Understanding Lorentz Factor & Proper Time Invariance

In summary: This is still a confusing concept for me.In summary, the Lorentz transformation for proper time is an invariant quantity, meaning it is the same in all moving reference frames. However, time dilation, which refers to the relationship between coordinate time and proper time, is not frame invariant and can vary between reference frames. Proper time is the time measured by a clock along its worldline and is not affected by the motion of the observer, while coordinate time can vary depending on the reference frame.
  • #1
e2m2a
354
11
This is still a confusing concept for me. The Lorentz transformation for proper time is expressed as tau = (1-v sq/c sq)^1/2 x coordinate time. Now we are told that tau is an invariant quantity with respect to all moving reference frames. So how can tau be invariant if its value depends on v in the above transformation equation? Seems like a contradiction.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
e2m2a said:
This is still a confusing concept for me. The Lorentz transformation for proper time is expressed as tau = (1-v sq/c sq)^1/2 x coordinate time. Now we are told that tau is an invariant quantity with respect to all moving reference frames. So how can tau be invariant if its value depends on v in the above transformation equation? Seems like a contradiction.
There is no Lorentz Transformation of proper time. Proper time is an invariant (if defined as the time measured by a clock along its worldline.)
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and PeterDonis
  • #3
Apart from what @PeroK said, the v must be there precisely to make the expression invariant because coordinate time is not.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #4
e2m2a said:
This is still a confusing concept for me. The Lorentz transformation for proper time is expressed as tau = (1-v sq/c sq)^1/2 x coordinate time. Now we are told that tau is an invariant quantity with respect to all moving reference frames. So how can tau be invariant if its value depends on v in the above transformation equation? Seems like a contradiction.

Invariant is the spacetime interval between 2 events (for example clock ticks):
##\Delta s = \sqrt{\left | c^2 \Delta t^2 - \Delta x^2 - \Delta y^2 - \Delta z^2 \right |} = \sqrt{\left | c^2 \Delta t'^2 - \Delta x'^2 - \Delta y'^2 - \Delta z'^2 \right |}##

If the clock is at rest in the primed frame, then
##\Delta x'^2 = \Delta y'^2 = \Delta z'^2 =0##

Under this condition and at timelike spacetime distance ##t' = \tau##:
##\Delta s = \sqrt{ c^2 \Delta t^2 - (\Delta x^2 + \Delta y^2 + \Delta z^2 )} = c \Delta \tau ##

##\Delta \tau / \Delta t = \sqrt{1 - v^2/c^2}##
 
  • Like
Likes Imager, Dale and vanhees71
  • #5
PeroK said:
There is no Lorentz Transformation of proper time. Proper time is an invariant (if defined as the time measured by a clock along its worldline.)
1645554484860.png
Okay, this is the Lorentz transformation equation taken from the hyperphysics website. Is Tsub0 proper time in this equation?
 
  • #6
e2m2a said:
this is the Lorentz transformation eqution
No, it's not. The Lorentz transformation equation for ##t## includes a term in ##x##.

e2m2a said:
taken from the hyperphysics website.
Please give a link. I suspect you are misinterpreting what the article is saying.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #7
Okay, so this is the source of my confusion. Then please explain what is Tsub0 representing?
 
  • #8
e2m2a said:
Then please explain what is Tsub0 representing?
I have no idea since I can't read the article you are referencing because you have not provided a link to it. Please do so.
 
  • #10
e2m2a said:
Ok. This is describing time dilation. The equation you posted is a relationship between the coordinate time elapsed in the primed frame (in which the object whose time dilation is being assessed is at rest), denoted by ##T_0##, and coordinate time elapsed in the unprimed frame (in which some observer is assessing the time dilation of the object), denoted by ##T##. The equation is derived from the Lorentz transformation, but it is not itself a Lorentz transformation equation for anything.

Since the object whose time dilation is being assessed is at rest in the primed frame, the elapsed coordinate time in that frame, ##T_0##, will also be the elapsed proper time for the object. But the elapsed proper time does not transform between frames; it's an invariant.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #11
e2m2a said:
##\tau_0## here is the lifetime of a particle in its own rest frame. The invariant quantity is how long it lives, as measured in its own rest frame. Its lifetime is longer when measured in a frame where it is moving - denoted by ##\tau##. This is not to be confused with proper time.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #12
PeterDonis said:
Ok. This is describing time dilation. The equation you posted is a relationship between the coordinate time elapsed in the primed frame (in which the object whose time dilation is being assessed is at rest), denoted by ##T_0##, and coordinate time elapsed in the unprimed frame (in which some observer is assessing the time dilation of the object), denoted by ##T##. The equation is derived from the Lorentz transformation, but it is not itself a Lorentz transformation equation for anything.

