guitarphysics said:
It is customary, when discussing a particle's motion through spacetime, to talk about its path x^{\mu}(\lambda), where x^{\mu} are the the spacetime coordinates of the particle in some frame, and \lambda is some parameter. I have a doubt regarding this parameter. Everywhere I've looked, people seem to say "this parameter can, for example, be the particle's proper time \tau". And then they proceed to, for some reason, only use this very specific example (proper time) as the parameter for the particle's path (or any parameter of the form \tau'=a\tau+b). So my question is: are there any other physically distinct parameters that can be used? (By physically distinct I mean something that isn't of the form a\tau+b; that doesn't rely on the proper time.) If so, why is it that the proper time is almost always used?
Thanks in advance.
The proper time action integral
<br />
S = - m \int d\tau = - m \int \sqrt{g_{ab} dx^{a} dx^{b}} ,<br />
is invariant under
arbitrary change of parametrisation
<br />
\tau \to \lambda = \lambda (\tau) .<br />
This is clear because d\tau = (d\tau / d\lambda) d\lambda is independent of \lambda. So, you can rewrite the action as
<br />
S = - m \int \ d\lambda \ \sqrt{g_{ab} \frac{dx^{a}}{d\lambda} \frac{dx^{b}}{d\lambda}} .<br />
Parametrisation-invariance means that the action is independent of what you
choose to parameterise the path x^{a}. This is, however,
not the case for the geodesic equation. Indeed, if you change the proper-time according to \tau \to \lambda (\tau), the geodesic equation transforms into
<br />
\frac{d^{2}x^{a}}{d\lambda^{2}} + \Gamma^{a}_{bc} \frac{dx^{b}}{d\lambda} \frac{dx^{c}}{d\lambda} = - \frac{d^{2}\lambda / d\tau^{2}}{(d\lambda / d\tau)^{2}} \frac{dx^{a}}{d\lambda} .<br />
Thus, the geodesic equation remains invariant
only under a class of parametrisation defined by
<br />
\frac{d^{2}\lambda}{d\tau^{2}} = 0 \ \ \Rightarrow \ \ \lambda = a \tau + b .<br />
This is
the class of affine parameters: parameters related to the proper-time \tau by an affine transformation \tau \to \sigma = a \tau + b are called affine parameters.