Physicists usually talk about reference frames and more specially inertial reference frames. This is particularly important in Mechanics and Relativity. Now, from the Physics standpoint there's no doubt on what is a reference frame: it is a point of view to observe a phenomenon. From the Math standpoint, however, usually books speak very loosely about reference frames.
There are many things that books imply without ever making it explict. Some of those things are:
- Sometimes reference frames seems to be considered simply as coordinate systems on spacetime
- But sometimes, books seems to stress that they are "sets of axes", so only cartesian coordinates on flat spacetime would be reference frames
- Usually reference frames seems to be able to move around, but coordinate systems (on Differential Geometry sense) can't do this
Now, these are just some of the concerns. Never it is made clear what really a reference frame is mathematically and this is annoying me for a long time. Some mechanics books do even worse: they make it seems that a reference frame is just a question of interpreting the equations correctly.
Just making the last point clearer: in Differential Geometry one coordinate system is suited for a particular subset, so it doen't make sense to try moving one coordinate system around. This could only work in $\mathbb{R}^n$.
Also, for any manifold $M$ we can consider the bundle of frames $F(M)$ which is the bundle whose fiber at $a \in M$ is homeomorphic to $GL(n,\mathbb{R})$ representing all the possible bases for the tangent space at $a$. Because of the name (bundle of frames) I thought this could relate to physicists' reference frames.
So, what is really in a rigorous mathematical language a reference frame? And in using that definition, what will be then one inertial reference frame?