51. Conservation Laws from a Geometric Perspective

Bosley Zhang
Join to follow...
Follow/Unfollow Writer: Bosley Zhang
By following, you’ll receive notifications when this author publishes new articles.
Don't wait! Sign up to follow this writer.
WriterShelf is a privacy-oriented writing platform. Unleash the power of your voice. It's free!
Sign up. Join WriterShelf now! Already a member. Login to WriterShelf.
6   0  
·
2026/04/17
·
2 mins read


A Self-Consistent Derivation Chain of Conservation Laws

 

(Strictly valid under no external force, no external torque, one-dimensional / free curvilinear motion, consistent with the geometric view that a straight line is part of an arc.)

 

0. Geometric Axiom (Core Idea)

 

Any straight-line motion may be regarded as circular motion with radius R\to\infty.

 

Relation between linear speed and radius of curvature:

 


v=R\omega


 

1. Conservation of Energy ⇒ Conservation of Kinetic Energy

 

For a closed system with no work done by external forces: total energy is conserved

 


\frac{dE}{dt}=0


 

In free motion with no potential energy variation, E=T, so we directly obtain:

 


\frac{dT}{dt}=0


 

Kinetic energy is conserved.

 

2. Conservation of Kinetic Energy ⇒ Conservation of Momentum

 

Kinetic energy:

 


T=\frac12mv^2


 

If T=\text{const} and mass m is constant,

 


\Rightarrow v=\text{const}


 

Momentum:

 


p=mv


 


\Rightarrow \frac{dp}{dt}=0


 

Momentum is conserved.

 

3. Conservation of Momentum + Geometry ⇒ Conservation of Angular Momentum

 

Definition of angular momentum (relative to the center of curvature):

 


L=Rp


 

For a given trajectory, the radius of curvature R is constant. Since p=\text{const} has been established,

 


\Rightarrow \frac{dL}{dt}=0


 

Angular momentum is conserved.

 

 

 

The derivation chain is fully self-consistent within this framework:

 


\boxed{

\text{Conservation of Energy} \Rightarrow

\text{Conservation of Kinetic Energy} \Rightarrow

\text{Conservation of Momentum}

\xrightarrow{\text{Straight Line = Arc / }~L=Rp}

\text{Conservation of Angular Momentum}

}


 

Using a one-way logical chain, the three conservation laws are linked together.

 

1. Conservation of Energy

2. ⇒ Conservation of Kinetic Energy (free particle)

3. ⇒ Conservation of Momentum

4. ⇒ Further geometric unification via a straight line as a large-radius arc

5. ⇒ Conservation of Angular Momentum

 

This implies:

Three originally independent conservation laws become hierarchical manifestations of a single origin.

Structurally, this constitutes unification.

 

Schematic symbolic chain:

 


E\to T\to p \xrightarrow{~L=Rp~} L


 

 

 

Within Lagrangian Mechanics

 

Any curvilinear motion can be divided into infinitely many infinitesimal straight segments.

A straight line is part of an arc; in the infinitesimal limit, arc ≈ straight line.

 

Within each infinitesimal segment ds:

 

1. Motion is approximately uniform straight-line motion

2. Therefore momentum is conserved: \vec p=\text{const}

3. Taking the moment about the origin:

 


d\vec L = \vec r \times d\vec p


 

4. Since d\vec p=0 within the infinitesimal segment,

 


d\vec L=0


 

5. The entire curve is composed of infinitely many such segments ⇒ angular momentum is conserved.

 

Derivation:

Conservation of Momentum ⇒ Conservation of Angular Momentum

 

 

 

Final Complete Chain

 


\boxed{

\text{Conservation of Energy}

\Rightarrow

\text{Conservation of Kinetic Energy}

\Rightarrow

\text{Conservation of Momentum}

\Rightarrow

\text{Conservation of Angular Momentum}

}


WriterShelf™ is a unique multiple pen name blogging and forum platform. Protect relationships and your privacy. Take your writing in new directions. ** Join WriterShelf**
WriterShelf™ is an open writing platform. The views, information and opinions in this article are those of the author.


Article info

This article is part of:
分類於:
合計:405字


Share this article:
About the Author

I love science as much as art, logic as deeply as emotion.

I write the softest human stories beneath the hardest sci-fi.

May words bridge us to kindred spirits across the world.




Join the discussion now!
Don't wait! Sign up to join the discussion.
WriterShelf is a privacy-oriented writing platform. Unleash the power of your voice. It's free!
Sign up. Join WriterShelf now! Already a member. Login to WriterShelf.