Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/History_of_Lorentz_transformations> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 27 of
27
with 100 items per page.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations abstract "The Lorentz transformations relate the space-time coordinates, (which specify the position x, y, z and time t of an event) relative to a particular inertial frame of reference (the "rest system"), and the coordinates of the same event relative to another coordinate system moving in the positive x-direction at a constant speed v, relative to the rest system. It was devised as a theoretical transformation which makes the velocity of light invariant between different inertial frames. The coordinates of the event in this "moving system" are denoted x′, y′, z′ and t′. The rest system was sometimes identified with the luminiferous aether, the postulated medium for the propagation of light, and the moving system was commonly identified with the earth as it moved through this medium. Early approximations of the transformation were published by Voigt (1887) and Lorentz (1895). They were completed by Larmor (1897, 1900) and Lorentz (1899, 1904) and were brought into their modern form by Poincaré (1905), who gave the transformation the name of Lorentz. Eventually, Einstein (1905) showed in his development of special relativity that the transformations follow from the principle of relativity and the constant light speed alone, without requiring a mechanical aether, and are changing the traditional concepts of space and time. Subsequently, Minkowski used them to argue that space and time are inseparably connected as spacetime.In this article the historical notations are replaced with modern notations, with the Lorentz transformation,,and the Lorentz factor,v being the relative velocity of the two reference frames, and c the speed of light.".
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink UQ:9560.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink 1-04.htm.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink 9134.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink 987.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink 00000218.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink purl?PPN373601816.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink darrigol2.pdf.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink janssen_diss.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink walter.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink mmm.xml.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageExternalLink treatiseoncircle00cooluoft.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageID "7058047".
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wikiPageRevisionID "605923000".
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations hasPhotoCollection History_of_Lorentz_transformations.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations subject Category:Equations.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations subject Category:History_of_ideas.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations subject Category:History_of_physics.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations comment "The Lorentz transformations relate the space-time coordinates, (which specify the position x, y, z and time t of an event) relative to a particular inertial frame of reference (the "rest system"), and the coordinates of the same event relative to another coordinate system moving in the positive x-direction at a constant speed v, relative to the rest system. It was devised as a theoretical transformation which makes the velocity of light invariant between different inertial frames.".
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations label "Geschichte der Lorentz-Transformation".
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations label "History of Lorentz transformations".
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations sameAs Geschichte_der_Lorentz-Transformation.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations sameAs m.0119g2m1.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations sameAs Q176851.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations sameAs Q176851.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations wasDerivedFrom History_of_Lorentz_transformations?oldid=605923000.
- History_of_Lorentz_transformations isPrimaryTopicOf History_of_Lorentz_transformations.