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Rest frame
Rest frame
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In special relativity, the rest frame of a particle is the frame of reference (a coordinate system attached to physical markers) in which the particle is at rest.

The rest frame of compound objects (such as a fluid, or a solid made of many vibrating atoms) is taken to be the frame of reference in which the average momentum of the particles which make up the substance is zero (the particles may individually have momentum, but collectively have no net momentum). The rest frame of a container of gas, for example, would be the rest frame of the container itself, in which the gas molecules are not at rest, but are no more likely to be traveling in one direction than another. The rest frame of a river would be the frame of an unpowered boat, in which the mean velocity of the water is zero. This frame is also called the center-of-mass frame, or center-of-momentum frame.

The center-of-momentum frame is notable for being the reference frame in which the total energy (total relativistic energy) of a particle or compound object, is also the invariant mass (times the scale-factor speed of light squared). It is also the reference frame in which the object or system has minimum total energy.

In both special relativity and general relativity it is essential to specify the rest frame of any time measurements, as the time that an event occurred is dependent on the rest frame of the observer. For this reason the timings of astronomical events such as supernovae are usually recorded in terms of when the light from the event reached Earth, as the "real time" that the event occurred depends on the rest frame chosen. For example, in the rest frame of a neutrino particle travelling from the Crab Nebula supernova to Earth, the supernova occurred in the 11th Century AD only a short while before the light reached Earth, but in Earth's rest frame the event occurred about 6300 years earlier.

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from Grokipedia
In physics, particularly within the framework of , the rest frame of an object is defined as the inertial reference frame in which that object has zero velocity relative to the observer, serving as the where the object's motion is absent. This frame is crucial for measuring intrinsic properties of the object, such as its —the length measured along the direction of motion when the object is at rest—and its , the time interval between two events as recorded by a clock moving with the object. Special relativity, developed by Albert Einstein in 1905, posits that all inertial frames—non-accelerating reference frames moving at constant velocity relative to one another—are equivalent, meaning there is no absolute or preferred rest frame in the universe. In this theory, the laws of physics, including those governing electromagnetism and mechanics, remain invariant across such frames, with transformations between them governed by the Lorentz transformations rather than the classical Galilean ones. Key consequences of viewing phenomena from an object's rest frame include time dilation, where moving clocks appear to tick slower from another frame, and length contraction, where distances parallel to the relative motion shorten—effects that are absent or maximal in the rest frame itself. The concept extends to compound systems, such as particles or extended bodies, where the rest frame may be defined for the center of momentum, ensuring the total momentum is zero. In practical applications, like experiments at facilities such as those operated by the Department of Energy, the rest frame helps analyze decays and interactions by transforming data from laboratory frames to the rest frame of unstable particles, revealing invariant quantities like rest mass. This framework underscores the relativity of motion, eliminating the notion of absolute rest proposed in earlier theories like the luminiferous ether.

Fundamentals

Definition

In physics, the rest frame of a given object or system is defined as the reference frame—a with specified origin, axes, and time scale—in which that object or system is stationary, such that its vector relative to the frame is zero. This means the position coordinates of the object remain constant over time in this frame, allowing measurements of properties like position, , or time intervals to be taken without accounting for motion-induced effects specific to other frames. Mathematically, in the rest frame coordinates (x,y,z,t)(x, y, z, t), the satisfies v=drdt=0\vec{v} = \frac{d\vec{r}}{dt} = 0
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