Since the object whose time dilation is being assessed is at rest in the primed frame, the elapsed coordinate time in that frame, ##T_0##, will also be the elapsed proper time for the object. But the elapsed proper time does not transform between frames; it's an invariant.
So I must look deeper into this. Proper time and time dilation are two different concepts . They are not talking about the same thing. It can get confusing. So time dilation is not frame invariant but proper time is. Correct?
 
  • #13
e2m2a said:
So time dilation is not frame invariant but proper time is. Correct?
Frame invariance refers to measured quantities that are the same in every frame. The most important example is the length of a spacetime interval between two events is frame invariant. This implies that proper time of a particle is frame invariant.

Time dilation refers to the relationship between coordinate time in a reference frame and the time measured by a moving clock (proper time of that clock). This varies between reference frames, because the speed of the clock varies between reference frames. For example, in a frame where a clock is at rest, there is no time dilation; but, in a frame where the clock is moving it is measured to be time dilated.

Note that it's not correct to say that the proper time is dilated, because proper time is the length of the spacetime interval, which is frame invariant.

That is, perhaps, a subtle point.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #14
e2m2a said:
Proper time and time dilation are two different concepts .
Correct.

e2m2a said:
So time dilation is not frame invariant but proper time is. Correct?
Yes. Different observers for which an object is moving at different relative speeds will see different time dilations for the same object. But the object's proper time is invariant.
 
  • Like
Likes cianfa72, vanhees71 and PeroK
  • #15
PeroK said:
Frame invariance refers to measured quantities that are the same in every frame. The most important example is the length of a spacetime interval between two events is frame invariant. This implies that proper time of a particle is frame invariant.

Time dilation refers to the relationship between coordinate time in a reference frame and the time measured by a moving clock (proper time of that clock). This varies between reference frames, because the speed of the clock varies between reference frames. For example, in a frame where a clock is at rest, there is no time dilation; but, in a frame where the clock is moving it is measured to be time dilated.

Note that it's not correct to say that the proper time is dilated, because proper time is the length of the spacetime interval, which is frame invariant.

That is, perhaps, a subtle point.
Yes, that helps clear it up. But one other thing has been bothering me. This graph of the worldline below. Is this a graph from the point of view of the observer in the moving frame or is this the graph from the point of view of an observer not in the moving frame?
1645558752708.png
 
  • #16
e2m2a said:
Yes, that helps clear it up. But one other thing has been bothering me. This graph of the worldline below. Is this a graph from the point of view of the observer in the moving frame or is this the graph from the point of view of an observer not in the moving frame? View attachment 297468
There's no such thing as a "moving" frame and a "not moving" frame. Frames are either inertial or not inertial. In this case, that's a frame in which the particle is moving.

There will also be a frame where the particle is at rest (although in this case that might not be an inertial frame).
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #17
e2m2a said:
This graph of the worldline below.
How did you produce this graph?
 
  • #18
e2m2a said:
Yes, that helps clear it up. But one other thing has been bothering me. This graph of the worldline below. Is this a graph from the point of view of the observer in the moving frame or is this the graph from the point of view of an observer not in the moving frame? View attachment 297468

This diagram might create the wrong impression, that ##\tau > t##, but it is always ##\tau <= t##, see comment #4. Spacetime geometry is not Euclidean. See the reversed triangle inequality in Minkowski geometry:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minkowski_space#The_reversed_triangle_inequality
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and PeroK
  • #20
Sagittarius A-Star said:
This diagram might create the wrong impression, that ##\tau > t##, but it is always ##\tau <= t##, see comment #4. Spacetime geometry is not Euclidean. See the reversed triangle inequality in Minkowski geometry:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minkowski_space#The_reversed_triangle_inequality
I agree. I wish whoever makes graphs like this makes sure they are more precise in getting the correct ideas of relativity across. Adds to the confusion.
 
