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Einstein field equations

In the general theory of relativity, the Einstein field equations (EFE; also known as Einstein's equations) relate the geometry of spacetime to the distribution of matter within it.[1]

The equations were published by Albert Einstein in 1915 in the form of a tensor equation[2] which related the local spacetime curvature (expressed by the Einstein tensor) with the local energy, momentum and stress within that spacetime (expressed by the stress–energy tensor).[3]

Analogously to the way that electromagnetic fields are related to the distribution of charges and currents via Maxwell's equations, the EFE relate the spacetime geometry to the distribution of mass–energy, momentum and stress, that is, they determine the metric tensor of spacetime for a given arrangement of stress–energy–momentum in the spacetime. The relationship between the metric tensor and the Einstein tensor allows the EFE to be written as a set of nonlinear partial differential equations when used in this way. The solutions of the EFE are the components of the metric tensor. The inertial trajectories of particles and radiation (geodesics) in the resulting geometry are then calculated using the geodesic equation.

As well as implying local energy–momentum conservation, the EFE reduce to Newton's law of gravitation in the limit of a weak gravitational field and velocities that are much less than the speed of light.[4]

Exact solutions for the EFE can only be found under simplifying assumptions such as symmetry. Special classes of exact solutions are most often studied since they model many gravitational phenomena, such as rotating black holes and the expanding universe. Further simplification is achieved in approximating the spacetime as having only small deviations from flat spacetime, leading to the linearized EFE. These equations are used to study phenomena such as gravitational waves.

Mathematical form edit

The Einstein field equations (EFE) may be written in the form:[5][1]

 
 
EFE on a wall in Leiden, Netherlands

where   is the Einstein tensor,   is the metric tensor,   is the stress–energy tensor,   is the cosmological constant and   is the Einstein gravitational constant.

The Einstein tensor is defined as

 

where Rμν is the Ricci curvature tensor, and R is the scalar curvature. This is a symmetric second-degree tensor that depends on only the metric tensor and its first and second derivatives.

The Einstein gravitational constant is defined as[6][7]

 

where G is the Newtonian constant of gravitation and c is the speed of light in vacuum.

The EFE can thus also be written as

 

In standard units, each term on the left has units of 1/length2.

The expression on the left represents the curvature of spacetime as determined by the metric; the expression on the right represents the stress–energy–momentum content of spacetime. The EFE can then be interpreted as a set of equations dictating how stress–energy–momentum determines the curvature of spacetime.

These equations, together with the geodesic equation,[8] which dictates how freely falling matter moves through spacetime, form the core of the mathematical formulation of general relativity.

The EFE is a tensor equation relating a set of symmetric 4 × 4 tensors. Each tensor has 10 independent components. The four Bianchi identities reduce the number of independent equations from 10 to 6, leaving the metric with four gauge-fixing degrees of freedom, which correspond to the freedom to choose a coordinate system.

Although the Einstein field equations were initially formulated in the context of a four-dimensional theory, some theorists have explored their consequences in n dimensions.[9] The equations in contexts outside of general relativity are still referred to as the Einstein field equations. The vacuum field equations (obtained when Tμν is everywhere zero) define Einstein manifolds.

The equations are more complex than they appear. Given a specified distribution of matter and energy in the form of a stress–energy tensor, the EFE are understood to be equations for the metric tensor  , since both the Ricci tensor and scalar curvature depend on the metric in a complicated nonlinear manner. When fully written out, the EFE are a system of ten coupled, nonlinear, hyperbolic-elliptic partial differential equations.[10]

Sign convention edit

The above form of the EFE is the standard established by Misner, Thorne, and Wheeler (MTW).[11] The authors analyzed conventions that exist and classified these according to three signs ([S1] [S2] [S3]):

 

The third sign above is related to the choice of convention for the Ricci tensor:

 

With these definitions Misner, Thorne, and Wheeler classify themselves as (+ + +), whereas Weinberg (1972)[12] is (+ − −), Peebles (1980)[13] and Efstathiou et al. (1990)[14] are (− + +), Rindler (1977),[citation needed] Atwater (1974),[citation needed] Collins Martin & Squires (1989)[15] and Peacock (1999)[16] are (− + −).

