Minkowski space
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- Not to be confused with the fictional Minovsky Physics.
Note: This article only describes the mathematics of Minkowski space. For physical descriptions see Special relativity.
Structure
Formally, Minkowski space is a four-dimensional real vector space equipped with a nondegenerate, symmetric bilinear form with signature (-,+,+,+). Elements of Minkowski space are called events or four-vectors. Minkowski space is often denoted R1,3 to emphasize the signature, although it is also denoted M 4 or simply M.The Minkowski inner product
This inner product is similar to the usual, Euclidean, inner product, but is used to describe a different geometry; the geometry usually associated with relativity. Let [ M ] be a 4-dimensional real vector space. The Minkowski inner product is a map [\eta : M \times M \rightarrow \R] (i.e. given any two vectors [ V, W ] in [ M ] we define [ \eta(V,W) ] as a real number) which satisfies properties (1), (2), (3) listed here, as well as property (4) given below:
Note that this is not an inner product in the usual sense, since it is not positive-definite, i.e. the Minkowski norm of a vector [V], defined as [V^2 \, = \eta(V, V)], need not be positive. The positive-definite condition has been replaced by the weaker condition of nondegeneracy (every positive-definite form is nondegenerate but not vice-versa).The inner product is said to be indefinite.
Just as in Euclidean space, two vectors are said to be orthogonal if [\eta (V, W) \, = 0].But there is a paradigm shift in Minkowski space to include hyperbolic-orthogonal events in case V and W span a plane where η takes negative values.This shift to a new paradigm is clarified by comparing the Euclidean structure of the ordinary complex number plane to the structure of the plane of split-complex numbers.
A vector [V] is called a unit vector if [V^2 = \pm 1]. A basis for M consisting of mutually orthogonal unit vectors is called an orthonormal basis.
There is a theorem stating that any inner product space satisfying conditions 1-3 above always has an orthonormal basis. Furthermore, the theorem states that the number of positive and negative unit vectors in any such basis is fixed. This pair of numbers is called the signature of the inner product.
Then the fourth condition on [\eta] can be stated:
Standard basis
A standard basis for Minkowski space is a set of four mutually orthogonal vectors (e0, e1, e2, e3) such that- [-\left(e_0\right)^2 = (e_1)^2 = (e_2)^2 = (e_3)^2 = 1]
- [\langle e_\mu, e_\nu \rangle = \eta_]
- [\eta = \begin-1&0&0&0\\0&1&0&0\\0&0&1&0\\0&0&0&1\end]
In terms of components, the inner product between two vectors [V] and [W] is given by
- [\langle V,W\rangle = \eta_V^\mu W^\nu = -V^0W^0 + V^1W^1 + V^2W^2 + V^3W^3]
- [V^2 \, = \eta_V^\mu V^\nu = -(V^0)^2+(V^1)^2+(V^2)^2+(V^3)^2]
Alternative definition
The section above defines Minkowski space as a vector space. There is an alternative definition of Minkowski space as an affine space which views Minkowski space as a homogeneous space of the Poincaré group with the Lorentz group as the stabilizer. See Erlangen program.Lorentz transformations
See: Lorentz transformations, Lorentz group, Poincaré groupCausal structure
Four-vectors are classified according to the sign of their (Minkowski) inner product. For four-vectors, [U], [V] and [W], the classification is as follows:
- [V] is timelike if and only if: [\eta_V^aV^b \, = V^aV_a <0 ]
- [U] is spacelike if and only if [\eta_U^aU^b \, = U^aU_a > 0]
- [W] is null (lightlike) if and only if [\eta_W^aW^b \, =W^aW_a = 0 ]
Vector fields are called timelike, spacelike or null if the associated vectors are timelike, spacelike or null at each point where the field is defined.
A useful result regarding null vectors is that if two null vectors are orthogonal (zero inner product), then they must be proportional.
Once a direction of time is chosen, timelike and null vectors can be further decomposed into various classes. For timelike vectors we have
- future directed timelike vectors whose first component is negative, and
- past directed timelike vectors whose first component is positive.
- the zero vector, whose components in any basis are (0,0,0,0),
- future directed null vectors whose first component is negative, and
- past directed null vectors whose first component is positive.
An orthonormal basis for Minkowski space necessarily consists of one timelike and three spacelike unit vectors. If one wishes to work with non-orthonormal bases it is possible to have other combinations of vectors. For example, one can easily construct a (non-orthonormal) basis consisting entirely of null vectors, called a null basis.
Locally flat spacetime
Strictly speaking, the use of the Minkowski space to describe physical systems over finite distances applies only in the Newtonian limit of systems without significant gravitation. In the case of significant gravitation, spacetime becomes curved and one must abandon special relativity in favor of the full theory of general relativity.Nevertheless, even in such cases, Minkowski space is still a good description in an infinitesimally small region surrounding any point (barring gravitational singularities). More abstractly, we say that in the presence of gravity spacetime is described by a curved 4-dimensional manifold for which the tangent space to any point is a 4-dimensional Minkowski space. Thus, the structure of Minkowski space is still essential in the description of general relativity.
In the limit of weak gravity, spacetime becomes flat and looks globally, not just locally, like Minkowski space. For this reason Minkowski space is often referred to as flat spacetime.
History
Minkowski space is named for the German mathematician Hermann Minkowski, who around 1907 realized that the theory of special relativity previously worked out by Einstein and Lorentz could be elegantly described using a four-dimensional spacetime, which combines the dimension of time with the three dimensions of space.“The views of space and time which I wish to lay before you have sprung from the soil of experimental physics, and therein lies their strength. They are radical. Henceforth space by itself, and time by itself, are doomed to fade away into mere shadows, and only a kind of union of the two will preserve an independent reality.” – Hermann Minkowski, 1908The way had been prepared for Minkowski's space by the issue of hyperbolic quaternions in the 1890s.In fact, as a mathematical structure, Minkowski space can be taken as hyperbolic quaternions, minus the multiplicative product, retaining only the quadratic form qq*.
See also
- Euclidean space
- spacetime
- speed of light
- world line
- metric tensor
- Lorentzian manifold
- Georg Bernhard Riemann
- hyperbolic space
- hyperboloid model
- Erlangen program
- split-complex number
- hyperbolic quaternions
- Electromagnetic tensor
References
- Naber, Gregory L., The Geometry of Minkowski Spacetime, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1992. ISBN 0-387-97848-8 (hardcover), ISBN 0-486-43235-1 (Dover paperback edition).
- Walter, Scott [Minkowski, Mathematicians, and the Mathematical Theory of Relativity].
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