Sujet : Re: Space-time interval...
De : mikko.levanto (at) *nospam* iki.fi (Mikko)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativityDate : 13. Aug 2024, 12:38:10
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On 2024-08-12 09:27:04 +0000, Richard Hachel said:
What is the space-time interval?
To describe it, mathematically, and not semantically,
because it may be an abstract construction requiring a complex number, we use the formula ds²=dl²-dt².
That doesn't make the "thing" much clearer.
In an orthogonal isometric coordinate system ds² = dt²-dx²-dy²-dz².
If ds² = 0 the line element is light-like. If ds² > 0 the line element
is time-like and √(ds²) is proper time. If ds² < 0 the line element
is space-like and √(-ds²) is proper distance.
Although the formula refers to a particular coordinate system any other
orthogonal isometric coordinate system can be used instead and ds² is
the same.
-- Mikko