Geometric transformations can be distinguished into two types: active or alibi transformations which change the physical position of a set of points relative to a fixed frame of reference or coordinate system (alibi meaning "being somewhere else at the same time"); and passive or alias transformations which leave points fixed but change the frame of reference or coordinate system relative to which they are described (alias meaning "going under a different name").[1] [2] By transformation, mathematicians usually refer to active transformations, while physicists and engineers could mean either.
For instance, active transformations are useful to describe successive positions of a rigid body. On the other hand, passive transformations may be useful in human motion analysis to observe the motion of the tibia relative to the femur, that is, its motion relative to a (local) coordinate system which moves together with the femur, rather than a (global) coordinate system which is fixed to the floor.[2]
In three-dimensional Euclidean space, any proper rigid transformation, whether active or passive, can be represented as a screw displacement, the composition of a translation along an axis and a rotation about that axis.
The terms active transformation and passive transformation were first introduced in 1957 by Valentine Bargmann for describing Lorentz transformations in special relativity.[3]
As an example, let the vector
v=(v1,v2)\in\R2
In general a spatial transformation
T\colon\R3\to\R3
T
As an active transformation,
T
v=(vx,vy,vz)
v'=(v'x,v'y,v'z)=Tv=T(vx,vy,vz)
If one views
\{e'x=T(1,0,0), e'y=T(0,1,0), e'z=T(0,0,1)\}
v'=vxe'x+vye'y+vze'z
v=vxex+vyey+vzez
On the other hand, when one views
T
v=(vx,vy,vz)
T-1
The new coordinates
(vX,vY,vZ)
v
From this equation one sees that the new coordinates are given by
As a passive transformation
T
Note the equivalence between the two kinds of transformations: the coordinates of the new point in the active transformation and the new coordinates of the point in the passive transformation are the same, namely
The distinction between active and passive transformations can be seen mathematically by considering abstract vector spaces.
Fix a finite-dimensional vector space
V
K
R
C
l{B}=\{ei\}1
V
C:Kn → V
An active transformation is then an endomorphism on
V
V
\tau\inEnd(V)
v\inV
v\mapsto\tauv
\tau
l{B}
v
vi\mapsto\tauijvj
A passive transformation is instead an endomorphism on
Kn
vi\mapstoTijvj=:v'i
T
l{B}'=\{e'i\}
viei=v'ie'i
e'i=(T-1)jiej
Although the spaces
End(V)
End({Kn})
l{B}
GL(V)
GL(n,K)
The transformations can then be understood as acting on the space of bases for
V
\tau\inGL(V)
\{ei\}\mapsto\{\tauei\}
T\inGL(n,K)
The inverse in the passive transformation ensures the components transform identically under
\tau
T
This observation is made more natural by viewing bases
l{B}
\Phil{B
Iso(V,Kn)
GL(V)
Iso(V,Kn)
GL(n,K)
Iso(V,Kn)
This turns the space of bases into a left
GL(V)
GL(n,K)
From a physical perspective, active transformations can be characterized as transformations of physical space, while passive transformations are characterized as redundancies in the description of physical space. This plays an important role in mathematical gauge theory, where gauge transformations are described mathematically by transition maps which act from the right on fibers.