- #1
therapeuter
- 18
- 0
hello,
i'm reading Einstein's popular book, On the Special and General Relativity,
i'm on Appendix two, Minkowski's Four-Dimensional Space ("World")
http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/einstein/works/1910s/relative/ap02.htm
however, i ran into such problem here. Einstein says
"We can characterise the Lorentz transformation still more simply if we introduce the imaginary square root of -1 times ct in place of t, as time-variable."
i know that the goal is to square this imaginary square root of -1 times ct in order to get -c^2t^2 which is in the previous simple derivation of Lorentz Transformation:
x'^2 + y'^2 + z'^2 - c2^t'^2 = x^2 + y^2 + z^2 - c^2t^2
but this the imaginary square root of -1 times ct is the distance traveled by light after time t, not time t (time travelled) itself, isn't it? if anyone knows this please tell me.
i'm reading Einstein's popular book, On the Special and General Relativity,
i'm on Appendix two, Minkowski's Four-Dimensional Space ("World")
http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/einstein/works/1910s/relative/ap02.htm
however, i ran into such problem here. Einstein says
"We can characterise the Lorentz transformation still more simply if we introduce the imaginary square root of -1 times ct in place of t, as time-variable."
i know that the goal is to square this imaginary square root of -1 times ct in order to get -c^2t^2 which is in the previous simple derivation of Lorentz Transformation:
x'^2 + y'^2 + z'^2 - c2^t'^2 = x^2 + y^2 + z^2 - c^2t^2
but this the imaginary square root of -1 times ct is the distance traveled by light after time t, not time t (time travelled) itself, isn't it? if anyone knows this please tell me.