Authors including Einstein have used a different sign in their definition for the Ricci tensor which results in the sign of the constant on the right side being negative:

 

The sign of the cosmological term would change in both these versions if the (+ − − −) metric sign convention is used rather than the MTW (− + + +) metric sign convention adopted here.

Equivalent formulations edit

Taking the trace with respect to the metric of both sides of the EFE one gets

 
where D is the spacetime dimension. Solving for R and substituting this in the original EFE, one gets the following equivalent "trace-reversed" form:
 

In D = 4 dimensions this reduces to

 

Reversing the trace again would restore the original EFE. The trace-reversed form may be more convenient in some cases (for example, when one is interested in weak-field limit and can replace   in the expression on the right with the Minkowski metric without significant loss of accuracy).

The cosmological constant edit

In the Einstein field equations

 
the term containing the cosmological constant Λ was absent from the version in which he originally published them. Einstein then included the term with the cosmological constant to allow for a universe that is not expanding or contracting. This effort was unsuccessful because:
  • any desired steady state solution described by this equation is unstable, and
  • observations by Edwin Hubble showed that our universe is expanding.

Einstein then abandoned Λ, remarking to George Gamow "that the introduction of the cosmological term was the biggest blunder of his life".[17]

The inclusion of this term does not create inconsistencies. For many years the cosmological constant was almost universally assumed to be zero. More recent astronomical observations have shown an accelerating expansion of the universe, and to explain this a positive value of Λ is needed.[18][19] The cosmological constant is negligible at the scale of a galaxy or smaller.

Einstein thought of the cosmological constant as an independent parameter, but its term in the field equation can also be moved algebraically to the other side and incorporated as part of the stress–energy tensor:

 

This tensor describes a vacuum state with an energy density ρvac and isotropic pressure pvac that are fixed constants and given by

 
where it is assumed that Λ has SI unit m−2 and κ is defined as above.

The existence of a cosmological constant is thus equivalent to the existence of a vacuum energy and a pressure of opposite sign. This has led to the terms "cosmological constant" and "vacuum energy" being used interchangeably in general relativity.

Features edit

Conservation of energy and momentum edit

General relativity is consistent with the local conservation of energy and momentum expressed as

 
Derivation of local energy–momentum conservation

Contracting the differential Bianchi identity

 
with gαβ gives, using the fact that the metric tensor is covariantly constant, i.e. gαβ = 0,
 

The antisymmetry of the Riemann tensor allows the second term in the above expression to be rewritten:

 
which is equivalent to
 
using the definition of the Ricci tensor.

Next, contract again with the metric

 
to get
 

The definitions of the Ricci curvature tensor and the scalar curvature then show that

 
which can be rewritten as
 

A final contraction with gεδ gives

 
which by the symmetry of the bracketed term and the definition of the Einstein tensor, gives, after relabelling the indices,
 

Using the EFE, this immediately gives,

 

which expresses the local conservation of stress–energy. This conservation law is a physical requirement. With his field equations Einstein ensured that general relativity is consistent with this conservation condition.

Nonlinearity edit

The nonlinearity of the EFE distinguishes general relativity from many other fundamental physical theories. For example, Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism are linear in the electric and magnetic fields, and charge and current distributions (i.e. the sum of two solutions is also a solution); another example is Schrödinger's equation of quantum mechanics, which is linear in the wavefunction.

The correspondence principle edit

The EFE reduce to Newton's law of gravity by using both the weak-field approximation and the slow-motion approximation. In fact, the constant G appearing in the EFE is determined by making these two approximations.

Derivation of Newton's law of gravity

Newtonian gravitation can be written as the theory of a scalar field, Φ, which is the gravitational potential in joules per kilogram of the gravitational field g = −∇Φ, see Gauss's law for gravity

 
where ρ is the mass density. The orbit of a free-falling particle satisfies
 

In tensor notation, these become

 

In general relativity, these equations are replaced by the Einstein field equations in the trace-reversed form

 
for some constant, K, and the geodesic equation
 

To see how the latter reduces to the former, we assume that the test particle's velocity is approximately zero

 
and thus
 
and that the metric and its derivatives are approximately static and that the squares of deviations from the Minkowski metric are negligible. Applying these simplifying assumptions to the spatial components of the geodesic equation gives
 
where two factors of dt/ have been divided out. This will reduce to its Newtonian counterpart, provided
 

