear density by branches

A query. If a bar of lengt $d$ has a linear density $\rho(x)=\begin{cases} x & x\in [a,b] \\ x^2 & x\in [b,c]\\ x^3 & [c,d] \end{cases}$ then its center of mass is $\overline{x}=\frac{\int_{a}^{b}x^2dx+\int_{b}^{c}x^…
eraldcoil
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Is there a preferred reference frame?

At any point in space there is only one truly inertial frame (the one that is in free-fall under local gravity conditions), does this form a preferred frame of reference? Special relativity tells us that all inertial frames are equally valid. And…
johnson316
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Why is it impossible to determine a real inertial frame?

Why is it impossible to determine a real inertial frame? We can determine the applied torque on a gyroscope by observing its precession. And thus we can evaluate the acceleration of our non-inertial frame. Is this acceleration relative to a real…
Junaid
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Is Magnetic field produced by a moving charge different for different observers

Consider a unit charge in space it’s in rest with respect to first observer then the magnetic field produced by this according first observer is zero according to formula B=qvb let another observer is moving with velocity v and charge appears to be…
Sai Charan Reddy
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Express the angle between two reference frames as function of other angles

I'm doing my homework on flight mechanics and the first lesson is about non-inertial reference frames. I've learnt there are three basic reference frames to be account in the study of flight mechanics. Body (b), wind (w) and local horizon…
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why the z axis points into the Earth in the inertial frame

I've seen a lot of papers define z-axis to be upside down when they define the inertial frame for the Earth. Is there any sensible explanation for that. To me, the more convenient way is that the z-axis should point to the up direction (i.e. to the…
CroCo
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I'm traveling through the space, and the solar system is going to be smaller and smaller. There is no way to determine who is moving?

I'm traveling the space, and the solar system is going to be smaller and smaller. There is no way to determine who is actually moving?
user203741