Module II: Relativity and Electrodynamics: Lecture 4: Covariant and Contravariant 4-Vectors
Module II: Relativity and Electrodynamics: Lecture 4: Covariant and Contravariant 4-Vectors
Outline
Examples of 4-vectors: x, , p, J, A, u, a
Coming up...
Examples of 4-vectors: x, , p, J, A, u, a
A 4-vector is a 4-component object whose components transform under a change of frame either like the differentials (cdt , dx , dy , dz ), or
like the derivatives ( ct ) , x , y , z . In the former case, it is a contravariant vector. In the latter case, it is a covariant vector.
We shall later see that a vector itself may be treated as a geometrical object, which may be represented by its covariant or contravariant components. We shall represent the 4-vectors by sans-serif notation X. Their contravariant components will be represented by Xk and the covariant components will be represented by Xk (k {0, 1, 2, 3}).
Lorentz transformations of dx
We already know how the coordinates transform under a boost along x -axis: cdt 0 0 cdt dx dx 0 0 . (1) dy = 0 0 1 0 dy dz 0 0 0 1 dz We write the above equation as dx = dx , or dx k =
m
km dxm
(2)
where dxm = (dx0 , dx1 , dx2 , dx3 ) = (cdt , dx , dy , dz ). The above equation may be looked upon simply as a matrix equation at the moment. (Later, well interpret it as a tensor equation, but that is getting ahead of ourselves.)
Contravariant components
Chain rule for differentials implies dx k = Thus, km = x k / xm . Any 4-component object X that transforms as X = X is a contravariant vector. Thus, a contravariant vector transforms as Xk = x k m X , xm (4) x k m dx xm (3)
where we have started using the convention where repeated indices are summed over.
A few comments
The denition of as km = x k / xm is a general one, valid in all circumstances. Here we have considered only Lorentz boosts along x direction, so the 4 4 matrix that appears in Eq. (1) is a special case of . However, once we know how a 4-component object behaves under this special Lorentz boost, we can combine this with our prior information on how the space components of this object behave under rotations, to gure out how the whole 4-component object behaves under a general Lorentz boost. The space components of all the relevant objects well consider here are 3-vectors. Hence we know that they behave as a vector should under space rotations, and it only remains to check that they transform properly under Lorentz boosts. We shall hence only focus on this last point.
Lorentz transformations of
Let us represent m (0 , 1 , 2 , 3 ) = xm , , , (ct ) x y z .
(6)
Covariant vectors
The requirement in eq. (5) may be written as a matrix equation , = where should be written as a row vector. Any 4-component object that transforms as Yk = is a covariant vector. xm mk Ym Ym = x k (7)
Note that
m xn n k = x mn = m k . xn x k = 1, or = 1 . Therefore,
(8)
(9)
So the Lorentz transformations do not affect the inner product Xk Yk of a contravariant and a covariant vector. Such a quantity is therefore frame-independent.
Coming up...
Examples of 4-vectors: x, , p, J, A, u, a
Clearly the position vector xk = (x0 , x1 , x2 , x3 ) = (ct , x , y , z ) = (ct , x) transforms like d xk , i.e. x k = km xm . It is therefore a contravariant 4-vector. However also note that xk = (x0 , x1 , x2 , x3 ) = (ct , x , y , z ) = (ct , x) m xm . It is therefore a covariant vector. transforms like xk = k From the above, xk and xk may be interpreted as the contravariant and covariant components of the same object, a 4-vector x.
Thus, m and m may be interpreted as the contravariant and covariant components of the same object, a 4-vector .
the vector and scalar potentials A and satisfy the wave equations 2A 2 A = 0 J , (ct )2 2 . 2 = (ct )2 0 (11)
Since the wave equations do not change under Lorentz transformations as seen earlier, clearly (/c , A) should have the same transformation properties like (c , J). Therefore, Am = (A0 , A1 , A2 , A3 ) = (/c , A) is a contravariant 4-vector, while Am = (A0 , A1 , A2 , A3 ) = (/c , A) is a covariant 4-vector.
4-velocity u
While dening new 4-vectors in terms of the known ones, one should ensure that they obey the required transformations. The covariant / contravariant indexing (subscripts / superscripts) and the summation convention are useful tools to take care of this. The 4-velocity is dened as um = c dxm ds (12)
which is clearly a 4-vector, since dxm is a 4-vector and ds = (c dt )2 (dx )2 (dy )2 (dz )2 is a Lorentz-invariant scalar. Since ds = dt / , the 4-velocity may be written as um = ( c , v) Note that dxm dxm = c2 (ds)2 Thus, u is a unit 4-vector (in the units c = 1). um um = c 2 (13)
(14)
4-acceleration a
Given that um um = c 2 , a constant, one gets am um = 0. Thus, 4-velocity and 4-acceleration are orthogonal to each other (in the 4-dimensional sense): u a = 0.
4-vectors in Special Relativity are useful quantities because of their transformation properties. They may be represented in terms of their contravariant or covariant components. 4-position x, 4-derivative , 4-momentum p, 4-current J and 4-potential A: all are 4-vectors. The 4-vectors for velocity and acceleration can be appropriately dened.