Lecture 2
Lecture 2
Kirit Makwana
September 7, 2020
x 0 = Φ1 (x, y , z, t) (1)
0
y = Φ2 (x, y , z, t) (2)
0
z = Φ3 (x, y , z, t) (3)
0
t = Φ4 (x, y , z, t) (4)
Consider the same physical system but just inverting the x, x 0 and
z, z 0 axes. The y transformation will become
y 0 = −a21 x + a22 y − a23 z (16)
But y 0 should remain unaffected by rotation of x 0 and z 0 axis. So
a21 = a23 = 0. Similarly a12 = a13 = a31 = a32 = 0
x = ∆−1 (a22 a33 a44 x 0 + a14 a33 a42 y 0 + a14 a22 a43 z 0 − a14 a22 a33 t 0 )
(21)
−1 0
y = a22 y (22)
−1 0
z= a33 z (23)
−1 0 −1 0
t=∆ (−a22 a33 a41 x ) + ∆ (a11 a22 a33 t ) (24)
Now consider another point in spacetime that does not fall on the
wavefront (x2 , y2 , z2 , t2 ). Let this point obey
x22 + y22 + z22 − c 2 t22 = A0 , where A0 is some non-zero value.
It can be seen that we can displace this point by y2 + δy and z2 + δz ,
such that x22 + (y2 + δy )2 + (z2 + δz)2 − c 2 t22 = 0
This displaced point lies on the wavefront and its transform will also
obey x202 + (y20 + δy 0 )2 + (z20 + δz 0 )2 − c 2 t202 = 0
But we already know that y and z coordinates do not change under
the transformation.
Using this, we can show that x202 + y202 + z202 − c 2 t202 = A0
What this means is that x 2 + y 2 + z 2 − c 2 t 2 remains same under the
Lorentz transformation for points not just on the wavefront but for all
points. This is called Lorentz invariance
x 0 = x − vt (42)
0
y =y (43)
0
z =z (44)
0
t =t (45)