Our assumptions force α = i and the time (0) derivatives to be zero. So this simplifies to

 
which is satisfied by letting
 

Turning to the Einstein equations, we only need the time-time component

 
the low speed and static field assumptions imply that
 

So

 
and thus
 

From the definition of the Ricci tensor

 

Our simplifying assumptions make the squares of Γ disappear together with the time derivatives

 

Combining the above equations together

 
which reduces to the Newtonian field equation provided
 
which will occur if
 

Vacuum field equations edit

 
A Swiss commemorative coin from 1979, showing the vacuum field equations with zero cosmological constant (top).

If the energy–momentum tensor Tμν is zero in the region under consideration, then the field equations are also referred to as the vacuum field equations. By setting Tμν = 0 in the trace-reversed field equations, the vacuum field equations, also known as 'Einstein vacuum equations' (EVE), can be written as

 

In the case of nonzero cosmological constant, the equations are

 

The solutions to the vacuum field equations are called vacuum solutions. Flat Minkowski space is the simplest example of a vacuum solution. Nontrivial examples include the Schwarzschild solution and the Kerr solution.

Manifolds with a vanishing Ricci tensor, Rμν = 0, are referred to as Ricci-flat manifolds and manifolds with a Ricci tensor proportional to the metric as Einstein manifolds.

Einstein–Maxwell equations edit

If the energy–momentum tensor Tμν is that of an electromagnetic field in free space, i.e. if the electromagnetic stress–energy tensor

 
is used, then the Einstein field equations are called the Einstein–Maxwell equations (with cosmological constant Λ, taken to be zero in conventional relativity theory):
 

Additionally, the covariant Maxwell equations are also applicable in free space:

 
where the semicolon represents a covariant derivative, and the brackets denote anti-symmetrization. The first equation asserts that the 4-divergence of the 2-form F is zero, and the second that its exterior derivative is zero. From the latter, it follows by the Poincaré lemma that in a coordinate chart it is possible to introduce an electromagnetic field potential Aα such that
 
in which the comma denotes a partial derivative. This is often taken as equivalent to the covariant Maxwell equation from which it is derived.[20] However, there are global solutions of the equation that may lack a globally defined potential.[21]

Solutions edit

The solutions of the Einstein field equations are metrics of spacetime. These metrics describe the structure of the spacetime including the inertial motion of objects in the spacetime. As the field equations are non-linear, they cannot always be completely solved (i.e. without making approximations). For example, there is no known complete solution for a spacetime with two massive bodies in it (which is a theoretical model of a binary star system, for example). However, approximations are usually made in these cases. These are commonly referred to as post-Newtonian approximations. Even so, there are several cases where the field equations have been solved completely, and those are called exact solutions.[9]

The study of exact solutions of Einstein's field equations is one of the activities of cosmology. It leads to the prediction of black holes and to different models of evolution of the universe.

One can also discover new solutions of the Einstein field equations via the method of orthonormal frames as pioneered by Ellis and MacCallum.[22] In this approach, the Einstein field equations are reduced to a set of coupled, nonlinear, ordinary differential equations. As discussed by Hsu and Wainwright,[23] self-similar solutions to the Einstein field equations are fixed points of the resulting dynamical system. New solutions have been discovered using these methods by LeBlanc[24] and Kohli and Haslam.[25]

The linearized EFE edit

The nonlinearity of the EFE makes finding exact solutions difficult. One way of solving the field equations is to make an approximation, namely, that far from the source(s) of gravitating matter, the gravitational field is very weak and the spacetime approximates that of Minkowski space. The metric is then written as the sum of the Minkowski metric and a term representing the deviation of the true metric from the Minkowski metric, ignoring higher-power terms. This linearization procedure can be used to investigate the phenomena of gravitational radiation.

