- #36
nikolakis
- 26
- 0
Well, starting with the familiar [itex]ℝ^{3}[/itex] manifold, let's examine what a natural representation of a metric space equipped with ds = [itex]\sqrt{dx^{2}+4dy^{2}}[/itex] would be.
Let
X=x,
Y=y,
Z=[itex]\sqrt{3}[/itex] y
ds = [itex]\sqrt{dX^{2}+dY^{2}+dZ^{2}}[/itex] is inherited from [itex]ℝ^{3}[/itex], hence ds = [itex]\sqrt{dx^{2}+4dy^{2}}[/itex] . It is the projection of Z=[itex]\sqrt{3}[/itex] Y plane onto Z=0.
Any creature living on the Z=0 plane equipped with the aforementioned metric should measure the same lengths as one living on the Z=[itex]\sqrt{3}[/itex] Y plane. For example, a distance of dy=1, dx=0 on the Z=0 plane, corresponds to ds=2 on the Z=[itex]\sqrt{3}[/itex] Y plane.
But, since the tangent of any angle is nothing but the ratio of lengths of the sides of orthogonal triangles, the velocity expressed by this angle must remain unchanged.
Because the lengths don't change!
Therefore, v = 2dy/dx, not v=dy/dx !
Let
X=x,
Y=y,
Z=[itex]\sqrt{3}[/itex] y
ds = [itex]\sqrt{dX^{2}+dY^{2}+dZ^{2}}[/itex] is inherited from [itex]ℝ^{3}[/itex], hence ds = [itex]\sqrt{dx^{2}+4dy^{2}}[/itex] . It is the projection of Z=[itex]\sqrt{3}[/itex] Y plane onto Z=0.
Any creature living on the Z=0 plane equipped with the aforementioned metric should measure the same lengths as one living on the Z=[itex]\sqrt{3}[/itex] Y plane. For example, a distance of dy=1, dx=0 on the Z=0 plane, corresponds to ds=2 on the Z=[itex]\sqrt{3}[/itex] Y plane.
But, since the tangent of any angle is nothing but the ratio of lengths of the sides of orthogonal triangles, the velocity expressed by this angle must remain unchanged.
Because the lengths don't change!
Therefore, v = 2dy/dx, not v=dy/dx !