Curved Spacetime I. Dr. Naylor

Similar documents
Curved Spacetime III Einstein's field equations

Georgia Tech PHYS 6124 Mathematical Methods of Physics I

Curved spacetime and general covariance

Einstein Toolkit Workshop. Joshua Faber Apr

3 Parallel transport and geodesics

Chapter 7 Curved Spacetime and General Covariance

Lecture: Lorentz Invariant Dynamics

Physics 411 Lecture 13. The Riemann Tensor. Lecture 13. Physics 411 Classical Mechanics II

Introduction to General Relativity

has a lot of good notes on GR and links to other pages. General Relativity Philosophy of general relativity.

General Relativity and Differential

Gravitation: Tensor Calculus

carroll/notes/ has a lot of good notes on GR and links to other pages. General Relativity Philosophy of general

Tensor Calculus, Part 2

Notes on Hobson et al., chapter 7

= (length of P) 2, (1.1)

Problem 1, Lorentz transformations of electric and magnetic

Imperial College 4th Year Physics UG, General Relativity Revision lecture. Toby Wiseman; Huxley 507,

Initial-Value Problems in General Relativity

A5682: Introduction to Cosmology Course Notes. 2. General Relativity

The Riemann curvature tensor, its invariants, and their use in the classification of spacetimes

Curved Spacetime... A brief introduction

going vertically down, L 2 going horizontal. Observer O' outside the lift. Cut the lift wire lift accelerates wrt

2 General Relativity. 2.1 Curved 2D and 3D space

Syllabus. May 3, Special relativity 1. 2 Differential geometry 3

Tutorial I General Relativity

Special & General Relativity

Astrophysics ASTR3415. Part 2: Introduction to General Relativity

Derivatives in General Relativity

A873: Cosmology Course Notes. II. General Relativity

Physics 133: Extragalactic Astronomy ad Cosmology

Lorentz Transformations and Special Relativity

Equivalence Principles

An Introduction to Kaluza-Klein Theory

Write your CANDIDATE NUMBER clearly on each of the THREE answer books provided. Hand in THREE answer books even if they have not all been used.

Properties of Traversable Wormholes in Spacetime

Geometry of the Universe: Cosmological Principle

Spacetime and 4 vectors

Physics 236a assignment, Week 2:

Übungen zu RT2 SS (4) Show that (any) contraction of a (p, q) - tensor results in a (p 1, q 1) - tensor.

General Relativity (225A) Fall 2013 Assignment 8 Solutions

General Relativity ASTR 2110 Sarazin. Einstein s Equation

Lecture I: Vectors, tensors, and forms in flat spacetime

u r u r +u t u t = 1 g rr (u r ) 2 +g tt u 2 t = 1 (u r ) 2 /(1 2M/r) 1/(1 2M/r) = 1 (u r ) 2 = 2M/r.

Relativistic Mechanics

carroll/notes/ has a lot of good notes on GR and links to other pages. General Relativity Philosophy of general

The principle of equivalence and its consequences.

In deriving this we ve used the fact that the specific angular momentum

The Reissner-Nordström metric

Problem Set #4: 4.1, 4.3, 4.5 (Due Monday Nov. 18th) f = m i a (4.1) f = m g Φ (4.2) a = Φ. (4.4)

Lecture VIII: Linearized gravity

An Introduction to General Relativity, Gravitational Waves and Detection Principles

Special and General Relativity (PHZ 4601/5606) Fall 2018 Classwork and Homework. Every exercise counts 10 points unless stated differently.

Relativity Discussion

Ask class: what is the Minkowski spacetime in spherical coordinates? ds 2 = dt 2 +dr 2 +r 2 (dθ 2 +sin 2 θdφ 2 ). (1)

Fundamental Theories of Physics in Flat and Curved Space-Time

ν ηˆαˆβ The inverse transformation matrices are computed similarly:

Solving the Geodesic Equation

Fundamental Cosmology: 4.General Relativistic Cosmology

Mechanics Physics 151

Lecture 23 (Gravitation, Potential Energy and Gauss s Law; Kepler s Laws) Physics Spring 2017 Douglas Fields

Basics of Special Relativity

Level sets of the lapse function in static GR

Linearized Gravity Return to Linearized Field Equations

PAPER 309 GENERAL RELATIVITY

Schwarschild Metric From Kepler s Law

Physics 325: General Relativity Spring Final Review Problem Set

Black Holes and Wave Mechanics

Uniformity of the Universe

Minkowski spacetime. Pham A. Quang. Abstract: In this talk we review the Minkowski spacetime which is the spacetime of Special Relativity.

INTRODUCTION TO GENERAL RELATIVITY AND COSMOLOGY

Stability and Instability of Black Holes

An Introduction to General. Relativity, Gravitational Waves. and Detection Principles. Overview. VESF School on Gravitational Waves.

General Relativity I

2.1 Basics of the Relativistic Cosmology: Global Geometry and the Dynamics of the Universe Part I

Lecture: Principle of Equivalence

Relativity, Gravitation, and Cosmology

2.1 The metric and and coordinate transformations

Lecture XVI: Symmetrical spacetimes

Orbital Motion in Schwarzschild Geometry

Lecture: General Theory of Relativity

Overthrows a basic assumption of classical physics - that lengths and time intervals are absolute quantities, i.e., the same for all observes.

