Published May 10, 2010 | Version v1
Publication

"Nonrelativistic" kinematics: Particles or waves?

Description

The kinematics of particles refer to events and tangent vectors, while that of waves refer to dual gradient planes. Special relativity [1–3] applies to both objects alike. Here we show that spacetime exchange symmetry [7] implicit in the SIdefinition of length based on the universal constant c has profound consequences at low velocities. Galilean physics, exact in the limit c → ∞, is mirrored by a dual so-called Carrollian superluminal kinematics [4–6] exact in the limit c → 0. Several new results follow. The Galilean limit explains mass conservation in Newtonian mechanics, while the dual limit is a kinematical prerequisite for wavelike tachyonic motion [8, 9]. As an example, the Landé paradox [19, 20] of waveparticle duality has a natural resolution within special relativity in terms of superluminal, particlelike waves. It is emphasized that internal particle energy mc^2 can not be ignored, while kinetic energy leads to an extended Galilei group. We also demonstrate that Maxwell's equations have magnetic and electric limits covariant under Galilean and Carrollian symmetry.

Abstract

4 pages.

Additional details

Identifiers

URL
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00482388
URN
urn:oai:HAL:hal-00482388v1

Origin repository

Origin repository
UNICA