where , and are 3-space vectors describing the velocity, the momentum of the particle and the force acting on it respectively; and is the total energy of the particle.
Including thermodynamic interactions
From the formulae of the previous section it appears that the time component of the four-force is the power expended, , apart from relativistic corrections . This is only true in purely mechanical situations, when heat exchanges vanish or can be neglected.
In the full thermo-mechanical case, not only work, but also heat contributes to the change in energy, which is the time component of the energy–momentum covector. The time component of the four-force includes in this case a heating rate , besides the power .[1] Note that work and heat cannot be meaningfully separated, though, as they both carry inertia.[2] This fact extends also to contact forces, that is, to the stress–energy–momentum tensor.[3][2]
Therefore, in thermo-mechanical situations the time component of the four-force is not proportional to the power but has a more generic expression, to be given case by case, which represents the supply of internal energy from the combination of work and heat,[2][1][4][3] and which in the Newtonian limit becomes .
In addition, we can formulate force using the concept of coordinate transformations between different coordinate systems. Assume that we know the correct expression for force in a coordinate system at which the particle is momentarily at rest. Then we can perform a transformation to another system to get the corresponding expression of force.[5] In special relativity the transformation will be a Lorentz transformation between coordinate systems moving with a relative constant velocity whereas in general relativity it will be a general coordinate transformation.
Consider the four-force acting on a particle of mass which is momentarily at rest in a coordinate system. The relativistic force in another coordinate system moving with constant velocity , relative to the other one, is obtained using a Lorentz transformation:
where is the Christoffel symbol. If there is no external force, this becomes the equation for geodesics in the curved space-time. The second term in the above equation, plays the role of a gravitational force. If is the correct expression for force in a freely falling frame , we can use then the equivalence principle to write the four-force in an arbitrary coordinate :
Examples
In special relativity, Lorentz four-force (four-force acting on a charged particle situated in an electromagnetic field) can be expressed as:
^ abGrot, Richard A.; Eringen, A. Cemal (1966). "Relativistic continuum mechanics: Part I – Mechanics and thermodynamics". Int. J. Engng Sci. 4 (6): 611–638, 664. doi:10.1016/0020-7225(66)90008-5.
^ abC. A. Truesdell, R. A. Toupin: The Classical Field Theories (in S. Flügge (ed.): Encyclopedia of Physics, Vol. III-1, Springer 1960). §§152–154 and 288–289.
^Maugin, Gérard A. (1978). "On the covariant equations of the relativistic electrodynamics of continua. I. General equations". J. Math. Phys. 19 (5): 1198–1205. Bibcode:1978JMP....19.1198M. doi:10.1063/1.523785.