martin_blckrs
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This is probably very trivial, but I can't find an argument, why the orthochronal transformations (i.e. those for which \Lambda^0{}_0 \geq 1) form a subgroup of the Lorentz group, i.e. why the product of two orthochronal transformations is again orthochronal?
Since when you multiply two orthochronal matrices \Lambda and \overline{\Lambda} the term \Lambda\overline{\Lambda})^0{}_0 = \Lambda^0{}_0\overline{\Lambda^0{}_0} + \Lambda^0{}_1\bar{\Lambda^1{}_0} + \Lambda^0{}_1\overline{\Lambda^2{}_0} + \Lambda^0{}_3\overline{\Lambda^3{}_0}, where I can only say that \Lambda^0{}_0\overline{\Lambda^0{}_0} \geq 1 but I don't really know much about the other terms.
Since when you multiply two orthochronal matrices \Lambda and \overline{\Lambda} the term \Lambda\overline{\Lambda})^0{}_0 = \Lambda^0{}_0\overline{\Lambda^0{}_0} + \Lambda^0{}_1\bar{\Lambda^1{}_0} + \Lambda^0{}_1\overline{\Lambda^2{}_0} + \Lambda^0{}_3\overline{\Lambda^3{}_0}, where I can only say that \Lambda^0{}_0\overline{\Lambda^0{}_0} \geq 1 but I don't really know much about the other terms.
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