Polynomial form edit

Despite the EFE as written containing the inverse of the metric tensor, they can be arranged in a form that contains the metric tensor in polynomial form and without its inverse. First, the determinant of the metric in 4 dimensions can be written

 
using the Levi-Civita symbol; and the inverse of the metric in 4 dimensions can be written as:
 

Substituting this definition of the inverse of the metric into the equations then multiplying both sides by a suitable power of det(g) to eliminate it from the denominator results in polynomial equations in the metric tensor and its first and second derivatives. The action from which the equations are derived can also be written in polynomial form by suitable redefinitions of the fields.[26]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Einstein, Albert (1916). . Annalen der Physik. 354 (7): 769. Bibcode:1916AnP...354..769E. doi:10.1002/andp.19163540702. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-06.
  2. ^ Einstein, Albert (November 25, 1915). "Die Feldgleichungen der Gravitation". Sitzungsberichte der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin: 844–847. Retrieved 2017-08-21.
  3. ^ Misner, Thorne & Wheeler (1973), p. 916 [ch. 34].
  4. ^ Carroll, Sean (2004). Spacetime and Geometry – An Introduction to General Relativity. Addison Wesley. pp. 151–159. ISBN 0-8053-8732-3.
  5. ^ Grøn, Øyvind; Hervik, Sigbjorn (2007). Einstein's General Theory of Relativity: With Modern Applications in Cosmology (illustrated ed.). Springer Science & Business Media. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-387-69200-5.
  6. ^ With the choice of the Einstein gravitational constant as given here, κ = 8πG/c4, the stress–energy tensor on the right side of the equation must be written with each component in units of energy density (i.e., energy per volume, equivalently pressure). In Einstein's original publication, the choice is κ = 8πG/c2, in which case the stress–energy tensor components have units of mass density.
  7. ^ Adler, Ronald; Bazin, Maurice; Schiffer, Menahem (1975). Introduction to general relativity (2d ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-000423-4. OCLC 1046135.
  8. ^ Weinberg, Steven (1993). Dreams of a Final Theory: the search for the fundamental laws of nature. Vintage Press. pp. 107, 233. ISBN 0-09-922391-0.
  9. ^ a b Stephani, Hans; Kramer, D.; MacCallum, M.; Hoenselaers, C.; Herlt, E. (2003). Exact Solutions of Einstein's Field Equations. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-46136-7.
  10. ^ Rendall, Alan D. (2005). "Theorems on Existence and Global Dynamics for the Einstein Equations". Living Rev. Relativ. 8 (1). Article number: 6. arXiv:gr-qc/0505133. Bibcode:2005LRR.....8....6R. doi:10.12942/lrr-2005-6. PMC 5256071. PMID 28179868.
  11. ^ Misner, Thorne & Wheeler (1973), p. 501ff.
  12. ^ Weinberg (1972).
  13. ^ Peebles, Phillip James Edwin (1980). The Large-scale Structure of the Universe. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-08239-1.
  14. ^ Efstathiou, G.; Sutherland, W. J.; Maddox, S. J. (1990). "The cosmological constant and cold dark matter". Nature. 348 (6303): 705. Bibcode:1990Natur.348..705E. doi:10.1038/348705a0. S2CID 12988317.
  15. ^ Collins, P. D. B.; Martin, A. D.; Squires, E. J. (1989). Particle Physics and Cosmology. New York: Wiley. ISBN 0-471-60088-1.
  16. ^ Peacock (1999).
  17. ^ Gamow, George (April 28, 1970). My World Line : An Informal Autobiography. Viking Adult. ISBN 0-670-50376-2. Retrieved 2007-03-14.
  18. ^ Wahl, Nicolle (2005-11-22). . News@UofT. University of Toronto. Archived from the original on 2007-03-07.
  19. ^ Turner, Michael S. (May 2001). "Making Sense of the New Cosmology". Int. J. Mod. Phys. A. 17 (S1): 180–196. arXiv:astro-ph/0202008. Bibcode:2002IJMPA..17S.180T. doi:10.1142/S0217751X02013113. S2CID 16669258.
  20. ^ Brown, Harvey (2005). Physical Relativity. Oxford University Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-19-927583-0.
  21. ^ Trautman, Andrzej (1977). "Solutions of the Maxwell and Yang–Mills equations associated with Hopf fibrings". International Journal of Theoretical Physics. 16 (9): 561–565. Bibcode:1977IJTP...16..561T. doi:10.1007/BF01811088. S2CID 123364248..
  22. ^ Ellis, G. F. R.; MacCallum, M. (1969). "A class of homogeneous cosmological models". Comm. Math. Phys. 12 (2): 108–141. Bibcode:1969CMaPh..12..108E. doi:10.1007/BF01645908. S2CID 122577276.
  23. ^ Hsu, L.; Wainwright, J (1986). "Self-similar spatially homogeneous cosmologies: orthogonal perfect fluid and vacuum solutions". Class. Quantum Grav. 3 (6): 1105–1124. Bibcode:1986CQGra...3.1105H. doi:10.1088/0264-9381/3/6/011. S2CID 250907312.
  24. ^ LeBlanc, V. G. (1997). "Asymptotic states of magnetic Bianchi I cosmologies". Class. Quantum Grav. 14 (8): 2281. Bibcode:1997CQGra..14.2281L. doi:10.1088/0264-9381/14/8/025. S2CID 250876974.
  25. ^ Kohli, Ikjyot Singh; Haslam, Michael C. (2013). "Dynamical systems approach to a Bianchi type I viscous magnetohydrodynamic model". Phys. Rev. D. 88 (6): 063518. arXiv:1304.8042. Bibcode:2013PhRvD..88f3518K. doi:10.1103/physrevd.88.063518. S2CID 119178273.
  26. ^ Katanaev, M. O. (2006). "Polynomial form of the Hilbert–Einstein action". Gen. Rel. Grav. 38 (8): 1233–1240. arXiv:gr-qc/0507026. Bibcode:2006GReGr..38.1233K. doi:10.1007/s10714-006-0310-5. S2CID 6263993.

