The totality of the world lines of the points of a body is called a spacetime-thread by Minkowski.
In parameter representation:
where is a timelike parameter and the are varying within certain limits given by the spatial extension.
We consider a piece of a spacetime-thread, for instance between two values and , and we form
the latter over the boundary of the spacetime-thread. By application to a rectilinear hyper-cylinder, whose generators are parallel to the -axis, and whose base spaces are plane and parallel to the –space, one obtains from that (at the passage to the limit at infinitesimal height of the cylinder) the known representation of the Newtonian total-force by means of the Maxwell stresses and by the electromagnetic momentum or the energy theorem.
Infinitely thin spacetime-threads as an image of a pointlike charge.
pointlike charges in the mathematical sense of this word do not exist; potentials and fields would indeed become infinitely large within them. The employment of pointlike sources in potential theory is only legitimate in the integral representation of the potential, or otherwise as approximation at distances which are not infinitely small. The same also holds in our case. Therefore we have to imagine the pointlike charge as physically very small. However, the individual points of this charge will exert forces upon each other. How can they be computed?
Now, it cannot be done without making assumptions on the shape of the infinitely thin spacetime-thread. Since we do not want to make them, we have to confine ourselves with an approximation. So let the world line of the charge be given, for instance as a function of the arc. The pointlike charge cannot act on itself; because the distance 0 has to be excluded when the pointlike sources in the potential theory are used, and is excluded here as well. It also cannot act upon a later position of itself; because this would require superluminal speed. Outside of the world line there should by now charges though. If we therefore extend the integral
over a piece of which does not contain the world line , it will (being extended over a charge-free space) vanish. This is indeed a known property of the ponderomotive force of the electron theory of Lorentz. However, if the piece of contains a part of the world line , then in accordance with the things previously said (and since the integrand would become infinite) it is to be excluded from the integration area by a small hypercylinder which encloses it, whose intersection may be taken as infinitely small. If one executes the integration in this way and then passes to the limit, by letting the hypercylinder contract itself upon the world line, then one finds zero again, as it has to be. Nevertheless, we will be able to use this integral for our purposes; because the charge is pointlike only when seen from infinitely large distances. Thus when we contract the considered piece of as follows: the boundary of the after-cone at point or of the wordline and if it is cut by a hypercylinder, whose intersection is assumed to be very large, then the field of a non-pointlike charge will not be computable upon the two after-cones by means of the Schwarzschild formulas, but it will be computable upon the mantle of the hypercylinder, as long as we assume its intersection to be very large. As it is now
so the third integral can be evaluated by means of the Schwarzschild formulas, if the distance
is afterwards increased over all measures.
The matrix of the stresses from the Schwarzschild formulas.
If we anticipate the developments of § 7, then every curve in possesses a comoving tetrad, whose four directions in the respectively considered curve point are given by the tangent, the principal normal, the binormal and the trinormal, which form a system of four mutually pairwise perpendicular unit vectors, changing their directions from curve point to curve point. In the case of a world line, the tangent must have a timelike direction, i.e. by the definition made in § 4: the quantities are purely imaginary, is real. Now, it is known that
where is the radius of the first curvature, which is computed as follows:
As one can see, is a real quantity and is related to the Minkowski acceleration by
.
Now we want to organize the points of the integration area with respect to the points of the world line, which are connected to them as light-points, and we write
Then we have in any case
since it is indeed
,
by assumption.
The are to be seen as functions of four parameters:
;
the latter is the timelike coordinate. The integration area is limited:
by the after-cone ,
by the mantle of the (spherical) hypercylinder
by the after-cone .
Only the integral over 2) can be evaluated by us, if we let go towards after finished evaluation.[2]
With the aid of the Frenet formulas (see § 7, (19)) one finds the value of
.
Furthermore
If it is now assumed that the determinant is
,
then it follows from it
For the mantle we have, if is the normal going to the exterior, i.e. :
in which it was set for an instant:
Generally it is therefore:
One notices that it is indeed:
is thus the exterior normal. Now one has also
.
Thus it follows
thus we have the integral
Thus it follows in addition
and at the limit
On the other hand, it was
Now, since is vanishing everywhere except along the infinitely thin spacetime-thread of the charge, one can write the integral on the right also as follows:
by introducing a vector of total force , thus
It is known that this result has already been derived by Abraham[3] in a different way. Now, guided by dimensional considerations, there is still a supplement;[4] to the previous expression we can add
,
if
,
i.e. if the motion in the location or is not accelerated.
We remark, that the first solution
gives the appearance of a timelike vector; furthermore, the orthogonality condition by which , is not satisfied in this form, so that also is not representing the mere mechanical power of force . Since we have no reason to allow non-mechanical energy at a single almost pointlike charge, we rather have to assume the second form
,
since this one satisfies the orthogonality condition. Because it follows from by two-fold differentiation with respect to :
,
.
As the reaction force of radiation we then have:
and as their purely mechanical power
The result stated above is obviously the only part of the ponderomotive forces exerted by the electron onto itself, which can be computed without assumptions about its shape. Because on the remaining boundaries, the cones or , the electron cannot be seen as pointlike, because is decreasing to 0. Since assumptions on the shape should not be made, we have to refrain from further treating the dynamical problem of the forces exerted by the electron onto itself, and by that we have to refrain from treating its motions in terms of dynamics. We will rather consider them as given and then compute the respective potentials and fields at a sufficiently distant reference-point, from which the electron can be seen as pointlike.
This motion is characterized by circles (equally sided hyperbolas in ) as world lines (see § 6). Therefore it follows for the three radii of the curvatures
and for
and from the Frenet formulas § 7 (19):
,
.
The reaction force is identical with zero for hyperbolic motion, and only for it, if uniform motion is seen as its special case .
↑We could have chosen another boundary instead of the mantle , since it is to be extended into infinity. The chosen one is the most efficient one from the standpoint of calculation.
↑Abraham. Theorie der Elektrizität (1905), II, p. 113.