Coin said:
Hi,
Garth said:
The Minkowski metric is:
d\tau^2 = dt^2 - \frac{1}{c^2}[dx^2 + dy^2 + dt^2]
This means that although space and time are all dimensions of space-time, time bears the same mathematical relationship to the space dimensions as the imaginary numbers do to the real.
This is a very interesting comparison, I do not think I have ever seen it made before. Do you think you can elaborate on why the Minkowski metric would force time quantities to behave like this?
I have been using this description of the relationship between space and time in my lectures for many years.
If we ask, "Why should the sign of the time
2 dimension be the negative of the space
2 dimensions?", one answer would be to say, "Well, that's the way the world is."
The understanding that time is a dimension as well as 'length, width and height' is obvious from Einstein's argument that: "You cannot measure the position of an event except at a particular time and you cannot measure the time of an event except at a particular place."
Yet as I said in my original post #2 above, the fact that, although time may be a dimension, it is not exactly the same as space is intuitively obvious, is it not?
The 'peculiarities' of SR, and consequently GR, derive from this (+---), or (-+++),
signature of the metric.
One temptation that should be avoided is to then try to treat time exactly the same as the space dimensions by using 'ict'. This practice has been discussed before
here. As I said then, Misner Thorne & Wheeler do a good article on this subject: "Farewell to ict" in 'Gravitation' Box 2.1, page 51.
This imagainary coordinate was invented to make the geometry of spacetime look formally as little different as possible from the geometry of Euclidean space.
The problems with it are:
1. Vectors (contravariant) and one-forms (covariant) are confused.
2. Thus it hides the character of the geometric object being dealt with.
3. The essentially very different rotations in Minkowski and Euclidean space are confused.
4. Thus it hides the nature of the parameter in transformations; is it cyclical or does it asymptotically tend to infinity?
5. It hides the completely different metric structure of (++++) and (-+++) geometry.
In (++++) Euclidean geometry a zero interval between two events implies they are the same event, in (-+++) Minkowskian geometry it implies they both lie on a null geodesic, one event may be a SN Ia explosion at the far side of the universe and the other the observation of that explosion on Earth billions of years later.
6. The causal structure of the universe , limited to all events in the past light cone of a particular event X
a that influence X
a, is broken.
7. Finally, and as a consequence of the above, no-one has been able to discover a way to make an imaginary ict coordinate work in the general curved space-time manifold.Garth