  • #21
e2m2a said:
Yes, that helps clear it up. But one other thing has been bothering me. This graph of the worldline below. Is this a graph from the point of view of the observer in the moving frame or is this the graph from the point of view of an observer not in the moving frame? View attachment 297468
From the page with that diagram:

The dark blue vertical line represents an inertial observer measuring a coordinate time interval t between events E1 and E2. The red curve represents a clock measuring its proper time interval τ between the same two events.
 
  • Like
Likes Motore and vanhees71
  • #22
e2m2a said:
I agree. I wish whoever makes graphs like this makes sure they are more precise in getting the correct ideas of relativity across. Adds to the confusion.
You cannot draw a graph that is faithful to distances in Minkowski space on a paper with a Euclidean metric. It is simply not possible because the metrics are fundamentally different. It is simply not something a person making the graphs can do. It is up to the person writing the surrounding text and you as a reader to make sure the message gets across properly.
 
  • Like
Likes Dale, vanhees71 and DrGreg
  • #23
e2m2a said:
I wish whoever makes graphs like this makes sure they are more precise in getting the correct ideas of relativity across. Adds to the confusion.
It's unreasonable to expect to fully understand a picture you've found on Google unless you have visited the web page it came from and read the text that goes with it.

The extract that appears on Google has been chosen by A.I., not a human being, so might not be an adequate explanation of the picture.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #24
Orodruin said:
e2m2a said:
I agree. I wish whoever makes graphs like this makes sure they are more precise in getting the correct ideas of relativity across. Adds to the confusion.
You cannot draw a graph that is faithful to distances in Minkowski space on a paper with a Euclidean metric. It is simply not possible because the metrics are fundamentally different. It is simply not something a person making the graphs can do. It is up to the person writing the surrounding text and you as a reader to make sure the message gets across properly.

As @Orodruin essentially says,
one can't measure elapsed time along a worldline on a Minkowski diagram (a position-vs-time graph) with a standard [Euclidean] ruler.
[In fact, you can't use a standard ruler to measure elapsed time along a worldline on a PHY-101 position-vs-time graph.]


Instead of the ruler's tickmarks, we need something else---
like the tickmarks determined by the light-signals in a ticking light-clock:
1645570580059.png

(the light-clock diamonds have equal area).
I got this diagram from my https://www.geogebra.org/m/HYD7hB9v#material/VrQgQq9R
For more information, see my PF Insights (link in my sig).By the way,
by writing [tex] T=T_0 \gamma [/tex]
as [tex] T=T_0 \cosh\theta [/tex]
where ##\theta## is the Minkowski-angle (called the rapidity) so ##v=c\tanh\theta##,
we can more easily see the Euclidean analogue
is
[tex] T=T_0 \cos\phi, [/tex]
where ##T_0## is the hypotenuse of a right-triangle and
##T## is the component adjacent to ##\phi##
using axes parallel to ##\hat T## and perpendicular to ##\hat T##.
Note that
[tex] T_0=\frac{T}{\cos\phi}=T\sqrt{1+m^2}, [/tex]
where ##m=\tan\phi## is the relative-slope.
Both ##T## and ##\sqrt{1+m^2}## depend on the choice of axes (used to break ##\vec T_0## into components), however, this product is an "invariant", independent of that choice of axes.
So, similarly, in the first post,
[tex] T_0=\frac{T}{\cosh\theta}=T\sqrt{1-(v/c)^2} [/tex]
is an "invariant", independent of that choice of inertial observer.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #25
e2m2a said:
View attachment 297465 Okay, this is the Lorentz transformation equation taken from the hyperphysics website. Is Tsub0 proper time in this equation?
That is not a Lorentz transformation, it is the time dilation formula. It describes the relationship between two unrelated proper times between two physically unrelated pairs of events.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #26
That's the usual problem with Minkowski diagrams. Students often don't understand that they must read it completely different than from we are all used to since elementary school, being taught Euclidean geometry on a plane. While in the Euclidean geometry you have a positive definite fundamental form and circles to construct lines of constant distance from a point, that's not the case for the Minkowski fundamental form, which has a signature (1,-1) in the planar Minkowski diagrams we draw as an attempt to graphically illustrate the algebra of this fundamental form and the isomorphisms wrt. this form, which are the Lorentz transformations (or rather the Poincare transformations for the Minkowski plane as an affine manifold). The lines of "constant distance from a point" are hyperbola rather than circles, and that makes a great difference. To read the Minkowski diagram of two inertial frames, where one moves with velocity ##v## against the other, you have to construct the units on the axes of one of the frames from those arbitrarily chosen of the other by drawing the corresponding unit hyperbolae in contradistinction to the Euclidean affine plane, where you construct them with circles. Thus reading the units of the two frames in the Minowski plane in terms of the Euclidean definition makes them look as being of different length although in fact they are not, because you have to read the Minkowski plane as a Minkowski and not a Euclidean plane.
 
