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Hello,
As known, any Lorentz transformation matrix \Lambda must obey the relation \Lambda^\mu~_\nu\Lambda^\rho~_\sigma g_{\mu \rho}=g_{\nu \sigma}. The same holds also for the inverse metric tensor g^{\nu \sigma} which has the same components as the metric tensor itself (don't really understand why every tex formula starts from a new line), i.e. \Lambda^\mu~_\nu\Lambda^\rho~_\sigma g^{\nu \sigma}=g^{\mu \rho}. Putting this all as a matrix relation, these two formulas are \Lambda^T~g~\Lambda=g,~~~\Lambda~g~\Lambda^T=g~~~~~(1), where g is the metric tensor (and also the inverse metric tensor, as they are both the same). From here one can deduce that \Lambda^T=\pm\Lambda, so Lorentz transformation matrix should be either symmetric or antisymmetric. And Everything was great until today, when in Weinberg's book on quantum field theory (vol.1, formula 2.5.26, http://www.scribd.com/doc/3082871/Steven-Weinberg-The-Quantum-Theory-of-Fields-Vol-1-Foundations , page 70, though it isn't much important) I met a Lorentz transformation matrix which is "almost" antisymmetric (it is antisymmetric, except for there aren't zero's on main diagonal).
So I guess I'm wrong somewhere. Isn't the Lorentz transformation matrix restricted to be either symmetric or antisymmetric? Or the equations (1) have other solutions too?
As known, any Lorentz transformation matrix \Lambda must obey the relation \Lambda^\mu~_\nu\Lambda^\rho~_\sigma g_{\mu \rho}=g_{\nu \sigma}. The same holds also for the inverse metric tensor g^{\nu \sigma} which has the same components as the metric tensor itself (don't really understand why every tex formula starts from a new line), i.e. \Lambda^\mu~_\nu\Lambda^\rho~_\sigma g^{\nu \sigma}=g^{\mu \rho}. Putting this all as a matrix relation, these two formulas are \Lambda^T~g~\Lambda=g,~~~\Lambda~g~\Lambda^T=g~~~~~(1), where g is the metric tensor (and also the inverse metric tensor, as they are both the same). From here one can deduce that \Lambda^T=\pm\Lambda, so Lorentz transformation matrix should be either symmetric or antisymmetric. And Everything was great until today, when in Weinberg's book on quantum field theory (vol.1, formula 2.5.26, http://www.scribd.com/doc/3082871/Steven-Weinberg-The-Quantum-Theory-of-Fields-Vol-1-Foundations , page 70, though it isn't much important) I met a Lorentz transformation matrix which is "almost" antisymmetric (it is antisymmetric, except for there aren't zero's on main diagonal).
So I guess I'm wrong somewhere. Isn't the Lorentz transformation matrix restricted to be either symmetric or antisymmetric? Or the equations (1) have other solutions too?
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