General Relativity
© The scientific sentence. 2010
| Relativity: Momentum-Energy 4-Vector
1. Velocity 4-vector
We need to use the time derivative of the components of the 4-vector displacement.
That is d(ct,x,y,z)/dt. We have with x = v t:
Vμ = d(ct, x)/dt = (c,v)
So
VμVμ = - c2 + v2, which is not
invariant. To become invariant, we use instead the proper time derivative. We
recall that the proper time is the time in the rest frame of the particle; that is
t' that we will denote by τ.
Then, with t = γ t'= γ τ:
Vμ = d(ct, x)/dt' = γ d(ct, x)/dt = γ (c, u)
So, dotting it into itself gives:
VμVμ = γ2 (- c2 + v2)
= - c2; which is invariant.
γ = 1/[1 - β2]1/2, where v is the velocity
of the moving frame defined as x = vt from the rest frame.
VμVμ = - c2
The magnitude of the velocity 4-Vector is c, no matter
the velocity v is.
Therefore:
Vμ = d(ct, x)/dt' = γ d(ct, x)/dt = γ (c, v)
is a velocity 4-Vector.
Vμ = γ (c, u) is a velocity 4-Vector
2. Relativistic energy
The relativistic energy E of the particle of mass
at rest mo, then of mass m = γmo,
when moving at v, is derived as:
m = γmo
dm/dv = mo dγ/dv
dγ/dv =
d(1/[1 - β2]1/2)/dv =
v/c2 [1 - (v/c)2]-3/2 =
(v/c2) (γ3)
Therefore:
dm/dv = mo (v/c2) (γ3) =
m (v/c2) (γ2) =
m v/ (c2 - v2)
The force acting on the particle is F = dP/dt
F = dP/dt = d(mv)/dt = m dv/dt + v dm/dt =
We have:
dv/dt = (dv/dm)(dm/dt) =
[(c2 - v2)/mv](dm/dt) =
[(c2 - v2)/mv](dm/dt)
So
F = [(c2 - v2)/v](dm/dt) + v dm/dt =
(c2/v)dm/dt
The energy of the particle as the received work:
dE = F dx = c2dm
Integrating gives:
E = c2m + constant.
If there is no mass then there is no energy. Hence
Constant = 0; and
we find again the equivalence mass-energy formula:
E = c2m
E = m c2
3. Momentum 4-Vector
According to the result from the velocity -4Vector, we define
the momentum 4-Vector as the product of the velocity 4-Vector and
the mass at rest mo of the particle moving at v from the frame
at rest:
Pμ = mo Vμ = mo γ (c, v)
It is still a 4-Vector because we have multiplied by a constant.
Pμ is a 4-Vector.
We write:
m = mo γ , and then:
Pμ = m(c, v)
Pμ = m (c, v) = γ mo(c,v)
According to the result for the energy: E = m c2, we
write:
Pμ = m (c, v) = (mc, mv) = (mc, p) =
(mc2/c , p) = (E/c,p)
Pμ = (E/c,p)
Pμ = (E/c,p)
VμVμ = - c2
is the velocity 4-Vector Lorentz-invariant.
PμPμ = - mo2c2
is the momentum 4-Vector Lorentz-invariant.
Therefore, the Lorentz-invariant of the moment becomes:
= - (E/c)2 + p2 = - mo2c2, or
- E2 + p2c2 = - mo2c4
That is:
E2 = p2c2+ mo2c4
E2 = p2c2+ mo2c4
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