References edit

See General relativity resources.

External links edit

  • "Einstein equations", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
  • — A simple introduction to Einstein's Field Equations.
  • The Meaning of Einstein's Equation — An explanation of Einstein's field equation, its derivation, and some of its consequences
  • Video Lecture on Einstein's Field Equations by MIT Physics Professor Edmund Bertschinger.
  • Arch and scaffold: How Einstein found his field equations Physics Today November 2015, History of the Development of the Field Equations

External images edit

  • Suzanne Imber, "The impact of general relativity on the Atacama Desert", Einstein field equation on the side of a train in Bolivia.

einstein, field, equations, einstein, equation, redirects, here, equation, displaystyle, mass, energy, equivalence, general, theory, relativity, also, known, einstein, equations, relate, geometry, spacetime, distribution, matter, within, equations, were, publi. Einstein equation redirects here For the equation E m c 2 displaystyle E mc 2 see Mass energy equivalence In the general theory of relativity the Einstein field equations EFE also known as Einstein s equations relate the geometry of spacetime to the distribution of matter within it 1 The equations were published by Albert Einstein in 1915 in the form of a tensor equation 2 which related the local spacetime curvature expressed by the Einstein tensor with the local energy momentum and stress within that spacetime expressed by the stress energy tensor 3 Analogously to the way that electromagnetic fields are related to the distribution of charges and currents via Maxwell s equations the EFE relate the spacetime geometry to the distribution of mass energy momentum and stress that is they determine the metric tensor of spacetime for a given arrangement of stress energy momentum in the spacetime The relationship between the metric tensor and the Einstein tensor allows the EFE to be written as a set of nonlinear partial differential equations when used in this way The solutions of the EFE are the components of the metric tensor The inertial trajectories of particles and radiation geodesics in the resulting geometry are then calculated using the geodesic equation As well as implying local energy momentum conservation the EFE reduce to Newton s law of gravitation in the limit of a weak gravitational field and velocities that are much less than the speed of light 4 Exact solutions for the EFE can only be found under simplifying assumptions such as symmetry Special classes of exact solutions are most often studied since they model many gravitational phenomena such as rotating black holes and the expanding universe Further simplification is achieved in approximating the spacetime as having only small deviations from flat spacetime leading to the linearized EFE These equations are used to study phenomena such as gravitational waves Contents 1 Mathematical form 1 1 Sign convention 1 2 Equivalent formulations 2 The cosmological constant 3 Features 3 1 Conservation of energy and momentum 3 2 Nonlinearity 3 3 The correspondence principle 4 Vacuum field equations 5 Einstein Maxwell equations 6 Solutions 7 The linearized EFE 8 Polynomial form 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External links 12 1 External imagesMathematical form editThe Einstein field equations EFE may be written in the form 5 1 G m n L g m n k T m n displaystyle G mu nu Lambda g mu nu kappa T mu nu nbsp nbsp EFE on a wall in Leiden Netherlandswhere G m n displaystyle G mu nu nbsp is the Einstein tensor g m n displaystyle g mu nu nbsp is the metric tensor T m n displaystyle T mu nu nbsp is the stress energy tensor L displaystyle Lambda nbsp is the