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Relativity : the Special and General Theory

Chapter 7: IV The Galileian System of Co-ordinates
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About This Book

The text introduces basic notions of space, time, and measurement and develops the special theory by examining simultaneity, coordinate systems, Lorentz transformations, and resulting effects such as time dilation and velocity addition, culminating in a four-dimensional spacetime view. It then formulates the general theory by presenting the equivalence of inertial and gravitational mass, a generalized relativity principle, and a geometric description of gravity using non-Euclidean spacetime and coordinate methods. Supplementary sections treat cosmological considerations, simple mathematical derivations, and empirical tests including the perihelion advance of Mercury, light deflection, and gravitational redshift.

IV
The Galileian System of Co-ordinates

As is well known, the fundamental law of the mechanics of Galilei-Newton, which is known as the law of inertia, can be stated thus: A body removed sufficiently far from other bodies continues in a state of rest or of uniform motion in a straight line. This law not only says something about the motion of the bodies, but it also indicates the reference-bodies or systems of coordinates, permissible in mechanics, which can be used in mechanical description. The visible fixed stars are bodies for which the law of inertia certainly holds to a high degree of approximation. Now if we use a system of co-ordinates which is rigidly attached to the earth, then, relative to this system, every fixed star describes a circle of immense radius in the course of an astronomical day, a result which is opposed to the statement of the law of inertia. So that if we adhere to this law we must refer these motions only to systems of coordinates relative to which the fixed stars do not move in a circle. A system of co-ordinates of which the state of motion is such that the law of inertia holds relative to it is called a “Galileian system of co-ordinates.” The laws of the mechanics of Galilei-Newton can be regarded as valid only for a Galileian system of co-ordinates.