|  Rotation | 
In General
  > s.a. examples of lie groups [rotation groups SO(n)].
  * In R3:
    An element R of SO(3), which can be parametrized by Euler angles, R(φ,
    θ, ψ) = R3(ψ)
    R1(θ)
    R3(φ).
  * Vector fields: In
    generalized Cartesian coordinates, a set of generators of SO(3) is
ξ1 = (0; 0, z, −y) , ξ2 = (0; −z, 0, x) , ξ3 = (0; y, −x, 0) ;
in spherical coordinates,
ξ1 = (0; 0, sinφ, cotθ cosφ) , ξ2 = (0; 0, −cosφ, cotθ sinφ) , ξ3 = (0; 0, 0, −1) .
  * Of a world-line: Its
    meaning is well-defined, not just with respect to something – it can
    be measured by a spiked sphere with springs and beads; To define it quantitatively,
    introduce 3 orthogonal vectors ua,
    va and wa
    on the world-line; The rate of change of these vectors measures the rotation;
    There is no rotation iff ξm
    ∇m
    ua
    = ξa
    (umAm),
    ξm
    ∇m va
    = ξa
    (vmAm),
    and ξm
    ∇m wa
    = ξa
    (wmAm),
    where ξa
    is the unit tangent to the world-line.
  @ General references: Walker 90;
    O'Connell in(10)-a1009 [in different physical theories].
  @ Teaching: Wheatland et al AJP(21)mar [demos with mobile phones, principal axes].
  > Related topics: see mach's principle
    [rotation problem]; Newton's Bucket [rotations and absolute space];
    Reference Frame [rotating].
As a Dynamical Process
  * Stationary rotations: The
    rotation of a free generic three-dimensional rigid body is stationary if
    and only if it is a rotation around one of three principal axes of inertia,
    assumed to be distinct (if a moment of inertia is degenerate, rotation is
    stationary around any rotation axis in the corresponding eigensubspace).
  * Measurement: The most
    sensitive instruments are laser gyroscopes, and atom interferometers; The
    latter have sensitivities of one-hundredth of a degree/min [@ Lenef et al
    PRL(97)
    + pn(97)feb],
    and potentially much less; > s.a. Gyroscope.
  @ Measurement:
    Wright et al PRL(13) [BEC-based rotation sensor];
    Nolan et al PRA(16)-a1511 [spin-1 BEC in a ring trap];
    > s.a. Detectors.
  @ In general relativity: 
    Malament gq/00-fs [vs intuition];
    Bel gq/03
      [Wilson-Wilson, Michelson-Morley experiments];
    Kajari et al proc(09)-a0905;
    Klioner et al IAU(09)-a1001 [relativistic aspects of the rotation of celestial objects].
  @ In astrophysics and cosmology:
    Hawking Obs(69) [of the universe];
    Chaliasos ap/06 [rotation of galaxies and acceleration];
    Iorio JCAP(10)-a1004 [rotation of distant masses, solar-system constraints];
    > s.a. galaxies [including rotation curves];
      star properties.
  @ Teaching: Silva & Tavares AJP(07)jan [angular momentum and angular velocity].
  @ Examples:
    news PhysOrg(10)sep
      [fastest-spinning macroscopic object, graphene flake at 60 Mrpm].
  @ Variations: Lansey a0906/AJP [rotations through imaginary angles];
    Izosimov JPA(12)-a1202 [stationary rotations in higher dimensions].
  > Related topics:
    see angular momentum; kinematics of special relativity;
    Moment of Inertia; time [rotating clocks].
  > Rotational invariance: see  hamiltonian
    dynamics; realism; spherical symmetry
    / symmetry.
  > In quantum theory:
    see quantum oscillators.
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  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 20 apr 2021