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Galilean transformation(Redirected from Galilean transformations)
The Galilean transformation is used to transform between the coordinates of two coordinate systems in constant relative motion in Newtonian physics. This is the passive transformation point of view. The equations below, although apparently obvious, break down at speeds that approach the speed of light.
HistoryGalileo formulated these concepts in his description of uniform motion The topic was motivated by Galileo's description of the motion of a ball rolling down a ramp, by which he discovered the numerical value for the acceleration of gravity, at the surface of the Earth. The descriptions below are another mathematical notation for this concept. Translation (one dimension)Unlike the Galilean transformation, the relativistic Lorentz transformation can be shown to apply at all velocities so far measured, and the Galilean transformation can be regarded as a low-velocity approximation to the Lorentz transformation. The notation below describes the relationship of two coordinate systems (x′ and x) in constant relative motion (velocity u) in the x-direction. All other parameters (t, y, z) are unchanged in the transformation from x′ to x coordinates.
Galilean transformationsUnder the Erlangen program, the space-time (no longer spacetime) of nonrelativistic physics is described by the symmetry group generated by Galilean transformations, spatial and time translations and rotations. The Galilean symmetries (interpreted as active transformations) Spatial translations: Time translations: Boosts: Rotations: where R is an orthogonal matrix. Central extension of the Galilean group
We can now give it a central extension into the Lie algebra spanned by E', P'i, C'i, L'ij (antisymmetric tensor), M such that M commutes with everything (i.e. lies in the center, that's why it's called a central extension) and
Notes
See alsorepresentation theory of the Galilean group, Poincaré group The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
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