A Galilean structure is a 5-tuple where is a 4-dimensional affine space, is a nonzero -linear map and is a real inner product on 3-dimensional -vector space .
The elements of will be called events. For any two events and we define the time interval between them to be . If the time interval between events and is then we say that and are simultaneous events. Fix an event . The set of all events which are simultaneous with is simply . Action of on thus restricts to an action of on which therefore becomes a 3-dimensional affine space.
If are simultaneous events we can speak of the space distance between them. It is simply the length of the parallel displacement with respect to the norm induced by inner product on :
However there is no natural choice of space distance between the events which are not simultaneous. We can not even say for two such events if they took place at the same point. Indeed, imagine that we define such a notion. Then the naturality would mean that that notion is determined solely in terms of Galilean structure. In other words it should be preserved by the maps between Galilean structure which preserve it in the following sense.
A map is called a Galilean transformation if it preserves the Galilean structure. More precisely, is an affine map such that
and for any three events .
Definition. Let . The uniform motion with velocity cooccuring with event is the Galilean transformation given by
The problem with non-simultaneous events above can now be restated as assertion that for any two non-simultaneous events and any event simultaneous with , the uniform motion where leaves intact and changes into . Thus if and ‘took place’ at the same point by some magic definition, that notion will be ruined by the Galilean transformation mentioned.
Lemma. Let be two points in some affine space over a division ring . The set
has a natural structure of a left 1-dimensional -vector space and therefore also the natural structure of a 1-dimensional -affine space. The inclusion of sets is an affine map.
Lemma. Let and be two non-simultaneous events in a Galilean structure . Then for every point there is exactly one point simultaneous with and belonging to .
Created on July 13, 2009 at 20:40:32. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.