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Can anyone help to recognise the following equation?
Hi,
It is a long story, and maths really isn't my greatest strength... so I'm here to ask the help of you clever lot :)
Basically, I am trying to find out what the following equation represents? Does anyone here recognise it and what it means/refers to?
Attachment 24398
Many thanks for the help, if indeed you can.
Kind regards,
Kris
p.s. This has nothing to do with any course I am on, so I'm not trying to cheat on anything.
Re: Can anyone help to recognise the following equation?
I understand that it could also be a formula/algorithm. I'm an artist, and very much of the right brain... which is why I ask for help. Thanks again.
Re: Can anyone help to recognise the following equation?
Re: Can anyone help to recognise the following equation?
Right, many thanks for the pointer!
So just trying to get my head around this. The image I posted up above represents (in part) time, minus (velocity, divided by the squared of the speed of light) which is represented by X.
Then, the square root...
l (length?) minus (velocity divided by the speed of light) squared
and all of this equates to i.
Sorry, I'm sure I'm very out on this. I know that "i" could represent anything. But I assume that the part that follows is the description that tells you what "i" actually represents.
So, is this purely another way of expressing observation of a moving object? Like I say, this is a whole different realm to what I am used to. I don't expect a lesson though. Just help in working out the correct description of what this represents. Though I will begin to work through many of the lessons on here. Better late than never huh! :)
Thank you for any help.
Re: Can anyone help to recognise the following equation?
This is a formula of the Lorentz transformation used in the special relativity theory.
Imagine two frame of references (coordinate systems) F and F'. Suppose they coincide at time t = 0 and F' is moving right at the speed v. Then the same point in space-time has different coordinates in the two frames: (x, y, z, t) in F and (x', y', z', t') in F' . Since F' moves right, i.e., along the x-axis, the y- and z-coordinates coincide in F and F': y' = y and z' = z. Similarly, in Newtonian mechanics, the time coordinate coincide: t' = t because it is assumed that the time flows at the same rate in every frame. As far as the x' coordinate in F', we have x' = x - vt. For example, the origin of F has coordinates (0, 0, 0, t) in F, but (-vt, 0, 0, t) in F' because F' leaves the origin of F further and further behind.
In the special relativity theory, t' is also different from t, and the difference grows as v approaches the speed of light c. We have
. I think the left-hand side of the formula in the OP is t', not i, and the first symbol under the square root is 1, not l.
Re: Can anyone help to recognise the following equation?
Many, many thanks. You are a true star. I shall investigate further!
Yes, I think you are right about the i being a "t". I wish I understood everything you said in your post, but it is a language that I still have much to learn about.
Anyway, thank you so much for your help folks.
Kris