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Can a massless classical particle experience a nonzero Newton's second law force?
Dickfore produced a very interesting formula in http://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=3333233&postcount=52 .
Is this generally accepted? Are there other expressions that work? Or are all acceptable expressions equivalent?
After posting doubts about how this would work in that other thread, I realized I thought it might work, but didn't have time to work out details. This post by Dickfore is very interesting. I was thinking that the key thing to work around, given preference to us 4 vectors is the following:
- we have a well defined 4-momentum for a massless particle (happens to have null norm)
- a null path can definitely change direction and not be geodesic (I was simply confused
for not realizing this).
but you need a consistent approach for not being able to take covariant derivatives by proper time along a path. 4-force is normally covariant derivative by proper time. What definition do you use for a lightlike path? I would hope there is something more elegant than Dickfore's post. So, for me, the key to making all this work is substituting something for covariant derivative by tau in the 4-vector formulation of relativistic kinematics.
Dickfore's equation says the force sees the energy of the particle, which reminds one a bit of gravity (as a field in flat spacetime). How about http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0405030, Eq 12? Can it hold for null 4-velocities?
Another useful reference for particle equations of motion in gravity is http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0611100.
I would also like to know if Gralla and Wald's http://arxiv.org/abs/0905.2391 derivation of the electromagnetic self-force of point charge as a certain limit applies to massless classical point charges.
bcrowell
Jul14-11, 10:23 AM
but you need a consistent approach for not being able to take covariant derivatives by proper time along a path. 4-force is normally covariant derivative by proper time. What definition do you use for a lightlike path? I would hope there is something more elegant than Dickfore's post. So, for me, the key to making all this work is substituting something for covariant derivative by tau in the 4-vector formulation of relativistic kinematics.
I don't think it's absolutely necessary to start off by defining the four-force as dp/d\tau. For a massless particle, a finite three-force acting on it becomes an infinite four-force, so the three-force is well defined but the four-force isn't.
But if we don't use dp/d\tau as our definition of force in relativity, and use the three-force instead, then we have to deal with the question of what is the fundamental definition of the three-force in relativity. I think the history is that very early on (maybe ca. 1920), Einstein decided that force was not a useful concept in relativity, and stopped referring to it. Newton's laws aren't valid, so it's not necessarily easy to define what is meant by the three-force, if we don't start with the four-force.
A related issue that has always bugged me, and about which I've never been able to get a satisfactory answer, is that a lot of treatments of SR derive the equation for relativistic kinetic energy by using the work-kinetic energy theorem with three-vectors, but I've never seen any justification for the assumption that the work-KE theorem should hold.
A related issue that has always bugged me, and about which I've never been able to get a satisfactory answer, is that a lot of treatments of SR derive the equation for relativistic kinetic energy by using the work-kinetic energy theorem with three-vectors, but I've never seen any justification for the assumption that the work-KE theorem should hold.
At least for massive particles, I've always been satisfied with the approach that takes 4-momentum as a definition; energy is its timelike component; rest energy its norm; and kinetic energy simply total energy - rest energy.
bcrowell
Jul14-11, 05:47 PM
At least for massive particles, I've always been satisfied with the approach that takes 4-momentum as a definition; energy is its timelike component; rest energy its norm; and kinetic energy simply total energy - rest energy.
I don't have any objection to any of those statements. What bothers me is the link to the 3-force, and the approach in which the work-KE theorem is used as a fundamental assumption in order to derive the relativistic relations involving energy and momentum.
After reviewing my books and finding nothing of use on this question, I searched again online and found the following:
http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9508081
The first part of this paper covers exactly this topic! (A consistent approach to the dynamics of massless particles in SR).
Thank you! Looks very interesting.
Dickfore
Jul15-11, 12:09 AM
In the same thread where I present newton's law, I also derive the equation for the trajectory of a charged massless particle in a uniform electric field, when the particle is incident perpendicularly to the field:
http://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=3336065&postcount=68
bcrowell
Jul15-11, 12:28 AM
After reviewing my books and finding nothing of use on this question, I searched again online and found the following:
http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9508081
The first part of this paper covers exactly this topic! (A consistent approach to the dynamics of massless particles in SR).
I got lost at this point:
Let us also introduce a space-like four-vector fk which fulfils:
fk tk = 0, (1.7)
and represents the physical three-force, exerted on the particle under consideration, as
”measured” by an observer following the world-line of the inertial frame[...]
What does it mean for a certain four-vector to "represent" a certain three-vector?
This also bugged me:
Earlier, exploring the idea of instantaneous relativistic action at a distance3[...] Instantaneous refers to the rest frame defined by the total time-like four-momentum of the rigid rotator the two massless and spinning particles happen to define.
I don't see how you can have instantaneous action at a distance in relativity. He says it's only instantaneous in the rest frame of a certain object...so it's not instantaneous in the rest frames of other objects...?? This doesn't make a lot of sense to me. If object A acts on object B, then how do you decide whose frame it's instantaneous in?
Hmm, I just skimmed the claimed results. Hopefully, this weekend I can spend some time reading it.
In the same thread where I present newton's law, I also derive the equation for the trajectory of a charged massless particle in a uniform electric field, when the particle is incident perpendicularly to the field:
http://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=3336065&postcount=68
Very interesting! If you Lorentz transform, do you use cXB for the magnetic force, and do you get the same trajectory?
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