The necessity of the second postulate in special relativity
Abstract
Many authors noted that the principle of relativity together with space-time homogeneity and isotropy restricts the form of the coordinate transformations from one inertial frame to another to being Lorentz-like. The equations contain a free parameter, k (equal to c-2 in special relativity), whose value is claimed to be merely an empirical matter, so that special relativity does not need the postulate of constancy of the speed of light. I analyze this claim and argue that the distinction between the cases k=0 and k ≠ 0 is on the level of a postulate and that until we assume one or the other, we have an incomplete structure that leaves many fundamental questions undecided, including basic prerequisites of experimentation. I examine an analogous case in which isotropy is the postulate dropped and use it to illustrate the problem. Finally I analyze two attempts by Sfarti, and Behera and Mukhopadhyay to derive the constancy of the speed of light from the principle of relativity. I show that these attempts make hidden assumptions that are equivalent to the second postulate.
- Publication:
-
Studies in the History and Philosophy of Modern Physics
- Pub Date:
- August 2015
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1412.4018
- Bibcode:
- 2015SHPMP..51...57D
- Keywords:
-
- Special relativity;
- Lorentz transformations;
- Constancy of the speed of light;
- Second postulate;
- Electromagnetism;
- Physics - General Physics
- E-Print:
- Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics, Vol.51, 57-67 (Aug. 2015)