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Consider a 4-coordinate system x=(x^0,x^1,x^2,x^3), x^0 plays a role of time, x^1, x^2, x^3 are some kind of space coordinates. In what follows greek letters will be 1,2 or 3, latin will be 0,1,2,3, c = 1, proper time squared ds^2 = g_{ik}(x) dx^{i} dx^{k}.
Now, if the body is "at rest" we have
x^{\alpha}={\rm const},
dx^{\alpha} = 0,
so space components of the 4-velocity are zeroes
u^k = (dx^0/ds, 0, 0, 0)
and space components of the contravariant 4-momentum p^k = m u^k are zeroes as well.
But p^{\alpha}=0 is not equivalent to p_{\alpha}=0:
p_{\alpha}=g_{\alpha k}p^k = g_{\alpha 0}p^0=g_{\alpha 0} g^{00} p_0 + g_{\alpha 0} g^{0 \beta} p_{\beta},
so we have a system of the form (with non-trivial solutions in general)
(\delta^{\beta}_{\alpha} - g_{\alpha 0} g^{0 \beta}) p_{\beta} = g_{\alpha 0} g^{00} p_0.
On the other hand, momentum may be considered as a gradient of the action S(x):
\vec{p}=\nabla S(x),
energy as minus time derivative of S(x):
E = -\partial S/\partial x^0,
in other words p_k = -\partial S/\partial x^k = (E, -\vec{p}).
So we are having a very interesting situation when body is at rest (dx^{\alpha} = 0), but has a non-zero momentum (that is not constant!).
Are my thoughts correct?
Now, if the body is "at rest" we have
x^{\alpha}={\rm const},
dx^{\alpha} = 0,
so space components of the 4-velocity are zeroes
u^k = (dx^0/ds, 0, 0, 0)
and space components of the contravariant 4-momentum p^k = m u^k are zeroes as well.
But p^{\alpha}=0 is not equivalent to p_{\alpha}=0:
p_{\alpha}=g_{\alpha k}p^k = g_{\alpha 0}p^0=g_{\alpha 0} g^{00} p_0 + g_{\alpha 0} g^{0 \beta} p_{\beta},
so we have a system of the form (with non-trivial solutions in general)
(\delta^{\beta}_{\alpha} - g_{\alpha 0} g^{0 \beta}) p_{\beta} = g_{\alpha 0} g^{00} p_0.
On the other hand, momentum may be considered as a gradient of the action S(x):
\vec{p}=\nabla S(x),
energy as minus time derivative of S(x):
E = -\partial S/\partial x^0,
in other words p_k = -\partial S/\partial x^k = (E, -\vec{p}).
So we are having a very interesting situation when body is at rest (dx^{\alpha} = 0), but has a non-zero momentum (that is not constant!).
Are my thoughts correct?