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All frames of reference that move with constant velocity with respect to any other inertial frame of reference are members of the group of inertial reference frames. An inertial frame of reference is one which is not undergoing acceleration. A frame of reference in physics is a set of axes relative to which an observer can measure the aspect, position and motion of all points in a system. ...
In mathematics and the mathematical sciences, a constant is a fixed, but possibly unspecified, value. ...
Velocity (symbol: v) is a vector measurement of the rate and direction of motion. ...
Inertia is the tendency of any state of affairs to persist in the absence of external influences. ...
The term group can refer to several concepts: Look up Group in Wiktionary, the free dictionary In music, a group is another term for band or other musical ensemble. ...
Acceleration is the time rate of change of velocity, and at any point on a v-t graph, it is given by the gradient of the tangent to that point In physics, acceleration (symbol: a) is defined as the rate of change (or time derivative) of velocity. ...
When there is no force being exerted on an object then the object moves inertially. This is also called 'free motion'. An example is a spacecraft in deep space that is not firing any thrusters. (If this space module is located in a region of intergalactic space where gravitational influences of surrounding galaxies cancel, then that is effectively a zero-gravity environment.) A frame of reference that is defined as co-moving with that object is an inertial frame of reference. This definition also covers rotation. A spinning gyroscope maintains its orientation unless a torque is applied. When this torque is applied, inertia manifests itself, as it is inertia that maintains the gyroscope's orientation. A gyroscope that is suspended without friction allows an observer to maintain zero rotation with respect to the co-moving inertial frame of reference. In physics, as defined by Asimov, a force is that which can impose a change of velocity on a material body. ...
Ariane 5 lifts off with the Rosetta probe on 2nd of March, 2004. ...
A frame of reference in physics is a set of axes relative to which an observer can measure the aspect, position and motion of all points in a system. ...
Acrobatic bicycle is possible thanks to gyroscopic effects A gyroscope is a device which demonstrates the principle of conservation of angular momentum, in physics this is also known as gyroscopic inertia or rigidity in space. ...
The concept of torque in physics, also called moment or couple, originated with the work of Archimedes on levers. ...
Newtonian dynamics
In Newtonian dynamics it is assumed that, when no force is being exerted, objects move in straight lines. This assumption is based on observations and the assumption that space is Euclidean. In mathematics, Euclidean geometry is the familiar kind of geometry on the plane or in three dimensions. ...
The expression has a striking feature: it does not mention velocity: the velocity of the accelerating object is not part of the calculation, and the ratio of force to amount of change of velocity is independent of velocity. This property of that law of motion expresses a fundamental property of motion: velocities are indistinguishable. Therefore an observer can choose any inertial frame of reference as a coordinate system for calculations, and the laws of motion will apply. The group of inertial frames of reference is the only group of frames of reference in which the same laws of motion hold. In the conceptual framework of Newtonian dynamics it is sufficient to define motion in a straight line and with constant velocity as inertial motion.
Special relativity not only identified the Lorentz transformations as the appropriate transformations between inertial frames of reference, but also brought the perception that the 'laws holding good' for all members of the group of inertial frames of reference also include the laws of electrodynamics, not just the laws of kinematics. A simple introduction to this subject is provided in Special relativity for beginners Special relativity (SR) or the special theory of relativity is the physical theory published in 1905 by Albert Einstein. ...
The Lorentz transformation (LT), named after its discoverer, the Dutch physicist and mathematician Hendrik Antoon Lorentz (1853-1928), forms the basis for the special theory of relativity, which has been introduced to remove contradictions between the theories of electromagnetism and classical mechanics. ...
Electromagnetism is the physics of the electromagnetic field: a field, encompassing all of space, composed of the electric field and the magnetic field. ...
In physics, kinematics is the branch of mechanics concerned with the motions of objects without being concerned with the forces that cause the motion. ...
In relativistic dynamics it is recognized that the assumption that space is Euclidean is not justified in general. However, it is possible to formulate consistent and accurate dynamics on the basis that the concept of 'inertial frame of reference' relates to measuring whether there is acceleration due to a force being exerted. For example, a weight within a box is suspended on all sides with springs acts as an accelerometer. When the accelerometer is being accelerated by a force, the weight in the box will "lag behind", as inertia manifests itself when the velocity is changing due to a force being exerted. If there is no manifestation of inertia then by definition the frame of reference that is co-moving with the weight is an inertial frame of reference. Two-dimensional visualisation of space-time distortion. ...
An accelerometer or gravimeter is a device for measuring acceleration and the effects of gravity. ...
In general relativity it is defined that way because the observation that even the most refined accelerometers do not measure any acceleration when they are in free fall in a gravitational field is taken as indication that there is fundamentally no acceleration in the local volume of space that is occupied by and surrounds a free falling object.
Unified description of gravity and inertia In general relativity, both gravity and inertia are described as interactions of matter with the geometry of space-time. Put very succinctly: space-time geometry tells matter how to move, matter tells space-time geometry how to deform. When matter is moving through non-deformed space-time (in other words: straight space-time), it follows paths that are the same as Euclidean straight lines. These lines are universally straight, meaning that when they are viewed from a distance they are still observed to be straight: they are straight lines universally. Objects that are moving through straight space-time can only move in straight lines and with constant velocity: that is the only free motion that straight space-time allows. When there is a change of velocity due to a force being exerted then inertia manifests itself. When matter is free-moving through deformed space-time it follows geodesics. Geodesics are paths with no manifestation of inertia. When a force diverts an object from moving along its proper geodesic, inertia manifests itself. In curved space-time, the concept of an inertial frame of reference is definable only locally, because of the deformation of space-time geometry by matter. Matter is lumped together in suns and planets and so on, and in the neighbourhood of these gravitating bodies there is spherically symmetrical deformation of space-time geometry. Part of the deformation of space-time geometry is alteration of the rate of time. An object free-falling towards the center of gravity of a gravitating mass is moving along its proper geodesic. The local frame of reference, co-moving with that object, is a local inertial frame of reference. In mathematics, a geodesic is a generalization of the notion of a straight line to curved spaces. ...
The gravito-inertial field According to general relativity, there is a single field, which can be called the gravito-inertial field. Gravitational interaction is mediated by deformation of something that is present anyway: space-time geometry. The property of inertia exists because of the universal presence of the gravito-inertial field; interaction with space-time geometry is telling a rotating planet how much to bulge at the equator. An accelerometer measures whether it is accelerating with respect to the local space-time geometry by interacting with it. It is important to note that an accelerometer does not measure its velocity with respect to any absolute frame. Velocity is fundamentally relative. A spinning gyroscope measures whether it is rotating with respect to the local space-time geometry by interacting with it. Since it is very rare for local space-time geometry to rotate significantly with respect to the universe, a spinning gyroscope is in effect displaying which frame of reference is not rotating with respect to the universe. The concept of inertial frames of reference as recognized in general relativity is usually introduced by discussing kinematic phenomena only: accelerometers and gyroscopes. But it is not just dynamics: in the inertial frames of reference as recognized by general relativity, all laws of physics hold good. See:Orbital state vectors In astrodynamics or celestial dynamics orbital state vectors (sometimes State Vectors) are vectors of position () and velocity () that together with their time () ( epoch) uniquely determine the state of an orbiting body. ...
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