[Home]Conservation law

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

In physics, a conservation law states that a particular physical quantity cannot change during the evolution? of an isolated physical system. The following are conservation laws that have never been shown inexact:

There is an important connection between conservation laws and the invariance? of physical laws with respect to certain transformations and. For instance, in can be shown that [time invariance]? implies that energy is conserved, that [translational invariance]? implies that momentum is conserved and that [rotational invariance]? implies that angular momentum is conserved.

Some [approximate conservation law]?s hold in many circumstances, but exceptions to them have been observed.


HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
This page is read-only | View other revisions
Last edited November 1, 2001 3:56 am by Seb (diff)
Search: