How do you show |r_1-r_2| is rotationally invariant

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on demonstrating that the expression |r_1 - r_2| is rotationally invariant under the transformation r_1 → r_1 + ε(n × r_1) and r_2 → r_2 + ε(n × r_2). Participants clarify that the original transformation proposed by the OP is incorrect, as it does not accurately represent how rotations act on vectors. The correct approach involves recognizing that the change in the distance |r_1 - r_2| remains constant under infinitesimal rotations, as shown through vector analysis and the properties of cross products.

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Physgeek64
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Homework Statement


How do you show |r_1-r_2| is rotationally invariant

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


So i get that we need to show that it is invariant under the transformations

## r_1 \rightarrow r_1 + \epsilon (n \times r_1)##
## r_2 \rightarrow r_2 + \epsilon (n \times r_2)##

but that gives

## |r_1 + \epsilon (n \times r_1) -r_2 - \epsilon (n \times r_2)|##
and i can't see what this equals ##|r_1 -r_2|##

Many thanks
 
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Physgeek64 said:

Homework Statement


How do you show |r_1-r_2| is rotationally invariant

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


So i get that we need to show that it is invariant under the transformations

## r_1 \rightarrow r_1 + \epsilon (n \times r_1)##
## r_2 \rightarrow r_2 + \epsilon (n \times r_2)##

but that gives

## |r_1 + \epsilon (n \times r_1) -r_2 - \epsilon (n \times r_2)|##
and i can't see what this equals ##|r_1 -r_2|##

Many thanks
What is n?
 
How would you show that ##|r_1|## is invariant ?
 
Physgeek64 said:

Homework Statement


How do you show |r_1-r_2| is rotationally invariant

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


So i get that we need to show that it is invariant under the transformations

## r_1 \rightarrow r_1 + \epsilon (n \times r_1)##
## r_2 \rightarrow r_2 + \epsilon (n \times r_2)##

but that gives

## |r_1 + \epsilon (n \times r_1) -r_2 - \epsilon (n \times r_2)|##
and i can't see what this equals ##|r_1 -r_2|##

Many thanks

So, you want to show that ##|r_1' - r_2'| = |r_1 - r_2|,## where ##r_1' = r_1 + \epsilon (n \times r_1)## and ##r_2' = r_2 + \epsilon (n \times r_2).## If ##s = r_1 - r_2## and ##s' = r_1' - r_2'##, we have that
$$s' = s + \epsilon (n \times s),$$
so
$$s'^2 = s' \cdot s' = s^2 + \epsilon (n \times s) \cdot s + \epsilon s \cdot (n \times s) + \epsilon^2 (n \times s) \cdot (n \times s).$$
Since ##n \times s \: \perp s##, the two middle terms (linear in ##\epsilon##) vanish. So, you need only worry about the ##\epsilon^2## term.

It is clear that the result you want is not true, but I think that is because you misrepresented how a rotation acts on a vector. In other words, ##r \to r + \epsilon (n \times r)## is incorrect.
 
The reasoning by Ray shows that an infinitesmal rotation conserves ##\ \left | \vec r_1 - \vec r_2\right |##. I suppose that is sufficient to show it for a finite rotation too ?

Again: @Physgeek64 : how would you prove that ##\ \left | \vec r_1 \right |\ ## is invariant ?
 
BvU said:
The reasoning by Ray shows that an infinitesmal rotation conserves ##\ \left | \vec r_1 - \vec r_2\right |##. I suppose that is sufficient to show it for a finite rotation too ?

Again: @Physgeek64 : how would you prove that ##\ \left | \vec r_1 \right |\ ## is invariant ?

OK: the transformation shown sort-of-works for small ##|\epsilon|##, but it fails for large values of ##|\epsilon|##.

The point is that the OP's transformation equation ##r \to r + \epsilon (n \times r)## is just not correct! It describes taking a vector r and then adding something perpendicular to it on to its end. That will give a right triangle with sides ##|r|## and ##|\epsilon (n \times r)|##, whose hypotenuse is not just ##|r|##, but something bigger---only very slightly bigger if ##|\epsilon|## is small.

The OP needs to find a linear transformation ##T = T(\epsilon)## with the property that for small ##|\epsilon|## we have ##Tr \approx r + \epsilon (n \times r)##.
 
Last edited:
Ray Vickson said:
So, you want to show that ##|r_1' - r_2'| = |r_1 - r_2|,## where ##r_1' = r_1 + \epsilon (n \times r_1)## and ##r_2' = r_2 + \epsilon (n \times r_2).## If ##s = r_1 - r_2## and ##s' = r_1' - r_2'##, we have that
$$s' = s + \epsilon (n \times s),$$
so
$$s'^2 = s' \cdot s' = s^2 + \epsilon (n \times s) \cdot s + \epsilon s \cdot (n \times s) + \epsilon^2 (n \times s) \cdot (n \times s).$$
Since ##n \times s \: \perp s##, the two middle terms (linear in ##\epsilon##) vanish. So, you need only worry about the ##\epsilon^2## term.

It is clear that the result you want is not true, but I think that is because you misrepresented how a rotation acts on a vector. In other words, ##r \to r + \epsilon (n \times r)## is incorrect.

But is this not the transformation one makes in lagrangian mechanics to then say ##\frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot{q}} (n \times r) = constant ## by Noether's theorem?

Many thanks
 
Physgeek64 said:
But is this not the transformation one makes in lagrangian mechanics to then say ##\frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot{q}} (n \times r) = constant ## by Noether's theorem?

Many thanks

You need to distinguish between the differential relationship and the "integrated" relationship. In other words, if ##\vec{r}(t) = T(t) \vec{r}_0## we have
$$\frac{d\vec{r}}{dt} = \vec{\omega} \times \vec{r},$$
but the relationship between ##\vec{r}(t)## and ##\vec{r}_0## is not quite that simple. It is certainly true that
$$ \vec{r}(t+\Delta t) \approx \vec{r}(t) + \Delta t (\vec{\omega} \times \vec{r}(t))$$
for small ##|\Delta t|##, but you cannot just let ##\Delta t## become "large" in this equation and still have a correct relationship.

Note added in edit: If all you want is to show that ##|\vec{r}(t)|## remains constant (at least for constant ##\vec{\omega}##) you do not actually need to find ##\vec{r}(t)## at all. Showing that ##|\vec{r}|## is constant is a lot easier than finding ##\vec{r}## itself.
 
Last edited:
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Ray Vickson said:
OK: the transformation shown sort-of-works for small ##|\epsilon|##, but it fails for large values of ##|\epsilon|##.

The point is that the OP's transformation equation ##r \to r + \epsilon (n \times r)## is just not correct! It describes taking a vector r and then adding something perpendicular to it on to its end. That will give a right triangle with sides ##|r|## and ##|\epsilon (n \times r)|##, whose hypotenuse is not just ##|r|##, but something bigger---only very slightly bigger if ##|\epsilon|## is small.

The OP needs to find a linear transformation ##T = T(\epsilon)## with the property that for small ##|\epsilon|## we have ##Tr \approx r + \epsilon (n \times r)##.
##\epsilon## is never intended to be large. The relationship given is the one of an infinitesimal rotation. It is sufficient to show it to first order in ##\epsilon## as it is a direct result that the derivative is zero and therefore it extends directly to the integrated version.
 
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  • #10
To get back to @Physgeek64 : Is the reasoning by @Ray Vickson in post #4 clear to you ? And the completed proof (with the inclusion of what @Orodruin indicates in #9 ) ?

Just checking ... :wink:
 

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