Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
The term Minkowski diagram is used in both a generic and particular sense.
This can be read immediately from the adjoining Minkowski diagram.
The situation is illustrated in the Minkowski diagram below.
This transformation is sometimes illustrated with a Minkowski diagram, as displayed above.
In principle a further dimension of space can be added to the Minkowski diagram leading to a three-dimensional representation.
A particular Minkowski diagram illustrates the result of a Lorentz transformation.
For simplification in Minkowski diagrams, usually only events in a one dimensional world are considered.
Further coordinate systems corresponding to observers with arbitrary velocities can be added to this Minkowski diagram.
The four-vectors are arrows on the spacetime diagram or Minkowski diagram.
The Minkowski diagram is drawn in a spacetime plane where the spatial aspect has been restricted to a single dimension.
Commonly a Minkowski diagram is used to illustrate this property of Lorentz transformations.
The diagramatic treatments given by Karapetoff are frequently called Minkowski diagrams in physical science.
These transformations, which are not actual rotations, but squeeze mappings, are sometimes described with Minkowski diagrams.
Minkowski diagrams illustrate Lorentz transformations.
This statement seems to be paradoxical, but it follows immediately from the differential equation yielding this, and the Minkowski diagram agrees.
In the Minkowski diagram this relativity of simultaneity corresponds with the introduction of a separate path axis for the moving observer.
This apparently paradoxical situation is again a consequence of the relativity of simultaneity as demonstrated by the analysis via Minkowski diagram.
The Minkowski diagram shows, that they are angle bisectors of the x'- and ct'-axis as well.
Light cone: The region ofspacetime embraced by lines represent- ing light rays in a Minkowski diagram.
The earlier works of Alexander Macfarlane contain algebra and diagrams that correspond well with the Minkowski diagram.
In this version of a Minkowski diagram, two space dimensions, X and Y, are indicated, with the flow of time, as usual, going up the page.
Whatever space and time axes arise through such transformation, in a Minkowski diagram they correspond to conjugate diameters of a pair of hyperbolas.
The concept of proper time was introduced by Hermann Minkowski in 1908, and is a feature of Minkowski diagrams.
He used (p 260) a Minkowski diagram to show "how a neutral current-bearing wire appears to carry a net charge density as observed in a moving frame."
Hyperbolic motion is easily visualized on a Minkowski diagram, where the motion of the accelerating particle is along the -axis.