  • Like
Likes cianfa72 and Dale
  • #27
vanhees71 said:
That's the usual problem with Minkowski diagrams. Students often don't understand that they must read it completely different than from we are all used to since elementary school, being taught Euclidean geometry on a plane.
...
Thus reading the units of the two frames in the Minowski plane in terms of the Euclidean definition makes them look as being of different length although in fact they are not, because you have to read the Minkowski plane as a Minkowski and not a Euclidean plane.
And practically everything you have said here applies to the PHY-101 position-vs-time graph,
except that its "circle" is different.

In the diagram provided by the OP in #15, in Galilean relativity, the two arcs have the same elapsed wristwatch time...the same arc-length in the appropriate geometry (https://books.google.com/books?id=AC1OCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA226&dq=geroch+galilean+viewpoint , https://www.amazon.com/dp/0387903321/?tag=pfamazon01-20 , https://www.amazon.com/dp/3642172857/?tag=pfamazon01-20, http://trautman.fuw.edu.pl/publications/Papers-in-pdf/22.pdf , https://arxiv.org/abs/0908.2832 , or whatever people want to call the constructions) for the PHY-101 diagram.

But once the circle is established, many constructions follow in analogy... for example, "orthogonality to a radius" by "tangent to a circle"... then "angles" by [spacelike-arc-length along the unit circle] or areas of sectors in a unit circle.

That's why I advocate learning about the PHY101-position-vs-diagram from this non-Euclidean viewpoint, connecting kinematics and affine geometry with a one-parameter family of quadratic-forms, as a steppingstone from the Euclidean plane to the Minkowski diagram... made more concrete in my spacetime diagrammer (time-rightward) https://www.desmos.com/calculator/awgqxtkqcc and (time-upward) https://www.desmos.com/calculator/emqe6uyzha .
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes Dale
  • #28
In Newtonian physics the corresponding spacetime plane is also not a Euclidean plane of course. Here the construction looks as follows:

galilei-diagram.png

Unfortunately I've drawn it with the time axis to the right and the spatial axis up instead of the usual convention for the Minkowski plane. This diagram, however, doesn't help anybody to understand Newtonian boost symmetry and thus nobody uses it. Perhaps it would also be better, not to introduce Minkowski diagrams in teaching SR. As I said somewhere else in these forums, I'm always somewhat in doubt, whether Minkowski diagrams really help.
 
  • #29
vanhees71 said:
Perhaps it would also be better, not to introduce Minkowski diagrams in teaching SR. As I said somewhere else in these forums, I'm always somewhat in doubt, whether Minkowski diagrams really help.
I do think they help, but only if they are introduced properly and carefully.
 
  • Like
Likes Motore and robphy
  • #30
vanhees71 said:
In Newtonian physics the corresponding spacetime plane is also not a Euclidean plane of course. Here the construction looks as follows:

View attachment 297515

Unfortunately I've drawn it with the time axis to the right and the spatial axis up instead of the usual convention for the Minkowski plane. This diagram, however, doesn't help anybody to understand Newtonian boost symmetry and thus nobody uses it. Perhaps it would also be better, not to introduce Minkowski diagrams in teaching SR. As I said somewhere else in these forums, I'm always somewhat in doubt, whether Minkowski diagrams really help.
For novices, I think drawing the t-axis to the right (like in PHY 101) is the better approach than using the usual SR-convention right away. In addition, the connection with Euclidean geometry is easier since we can talk about angles-with-respect-to-the-x-axis and define slope with the usual "rise over run".

After getting comfortable with the geometric and trigonometric analogies and their physical interpretations, then switch to the SR-convention.Note that your dashed-line is the Galilean unit-circle.
Tangents to this circle are "spacelike" because this tangency defines orthogonal to "timelike" worldlines.

