Lorentz factor


The Lorentz factor or Lorentz term is the factor by which time, length, and relativistic mass change for an object while that object is moving. The expression appears in several equations in special relativity, and it arises in derivations of the Lorentz transformations. The name originates from its earlier appearance in Lorentzian electrodynamics – named after the Dutch physicist Hendrik Lorentz.
It is generally denoted . Sometimes the factor is written as Γ rather than.

Definition

The Lorentz factor is defined as
where:
This is the most frequently used form in practice, though not the only one.
To complement the definition, some authors define the reciprocal
see velocity addition formula.

Occurrence

Following is a list of formulae from Special relativity which use as a shorthand:
Corollaries of the above transformations are the results:
Applying conservation of momentum and energy leads to these results:
In the table below, the left-hand column shows speeds as different fractions of the speed of light. The middle column shows the corresponding Lorentz factor, the final is the reciprocal. Values in bold are exact.
Speed Lorentz factorReciprocal
0.0001.0001.000
0.0501.0010.999
0.1001.0050.995
0.1501.0110.989
0.2001.0210.980
0.2501.0330.968
0.3001.0480.954
0.4001.0910.917
0.5001.1550.866
0.6001.2500.800
0.7001.4000.714
0.7501.5120.661
0.8001.6670.600
0.8662.0000.500
0.9002.2940.436
0.9907.0890.141
0.99922.3660.045
0.99995100.000.010

Alternative representations

There are other ways to write the factor. Above, velocity v was used, but related variables such as momentum and rapidity may also be convenient.

Momentum

Solving the previous relativistic momentum equation for leads to
This form is rarely used, although it does appear in the Maxwell–Jüttner distribution.

Rapidity

Applying the definition of rapidity as the hyperbolic angle :
also leads to :
Using the property of Lorentz transformation, it can be shown that rapidity is additive, a useful property that velocity does not have. Thus the rapidity parameter forms a one-parameter group, a foundation for physical models.

Series expansion (velocity)

The Lorentz factor has the Maclaurin series:
which is a special case of a binomial series.
The approximation ≈ 1 + β2 may be used to calculate relativistic effects at low speeds. It holds to within 1% error for v < 0.4 c, and to within 0.1% error for v < 0.22 c.
The truncated versions of this series also allow physicists to prove that special relativity reduces to Newtonian mechanics at low speeds. For example, in special relativity, the following two equations hold:
For ≈ 1 and ≈ 1 + β2, respectively, these reduce to their Newtonian equivalents:
The Lorentz factor equation can also be inverted to yield
This has an asymptotic form
The first two terms are occasionally used to quickly calculate velocities from large values. The approximation β ≈ 1 − −2 holds to within 1% tolerance for > 2, and to within 0.1% tolerance for > 3.5.

Applications in astronomy

The standard model of long-duration gamma-ray bursts holds that these explosions are ultra-relativistic, which is invoked to explain the so-called "compactness" problem: absent this ultra-relativistic expansion, the ejecta would be optically thick to pair production at typical peak spectral energies of a few 100 keV, whereas the prompt emission is observed to be non-thermal.
Subatomic particles called muons, have a relatively high Lorentz factor and therefore experience extreme time dilation. As an example, muons generally have a mean lifetime of about which means muons generated from cosmic ray collisions at about 10 km up in the atmosphere should be non-detectable on the ground due to their decay rate. However, it has been found that ~10% of muons are still detected on the surface, thereby proving that to be detectable they have had their decay rates slow down relative to our inertial frame of reference.