Physics, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

explain frame of reference

Answers

Answered by nayan00742
3
In physics, a frame of reference (or reference frame) consists of an abstract coordinate system and the set of physical reference points that uniquely fix (locate and orient) the coordinate system and standardize measurements.

In n dimensions, n+1 reference points are sufficient to fully define a reference frame. Using rectangular (Cartesian) coordinates, a reference frame may be defined with a reference point at the origin and a reference point at one unit distance along each of the n coordinate axes.

In Einsteinian relativity, reference frames are used to specify the relationship between a moving observer and the phenomenon or phenomena under observation. In this context, the phrase often becomes "observational frame of reference" (or "observational reference frame"), which implies that the observer is at rest in the frame, although not necessarily located at itsorigin. A relativistic reference frame includes (or implies) the coordinate time, which does not correspond across different framesmoving relatively to each other. The situation thus differs from Galilean relativity, where all possible coordinate times are essentially equivalent.

Answered by Smartyyogi45
5
a frame of reference (or reference frame) consists of an abstract coordinate system and the set of physical reference points that uniquely fix (locate and orient) the coordinate system and standardize measurements.

In n dimensions, n+1 reference points are sufficient to fully define a reference frame. Using rectangular (Cartesian) coordinates, a reference frame may be defined with a reference point at the origin and a reference point at one unit distance along each of the n coordinate axes


Smartyyogi45: thnx
swarnistha: wlcm
Smartyyogi45: okk
Smartyyogi45: if u have any problem related to study . U can ask me
swarnistha: okk
swarnistha: thankx
Smartyyogi45: my pleasure
swarnistha: yup
Smartyyogi45: ok bye
swarnistha: byeeee
Similar questions