We investigate the effects of the repeated application of Lorentz boosts to the four momentums of a photon in the transverse direction and observe that this can take us to a reference frame in which the direction of the photon's momentum is apparently reversed. This raises an apparent paradox: how could two observers see the same photon traveling in opposite directions? We further extend this process to an infinite succession of infinitesimal transverse Lorentz boosts and show it amounts to a rotation of the photon's momentum, but as part of a Lorentz transformation and not as a simple rotation. These possibly surprising results can be understood in light of the Wigner rotation: the combination of Lorentz boosts along different directions amounts to a Lorentz boost combined with a rotation. The presented exercises offer illustrations of the counterintuitive behavior of Lorentz boost combinations.
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September 2024
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September 01 2024
Photon under repeated transverse Lorentz boosts: An apparent paradox Available to Purchase
Tugdual LeBohec
Tugdual LeBohec
a)
Department of Physics, University of Utah
, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-0830
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Tugdual LeBohec
a)
Department of Physics, University of Utah
, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-0830a)
Electronic mail: [email protected], ORCID: 0000-0002-3489-7325.
Am. J. Phys. 92, 674–679 (2024)
Article history
Received:
December 24 2023
Accepted:
June 10 2024
Citation
Tugdual LeBohec; Photon under repeated transverse Lorentz boosts: An apparent paradox. Am. J. Phys. 1 September 2024; 92 (9): 674–679. https://doi.org/10.1119/5.0193902
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