Born rigidity

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Born rigidity, proposed by and later named after Max Born, is a concept in special relativity. It is one answer to the question of what, in special relativity, corresponds to the rigid body of non-relativistic classical mechanics.

The defining property of Born rigidity is locally constant distance in the co-moving frame for all points of the body in question. Thus this distance is Lorentz contracted in relatively moving frames.[1] Born rigidity is a constraint on the motion of an extended body, achieved by careful application of forces to different parts of the body. A body rigid in itself would violate special relativity, as its speed of sound would be infinite.

It is a very restrictive sense of rigidity, as stated in the Herglotz-Noether theorem by Gustav Herglotz (1910)[2] and Fritz Noether (1910).[3] It states that a Born-rigid object has only three degrees of freedom, and its motion is in general definitely determined by the motion of one of its points.[4] This leads to the Ehrenfest paradox, as it is impossible to put a disk from rest into rotation while maintaining its Born rigidity.[5] Bell's spaceship paradox demonstrates that if there is a body at rest and then its two endpoints are accelerated with the same proper acceleration, then its Born rigidity will be broken. In general it was shown by Herglotz (1911),[6] that a relativistic theory of elasticity can be based on the assumption, that stresses arise when the condition of Born rigidity is broken.[4]

Several weaker substitutes have been proposed as rigidity conditions, such as by Noether (1910).[3]

References

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  4. 4.0 4.1 Wolfgang Pauli, Theory of Relativity, Dover Publications 1981, ISBN 0-486-64152-X
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