4.II.17G

Special Relativity
Part IB, 2005

Obtain the Lorentz transformations that relate the coordinates of an event measured in one inertial frame (t,x,y,z)(t, x, y, z) to those in another inertial frame moving with velocity vv along the xx axis. Take care to state the assumptions that lead to your result.

A star is at rest in a three-dimensional coordinate frame S\mathcal{S}^{\prime} that is moving at constant velocity vv along the xx axis of a second coordinate frame S\mathcal{S}. The star emits light of frequency ν\nu^{\prime}, which may considered to be a beam of photons. A light ray from the star to the origin in S\mathcal{S}^{\prime} is a straight line that makes an angle θ\theta^{\prime} with the xx^{\prime} axis. Write down the components of the four-momentum of a photon in this light ray.

The star is seen by an observer at rest at the origin of S\mathcal{S} at time t=t=0t=t^{\prime}=0, when the origins of the coordinate frames S\mathcal{S} and S\mathcal{S}^{\prime} coincide. The light that reaches the observer moves along a line through the origin that makes an angle θ\theta to the xx axis and has frequency ν\nu. Make use of the Lorentz transformations between the four-momenta of a photon in these two frames to determine the relation

λ=λ(1v2c2)1/2(1+vccosθ)\lambda=\lambda^{\prime}\left(1-\frac{v^{2}}{c^{2}}\right)^{-1 / 2}\left(1+\frac{v}{c} \cos \theta\right)

where λ\lambda is the observed wavelength of the photon and λ\lambda^{\prime} is the wavelength in the star's rest frame.

Comment on the form of this result in the special cases with cosθ=1,cosθ=1\cos \theta=1, \cos \theta=-1 and cosθ=0\cos \theta=0.

[You may assume that the energy of a photon of frequency ν is h\nu \mathrm{~ i s ~ h} momentum is a three-vector of magnitude hν/c.]h \nu / c .]