actionintegral
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Does anyone have a brief explanation of why the gamma is necessary in the Lorentz transformation.
in order to account for relativistic effects like time dilation, doppler shift...actionintegral said:Does anyone have a brief explanation of why the gamma is necessary in the Lorentz transformation.
actionintegral said:But the constancy of the speed of light is preserved simply by
x'=x-vt and t'=t-vx/cc. I'm trying to see where the scaling factor comes in.
Gamma, or sometimes called the Lorentz factor, represents the relationship between relativistic time and proper time or relativistic length and proper length.actionintegral said:Does anyone have a brief explanation of why the gamma is necessary in the Lorentz transformation.
nakurusil said:Comes from preserving dx^2 -( c dt )^2
you are perfectly right. in the paperactionintegral said:But the constancy of the speed of light is preserved simply by
x'=x-vt and t'=t-vx/cc. I'm trying to see where the scaling factor comes in.
actionintegral said:Fair enough - but why would I want to preserve THAT?
actionintegral said:nakurusil said:Comes from preserving dx^2 -( c dt )^2
Fair enough - but why would I want to preserve THAT?
actionintegral said:But the constancy of the speed of light is preserved simply by
x'=x-vt and t'=t-vx/cc. I'm trying to see where the scaling factor comes in.
pervect said:We _also_ want the transforms to have the property that the inverse is generated just by changing the sign of v.
actionintegral said:Does anyone have a brief explanation of why the gamma is necessary in the Lorentz transformation.