cuallito
- 94
- 1
So in special relativity we have ds'^{2}=ds^2, which is another way of saying \Lambda^{T}\eta\Lambda=\eta. Where \eta=diag(-1,1,1,1).
It seems in GR the symmetry group for transformations is GL(R,4) or Diff(M) depending on who you ask: http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/65688/group-theory-in-general-relativity
However (I might have missed it) the answers in the above link don't mention if there is an explicit formula akin to \Lambda^{T}\eta\Lambda=\eta for allowed transformations, or a formula for a conserved quantity like ds'^{2}=ds^2?
It seems in GR the symmetry group for transformations is GL(R,4) or Diff(M) depending on who you ask: http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/65688/group-theory-in-general-relativity
However (I might have missed it) the answers in the above link don't mention if there is an explicit formula akin to \Lambda^{T}\eta\Lambda=\eta for allowed transformations, or a formula for a conserved quantity like ds'^{2}=ds^2?