On the existence of isoperimetric extremals of rotation and the fundamental equations of rotary diffeomorphisms

An introduction to gravitational waves. Enrico Barausse (Institut d'astrophysique de Paris/CNRS, France)

A Brief Introduction to Mathematical Relativity

Gravitation: Gravitation

arxiv: v1 [gr-qc] 17 May 2008

Accelerated Observers

Exact Solutions of the Einstein Equations

En búsqueda del mundo cuántico de la gravedad

Geometry of SpaceTime Einstein Theory. of Gravity II. Max Camenzind CB Oct-2010-D7

Changing coordinates - the Lorentz transformation

From An Apple To Black Holes Gravity in General Relativity

2 Vector analysis in special relativity

VACUUM POLARIZATION AND HAWKING RADIATION. SHOHREH RAHMATI Bachelor of Science, Shahid Beheshti University, 2007

5.5 Energy-momentum tensor

Vectors in Special Relativity

Fundamental Concepts of General Relativity

The existence of light-like homogeneous geodesics in homogeneous Lorentzian manifolds. Sao Paulo, 2013

Einstein s Theory of Gravity. December 13, 2017

Transcription:

Curved Spacetime I Dr. Naylor

Last Week Einstein's principle of equivalence We discussed how in the frame of reference of a freely falling object we can construct a locally inertial frame (LIF) Space tells matter how to move Matter tells space how to curve John Wheeler To find a way to connect different LIFs we need the concept of a Manifold A manifold is a continuous space whose points can be assigned coordinates The number of dimensions being the number of coords For example S 2 and S 4 A manifold is differentiable if we can define a scalar field φ at each point which can be differentiated everywhere 2

Riemannian Manifolds A Riemannian manifold is a differentiable manifold with a symmetric metric tensor (g αβ = g βα ) at every point such that for example in Euclidean S 3 However in special and general relativity is of indefinite sign Remember in SR the metric can be spacelike, timelike or null, i.e., ds 2 >0, <0, =0 In this case is called a Pseudo-Riemannian metric For general coordinates {x α }, the interval between two points is ds 2 = g αβ dx α dx β, where in SR we have g αβ = η αβ 3

LIFs & the metric In GR we cannot use η αβ Theorem: any symmetric matrix (at any given point x 0 ) can be converted into a diagonal form which is locally Minkowski: In general Λ α β will not diagonalize g αβ at every point because there are 10 functions for only four transformation functions X α (x β ) Note the following theorem: We can always choose Λ α β such that g αβ,γ = 0 is satisfied ) g αβ (x µ )=η αβ +O [(x µ ) 2 ] Thus, any LIF is a frame where g αβ (x 0 )=η αβ ; g αβ,γ (x 0 )= 0 and g αβ,γµ (x 0 ) 0 4

Christoffel symbols In Minkowski spacetime the derivative of a vector Because the basis vectors do not vary; however in a general curved spacetime vary from point to point ) But since is a vector for a given β this can be written as a linear combination of the bases: These Γ are known as Christoffel symbols (or the metric connection) and hence 5

Thus, we write Covariant derivatives the semicolon ; denotes the covariant derivative The components of V α ;β are a tensor defined by Under a coordinate transformation Λ α β = x α,β we have hence the name covariant derivative. Note the normal derivative, is not a tensor unless in Minkowski space: Only zero for Minkowski 6

Reasoning? Thus, we add Γ α βγ to the derivative of a vector so that it remains a tensor in any spacetime. Namely, by defining Then the ; derivative transforms with the bases and hence is called the covariant derivative: Note that the Christoffel symbol Γ is also known as the metric connection This point will be explained later 7

Covariant derivatives on other tensors For scalars we have because scalars do not depend on basis vectors For a one form (covector) we have and therefore implying the components transform p α;β = p α,β - p µ Γ µ αβ For general tensors we then have 8

Γ α βγ from the metric Consider V α ;β We can lower the upper index using the metric g αβ : V α;β = g αµ V µ ;β but by linearity we must have For consistency this implies Finally assuming that Γ γ αβ = Γ γ βα then we have Exercise: by writing different permutations of the above equation and assuming g αγ g αν = δ γ ν show that 9

Parallel Transport Definition: A vector field is parallel transported along a curve with tangent in an inertial frame if and only if λ parameterizes the curve and is usually taken to be the proper time τ Thus in a general coordinate frame we have We use the rule comma goes to semicolon : That is work things out in a LIF, and if it is a tensor equation then generalize to ; e Remember by using the Christoffel symbol we found a way to define in a general frame Thus, from an LIF we can use,! ; 10

Geodesic equation Definition: A curve λ is a geodesic if it parallel transports its own tangent vector: V U Parallel transport Geodesic A geodesic is the closest thing to a straight line in a curved space. Since U α =dx α /dλ and d/dλ=u β / x β then we obtain the geodesic equation This is a 2 nd order differential equation for x α (λ) so is unique as long as the initial position x 0 and velocity U 0 are specified U 11

Relation to the equivalence principle (EP)? In Minkowski space d 2 x α / dτ 2 =0; however, even in flat spacetime if we use a non-inertial frame, for example polar coordinates, then in this case Γ equates to inertial forces due to a flat metric, but with g αβ η αβ. By the EP we know that gravitational forces and inertial forces are related (see last week s lecture) Furthermore gravity requires a curved spacetime Thus, we use the metric connection Γ for a non-flat metric g αβ where the Γ s are interpreted as force terms Implying that g αβ behaves like the Newtonian potential Φ Φ satisfies a 2 nd O.D.E. and analogously so does g αβ 12

Next week s class: Curvature Thus we can obtain a relativistic theory of gravitation once we find this set of partial differential equations Note that unlike with the Newtonian differential equation we are dealing with tensors which are a set of partial differential equations Before doing this though we must learn how to quantify the amount of curvature... Next week 13