Furthermore, note that your dashed line is parallel to the eigenvector of the Newtonian boost.
Physically, this implies "absolute simultaneity" (if P and Q are simultaneous according to Alice, then they are simultaneous according to Bob in the Galilean spacetime model)
and
that (since its eigenvalue equals 1) "lengths of segments along the x-axis" ("absolute lengths of purely spatial displacements") are unchanged by the boost.
I would argue that it's more likely that:
recognizing the Newtonian boost symmetry from this diagram is "unfamiliar".As Geroch (in his General Relativity from A to B) describes it (using the time-upwards convention)
from the chapter called "The Galilean View" on page 42.
1645639719121.png
and later on pg.47
1645640845882.png
and concluding on pg. 52
The Galilean view, although it takes a little getting used to,
is really a simple and remarkably natural attitude about how
space and time operate. It would be easy to be lulled into the
position that it represents the only reasonable attitude one could take.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #31
vanhees71 said:
I'm always somewhat in doubt, whether Minkowski diagrams really help.
They really helped me. It was Minkowski diagrams and the concept of four-vectors that made relativity click for me.

I think different students are going to “get it” with different mental tools. So educators need to know and use all of them. Of course, it is ok to have a favorite one and it is ok for that favorite to be different from person to person
 
  • Like
Likes nitsuj, cianfa72, robphy and 1 other person
  • #32
PeroK said:
...in a frame where the clock is moving it is measured to be time dilated.

Note that it's not correct to say that the proper time is dilated, because proper time is the length of the spacetime interval, which is frame invariant.

That is, perhaps, a subtle point.
imo is crucial for better understanding.
I find the part I underlined to be VERY well worded. Textbook quality imo. (only thing I can think of is including the spatial separation between measurement taken and the thing being measured. for example "is measured at a distance to be time dilated.")

I get that is very implicit as was mentioned there is relative motion. but feel it may help separate the concepts [proper / dilated time] a bit quicker for those new to them.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
  • #33
Dale said:
They really helped me. It was Minkowski diagrams and the concept of four-vectors that made relativity click for me.

I think different students are going to “get it” with different mental tools. So educators need to know and use all of them. Of course, it is ok to have a favorite one and it is ok for that favorite to be different from person to person
me too, though of course to a MUCH lesser understanding than you have. (you've explained lots to me years ago)
I found the simple light clock to be very helpful too, for me helped visualize / see it play out.

The Minkowski modeling gets into comparatively more abstracted presentation than the idealized clock imo, but of course is a math tool of sorts, the idealized light clock is just an imaginary thing that helps my simple mind figuratively see the "mechanics" of this "tiny bit" of spacetime physics.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and Dale

1. What is the Lorentz factor and how is it related to special relativity?

The Lorentz factor, denoted by the symbol γ, is a mathematical term used in special relativity to describe the relationship between an object's velocity and its mass, length, and time. It is calculated by the formula γ = 1/√(1-v²/c²), where v is the object's velocity and c is the speed of light. This factor is crucial in understanding the effects of time dilation and length contraction in special relativity.

2. What is proper time and why is it important in special relativity?

Proper time, denoted by the symbol τ, is the time measured by a clock that is at rest relative to the observer. It is a fundamental concept in special relativity as it is the only time that remains constant for all observers, regardless of their relative velocities. Proper time is important because it allows for the calculation of time dilation and the preservation of causality in special relativity.

3. How does the Lorentz factor affect the measurement of time and distance in special relativity?

The Lorentz factor plays a crucial role in the measurement of time and distance in special relativity. As an object's velocity approaches the speed of light, the Lorentz factor increases, resulting in time dilation and length contraction. This means that an observer will measure a longer time interval and a shorter distance for a moving object than an observer at rest with the object.

4. Does the Lorentz factor apply only to objects moving at high speeds?

No, the Lorentz factor applies to all objects, regardless of their speed. However, its effects become more significant as the object's velocity approaches the speed of light. For objects moving at everyday speeds, the Lorentz factor is very close to 1, so its effects are negligible and can be ignored in calculations.

5. Is the Lorentz factor the same for all observers in special relativity?

Yes, the Lorentz factor is the same for all observers in special relativity. This is because it is a fundamental property of the universe and is derived from the principles of special relativity. It allows for the consistency of physical laws and the preservation of causality for all observers, regardless of their relative velocities.

Similar threads

  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
9
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
20
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
3
Replies
101
Views
3K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
21
Views
491
Replies
17
Views
758
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
54
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
48
Views
3K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
5
Views
1K
Replies
26
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
32
Views
3K
Back
Top