Galilean Transformations

It is quite common for some physical problems to be easier to solve in one reference frame than in another or for us to want to find kinematical quantities in different reference frames. To achieve this, we need a way to convert between kinematical quantities in one reference frame to the kinematical quantities in another reference frame.

In classical mechanics, this conversion is done using Galilean transformations.

Axiom: Galilean Transformations

Let and be reference frames with origins and and temporal origins and , respectively. We assume the following:

  • If a point particle has position at time with respect to and if the position of at time with respect to is , then the position of at time with respect to is

  • If the velocity of at time with respect to is and the velocity of at time with respect to is , then

The above equations are called Galilean transformations.

From the above equations we can derive two other equations regarding velocity and acceleration.

Theorem: Velocity and Acceleration Addition

Let and be reference frames with origins and and let be a point particle. Suppose we have a moment in time which is in and in .

If the velocity of with respect to at is and the the velocity of with respect to at is , then the velocity of with respect to at is

If the acceleration of with respect to at is and the the acceleration of with respect to at is , then the acceleration of with respect to at is

Galilean transformations are true as long as we are not dealing with very high speeds, way below . Reality, however, is more complicated as you approach these speeds because, for some reason, is a universal speed limit. In these situations, Galilean transformations break down and we need other transformations in order to match empirical observation.