Revisiting special relativity: a natural algebraic alternative to Minkowski spacetime.

PLoS One

School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.

Published: July 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Minkowski introduced the space-time continuum in 1908, integrating three spatial dimensions with an imaginary time dimension to explain Einstein's theory of special relativity.
  • Instead of using an imaginary unit, a Clifford bivector is applied in a planar space-time model, allowing for a two-dimensional representation without adding extra dimensions.
  • This approach reveals the spacetime metric and Lorentz transformations as inherent properties of the algebra, leading to new insights in physics, including efficient derivations of key equations and a deeper understanding of time as a mathematical entity.

Article Abstract

Minkowski famously introduced the concept of a space-time continuum in 1908, merging the three dimensions of space with an imaginary time dimension [Formula: see text], with the unit imaginary producing the correct spacetime distance [Formula: see text], and the results of Einstein's then recently developed theory of special relativity, thus providing an explanation for Einstein's theory in terms of the structure of space and time. As an alternative to a planar Minkowski space-time of two space dimensions and one time dimension, we replace the unit imaginary [Formula: see text], with the Clifford bivector [Formula: see text] for the plane that also squares to minus one, but which can be included without the addition of an extra dimension, as it is an integral part of the real Cartesian plane with the orthonormal basis [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]. We find that with this model of planar spacetime, using a two-dimensional Clifford multivector, the spacetime metric and the Lorentz transformations follow immediately as properties of the algebra. This also leads to momentum and energy being represented as components of a multivector and we give a new efficient derivation of Compton's scattering formula, and a simple formulation of Dirac's and Maxwell's equations. Based on the mathematical structure of the multivector, we produce a semi-classical model of massive particles, which can then be viewed as the origin of the Minkowski spacetime structure and thus a deeper explanation for relativistic effects. We also find a new perspective on the nature of time, which is now given a precise mathematical definition as the bivector of the plane.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3534154PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0051756PLOS

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