Principle Of Covariance

In physics, the principle of covariance emphasizes the formulation of physical laws using only those physical quantities the measurements of which the observers in different frames of reference could unambiguously correlate.

Mathematically, the physical quantities must transform covariantly, that is, under a certain representation of the group of coordinate transformations between admissible frames of reference of the physical theory. This group is referred to as the covariance group.

The principle of covariance does not require invariance of the physical laws under the group of admissible transformations although in most cases the equations are actually invariant. However, in the theory of weak interactions, the equations are not invariant under reflections (but are, of course, still covariant).

Covariance in Newtonian mechanics

In Newtonian mechanics the admissible frames of reference are inertial frames with relative velocities much smaller than the speed of light. Time is then absolute and the transformations between admissible frames of references are Galilean transformations which (together with rotations, translations, and reflections) form the Galilean group. The covariant physical quantities are Euclidean scalars, vectors, and tensors. An example of a covariant equation is Newton's second law,

    Principle Of Covariance 

where the covariant quantities are the mass Principle Of Covariance  of a moving body (scalar), the velocity Principle Of Covariance  of the body (vector), the force Principle Of Covariance  acting on the body, and the invariant time Principle Of Covariance .

Covariance in special relativity

In special relativity the admissible frames of reference are all inertial frames. The transformations between frames are the Lorentz transformations which (together with the rotations, translations, and reflections) form the Poincaré group. The covariant quantities are four-scalars, four-vectors etc., of the Minkowski space (and also more complicated objects like bispinors and others). An example of a covariant equation is the Lorentz force equation of motion of a charged particle in an electromagnetic field (a generalization of Newton's second law)

    Principle Of Covariance [citation needed]

where Principle Of Covariance  and Principle Of Covariance  are the mass and charge of the particle (invariant 4-scalars); Principle Of Covariance  is the invariant interval (4-scalar); Principle Of Covariance  is the 4-velocity (4-vector); and Principle Of Covariance  is the electromagnetic field strength tensor (4-tensor).

Covariance in general relativity

In general relativity, the admissible frames of reference are all reference frames. The transformations between frames are all arbitrary (invertible and differentiable) coordinate transformations. The covariant quantities are scalar fields, vector fields, tensor fields etc., defined on spacetime considered as a manifold. Main example of covariant equation is the Einstein field equations.

See also

References

Tags:

Principle Of Covariance Covariance in Newtonian mechanicsPrinciple Of Covariance Covariance in special relativityPrinciple Of Covariance Covariance in general relativityPrinciple Of CovarianceFrame of reference

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Stephen CurryJennifer AnistonBrooke ShieldsMain Page2023 Scottish National Party leadership electionWindows Server 2016Kim KardashianMidjourneyResident EvilVande Bharat ExpressMount TakaheShrek (franchise)WokeLinda NolanChuck NorrisTwitterSelena GomezClient access licenseZlatan IbrahimovićShou Zi ChewAll Quiet on the Western Front (2022 film)2023 Israeli judicial reform protestsFC Bayern MunichList of mass shootings in the United States in 2023Donald TrumpBen AffleckTimothy McVeighChelsea F.C.Highland Park parade shootingFinlandIndian Premier LeagueEurythmicsEverything Everywhere All at OnceMarylandWinston ChurchillTu Jhoothi Main MakkaarRishi SunakMaltaNCAA Division I men's basketball tournamentMark WahlbergKnessetAzerbaijan2026 FIFA World CupVincent van GoghThom BierdzMiley CyrusList of NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament Final Four participantsShrinking (TV series)List of countries and dependencies by populationWikipediaFranklin D. RooseveltRina SawayamaBoston StranglerXXX (2002 film)William ShakespeareJudd ApatowPablo EscobarBlackpinkPornhubJackie ChanAnnie LennoxMegan FoxStephen HawkingJordan PetersonVal KilmerIrelandBrett GoldsteinBrock LesnarMexicoAtomic bombings of Hiroshima and NagasakiSwitzerlandTornado outbreak of March 24–26, 2023Chris Pratt🡆 More