Physics, General Relativity: Homework Due Wednesday, September
Physics, General Relativity: Homework Due Wednesday, September
Physics, General Relativity: Homework Due Wednesday, September
Homework
Due Wednesday, th September
Jacob Lewis Bourjaily
Problem 1
a) We are to use the spacetime diagram of an observer O to describe an experiment specified by the
problem 1.5 in Schutz text.
b) The experimenter observes that the two particles arrive back at the same point in spacetime after
leaving from equidistant sources. The experimenter argues that this implies that they were released
simultaneously; comment.
In his frame, his reasoning is just, and implies that his t-coordinates of the two events
have the same value. However, there is no absolute simultaneity in spacetime, so a
different observer would be free to say that in her frame, the two events were not
simultaneous.
c) A second observer O moves with speed v = 3c/4 in the negative x-direction relative to O. We are
asked to draw the corresponding spacetime diagram of the experiment in this frame and comment on
simultaneity.
Calculating the transformation by hand (so the image is accurate), the experiment ob-
served in frame O is shown in Figure 2. Notice that observer O does not see the two
emission events as occurring simultaneously.
t
1
2 JACOB LEWIS BOURJAILY
d) We are to show that the invariant interval between the two emission events is invariant.
We can proceed directly. It is necessary to know that in frame O the events have
coordinates p1 = (5/2, 2) and p2 = (5/2, 2) while in frame O they have coordinates
p1 = (1, 1/8) and p2 = (4, 31/8) where 2 = 16
7 .
s2 = (p1 p2 )2 = 16;
s2 = (p1 p2 )2 = 2 (9 + 16) = 16.
We see that the invariant interval is indeed invariant in this pointless example.
Problem 2.
a) We are to show that rapidity is additive upon successive boosts in the same direction.
We may as well introduce the notation used in the problem: let v = tanh and w =
tanh ; this allows us to write = 1 2 = cosh and v = sinh , and similar
1tanh
expressions apply for . We see that using this language, the boost transformations
are realized by the matrices1
v cosh sinh a
7 , (a.1)
v sinh cosh
and similarly for the boost with velocity w. Two successive boosts are then composed
by2:
cosh sinh cosh sinh cosh cosh + sinh sinh sinh cosh cosh sinh
=
sinh cosh sinh cosh sinh cosh cosh sinh cosh cosh + sinh sinh
cosh( + ) sinh( + )
=
sinh( + ) cosh( + )
This matrix is itself a boost matrix, now parameterized by a rapidity parameter
( + ). Therefore, successive boosts are additive for rapidity.
o
b) Consider a star which observes a second star receding at speed 9c/10; this star measures a third
moving in the same direction, receding with the same relative speed; this build up continues consecu-
tively N times. What is the velocity of the N th star relative to the first? Give the explicit result for all N .
1Because we are considering successive boosts in one direction, the problem really lives in 1 + 1-dimensions and we can
make life easier with only 2 2 matrices.
2We make use of some obvious identities in hyperbolic geometry.
PHYSICS : GENERAL RELATIVITY HOMEWORK 3
Problem 3.
a) Consider a boost in the x-direction with speed vA = tanh followed by a boost in the y-direction
with speed vB = tanh . We are to show that the resulting Lorentz transformation can be written as a
pure rotation followed by a pure boost and determine the rotation and boost.
b) A spaceship A moves with velocity vA along x relative to O and another, B, moves with speed
vB along y relative to A. Determine the direction and velocity of the frame O relative to B.
To map this exactly to the previous problem, we do things backwards and transform
B A followed by A O relative to B. That is, let tanh = vB and tanh = vA .
Now, the magnitude of the velocity of frame O relative to B has rapidity given by
equation (a.5), and is moving in the direction an angle ( + ) relative to A where
and are given by equations (a.6) and (a.7), respectively.
3This required a bit of algebra, but it isnt worth doing in public.