1 Some Four-Vectors, Old and New: 1.1 Preparation: Proper Time and Time Derivatives
1 Some Four-Vectors, Old and New: 1.1 Preparation: Proper Time and Time Derivatives
This is the time interval measured from a frame relative to which the object
pframe, (dx, dy, dy) is the displacement of the
is at rest. Relative to the lab
object in time dt, thus u = (dx )2 + (dy)2 + (dz)2 /dt. Therefore
dt
q p
cdτ = c2 (dt)2 − u2 (dt)2 = cdt 1 − u2 /c2 =⇒ dτ =
γu
p. 2 Eamples of physical 4-vectors
If the motion of the object is uniform, one could write this in terms of finite
differences:
∆t
∆τ =
γu
(ct, x, y, z)
x = (ct, x, y, z).
p. 3 Eamples of physical 4-vectors
This has the unpleasant feature that the same symbol x means different
things on left and right sides of the equation.
It is also common to refer to the spacetime coordinate as x µ . You might
write
x µ = (ct, x, y, z).
You might find this also a bit strange: does x µ refer to a particular compo-
nent of the 4-vector depending on the value of µ, or does it represent the
complete 4-vector? You have to get used to x µ sometimes representing the
µ-th element of the 4-vector, and sometimes the 4-vector itself.
There is no standard notation that is completely satisfactory. You will en-
counter both of these mildly inconsistent manners of describing 4-vectors.
We will gradually wean ourselves off the double-vector notation and move
to these more standard notations, and hope that from the context you can
always figure out which symbol refers to what.
1.3 4-velocity
In non-relativistic mechanics, the velocity of an object is obtained by taking
d~r
the derivative of displacement: ~u = .
dt
Since the displacement (position) vector now appears as components of a
4-vector (spacetime), we could think of defining a velocity 4-vector as the
temporal derivative of the spacetime coordinate:
⇒ ? d
U= (ct,~r ) = (c, ~u).
dt
One can show (through a somewhat painful calculation) that this combi-
nation does not transform like a 4-vector. More easily, one observes that
c2 − |~u|2 is not Lorentz invariant and hence is not the norm of a 4-vector.
To see what went wrong, we write this is
d 1
(ct,~r ) = lim (c∆t, ∆~r )
dt ∆t→0 ∆t
Here ∆~r is the displacement of the particle in time interval ∆t, as seen from
some frame which is not the rest frame of the particle. We know that ∆t is
not a Lorentz scalar. Since we are dividing a 4-vector by a number which is
not a scalar, we cannot expect to find a 4-vector. The solution is to divide
by a scalar (Lorentz invariant) quantity, i.e., to replace ∆t by the proper
time interval ∆τ = ∆t/γu . Thus we define the 4-velocity as
⇒ d d
U= (ct,~r ) = γu (ct,~r ) = γu (c, ~u)
dτ dt
p. 4 Eamples of physical 4-vectors
You can show (going through a cumbersome calculation) that this object
trasforms under Lorentz transformations as a 4-vector should. We also
immediately see that the norm is γu 2c2 − γu 2v2 = c2 , which we know to
be Lorentz invariant. Thus we have successfully constructed a 4-vector.
Definition: 4-velocity
• The 4-velocity of any particle with nonzero mass is time-like, i.e., has
positive norm in the (+, −, −, −) metric. Exercise: Show!
with the understanding that U µ on the left represents the whole 4-vector
and not one component of the 4-velocity. We will be gradually shift-
ing toward this type of notation and stop using the non-standard thick-
vector notation.
Some texts also use U or U ~ to represent the 4-vector. I would advise
against this. No need to encourage confusion between 4-vectors and
3-vectors!
• For a particle/object at rest, the 4-velocity is simple: (c, 0, 0, 0). Exercise: Show!
In other words, the 4-velocity of any massive object in the frame moving
with the object is (c, 0, 0, 0)
relative to Σ and U 0 = γu0 (c, u0x , u0y , u0z ) relative to Σ0 . If Σ and Σ0 are re-
lated to the standard boost, then
00 0
U γv −γv (v/c) 0 0 U
U 01 −γv (v/c) 1
γ v 0 0 U
=
U 02 0 0 1 0 U 2
U 03 0 0 0 1 U3
These equations (and their inverted form) can then be used to express
~ 0 , and vice versa.
the components of ~u in terms of the components of u
• Adding two 4-velocities does not physically mean much, in fact, the
result might not even be a valid 4-velocity.
1.4 4-momentum
We have already encountered this 4-vector:
Definition: 4-momentum
An object with energy E and 3-momentum ~p = ( p x , py , pz ) has 4-
momentum ( E/c, ~p).
• We have previously seen that the combination (γu mc, γu m~u) transforms
like a 4-vector under Lorentz transformations. In fact, this is how we
motivated the notion of 4-vectors.
• For a massless particle, i.e., a photon, we know how to express the mo-
mentum and energy in terms of its frequency f or its wavelength λ:
hc hf h
E = hf = and ~p = n̂ = n̂
λ c λ
where n̂ is a unit vector in the direction of propagation of the photon.
Hence the 4-momentum is
µ hf hf h h
P = , n̂ = , n̂ .
c c λ λ
For example, if the photon were traveling in the z direction, its 4-momentum
would be (h/λ, 0, 0, h/λ).
• The 4-momentum of a photon also transforms under LT’s as a 4-vector
should, although we did not show this explicitly. To show this, we need
to use our knowledge of the relativistic Doppler shift.
• The expression Pµ = mass×U µ does not make sense for photons. This
is because 4-velocity is not defined for photons, and the mass is zero.
• For a massive particle, the norm of the 4-momentum is Pµ Pµ = m2 c2
(if you didn’t previously: Show! ). This is Lorentz invariant, of course.
Also, since this is positive, the 4-momentum of particles with nonzero
mass is time-like.
For a mass-less particle, the norm is Pµ Pµ = 0, also an invariant. The
4-momentum in this case is null or light-like.
p. 7 Eamples of physical 4-vectors
1.5 4-acceleration
We constructed the 4-velocity from the 4-displacement by differentiating
with respect to the proper time. Similarly, the 4-acceleration is obtained by
differentiating the 4-velocity with respect to the proper time:
dU µ
Definition: 4-acceleration Aµ =
dτ
⇒ ⇒
Exercise: Show that Uµ Aµ = 0 , or U ? A = 0 , using the ex-
pressions derived for them, for a particle having 3-velocity ~v and
3-acceleration ~a.
1.6 4-force
˙ in the by-now familiar
We generalize the defintion of the 3-force, ~F = ~p,
way. The 4-force on a particle/object is
dPµ
Definition: 4-force Kµ =
dτ
where Pµ of is the 4-momentum of the particle/object.
⇒
• Notation: Why K µ instead of, say, F µ or F ?
Because we will encounter an object called F µν (with two indices) in
electromagnetism, and it would be confusing to have two quantities
called F. So the notation K µ is common. It probably stems from the
German word for force, Kraft.
If you are not dealing with electromagnetism, using F µ is fine of course.
d
• Since Pµ = mU µ and Aµ = µ
dτ U , we get for objects which are not
losing/gaining mass
K µ = mAµ
The 4-force is mass times the 4-acceleration. Nice! Even though the rel-
ativistic 3-force and 3-acceleration refuse to obey the familiar equation,
the 4-force and 4-acceleration do obey a relativistic version.
d µ
• Noting dτ P = γu dtd ( E/c, ~p), we get
µ 1 dE ~
K = γu ,F
c dt
The 3-vector part of the 4-force is γu times the 3-force.
p. 9 Eamples of physical 4-vectors
1.10 4-gradient