🧄Affine Transformations and the Orthogonality of Cartesian Rotations

The derivation shows that a Cartesian coordinate transformation, which is an affine transformation ( xh=Riixi+Aix^{h^{\prime}}=R_i^{i^{\prime}} x^i+A^{i^{\prime}} ) that preserves the form of the metric tensor ( gij=δijg_{i j}=\delta_{i j} ), necessarily implies that the transformation matrix R is orthogonal. This is mathematically expressed as the orthogonality condition, RiiRji=δijR_i^{i^{\prime}} R_j^{i^{\prime}}=\delta_{i j}. This requirement ensures that the transformation represents a rigid-body motion (rotation and/or reflection) in Euclidean space. Furthermore, using this orthogonality condition, the inverse relationship can be derived and shown to have the same affine form: xi=Riixi+Bix^i=R_i^{i^{\prime}} x^{i^{\prime}}+B^i, where BiB^i is a new constant translation vector related to AiA^{i^{\prime}}.

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