Also known as Covariance principle, principle of Covariance, principle of proportionality (legal principles), Special Relativity/Principle of Relativity
physics principle stating that the laws of physics must be the same in all reference frames
In physics, the principle of relativity is the idea that the laws of physics should remain consistent over time and from one place to another. Several principles of relativity have been successfully applied during the development of physics, implicitly in Newtonian mechanics and explicitly in Albert Einstein's special relativity and general relativity.
For example, in the framework of special relativity, the Maxwell equations have the same form in all inertial frames of reference. In the framework of general relativity, the Maxwell equations or the Einstein field equations have the same form in arbitrary frames of reference.
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).