cosmological constant and k displaystyle kappa nbsp is the Einstein gravitational constant The Einstein tensor is defined as G m n R m n 1 2 R g m n displaystyle G mu nu R mu nu frac 1 2 Rg mu nu nbsp where Rmn is the Ricci curvature tensor and R is the scalar curvature This is a symmetric second degree tensor that depends on only the metric tensor and its first and second derivatives The Einstein gravitational constant is defined as 6 7 k 8 p G c 4 2 076647442844 10 43 N 1 displaystyle kappa frac 8 pi G c 4 approx 2 076647442844 times 10 43 textrm N 1 nbsp where G is the Newtonian constant of gravitation and c is the speed of light in vacuum The EFE can thus also be written as R m n 1 2 R g m n L g m n k T m n displaystyle R mu nu frac 1 2 Rg mu nu Lambda g mu nu kappa T mu nu nbsp In standard units each term on the left has units of 1 length2 The expression on the left represents the curvature of spacetime as determined by the metric the expression on the right represents the stress energy momentum content of spacetime The EFE can then be interpreted as a set of equations dictating how stress energy momentum determines the curvature of spacetime These equations together with the geodesic equation 8 which dictates how freely falling matter moves through spacetime form the core of the mathematical formulation of general relativity The EFE is a tensor equation relating a set of symmetric 4 4 tensors Each tensor has 10 independent components The four Bianchi identities reduce the number of independent equations from 10 to 6 leaving the metric with four gauge fixing degrees of freedom which correspond to the freedom to choose a coordinate system Although the Einstein field equations were initially formulated in the context of a four dimensional theory some theorists have explored their consequences in n dimensions 9 The equations in contexts outside of general relativity are still referred to as the Einstein field equations The vacuum field equations obtained when Tmn is everywhere zero define Einstein manifolds The equations are more complex than they appear Given a specified distribution of matter and energy in the form of a stress energy tensor the EFE are understood to be equations for the metric tensor g m n displaystyle g mu nu nbsp since both the Ricci tensor and scalar curvature depend on the metric in a complicated nonlinear manner When fully written out the EFE are a system of ten coupled nonlinear hyperbolic elliptic partial differential equations 10 Sign convention edit The above form of the EFE is the standard established by Misner Thorne and Wheeler MTW 11 The authors analyzed conventions that exist and classified these according to three signs S1 S2 S3 g m n S 1 diag 1 1 1 1 R m a b g S 2 G a g b m G a b g m G s b m G g a s G s g m G b a s G m n S 3 k T m n displaystyle begin aligned g mu nu amp S1 times operatorname diag 1 1 1 1 6pt R mu alpha beta gamma amp S2 times left Gamma alpha gamma beta mu Gamma alpha beta gamma mu Gamma sigma beta mu Gamma gamma alpha sigma Gamma sigma gamma mu Gamma beta alpha sigma right 6pt G mu nu amp S3 times kappa T mu nu end aligned nbsp The third sign above is related to the choice of convention for the Ricci tensor R m n S 2 S 3 R a m a n displaystyle R mu nu S2 times S3 times R alpha mu alpha nu nbsp With these definitions Misner Thorne and Wheeler classify themselves as whereas Weinberg 1972 12 is Peebles 1980 13 and Efstathiou et al 1990 14 are Rindler 1977 citation needed Atwater 1974 citation needed Collins Martin amp Squires 1989 15 and Peacock 1999 16 are Authors including Einstein have used a different sign in their definition for the Ricci tensor which results in the sign of the constant on the right side being negative R m n 1 2 R g m n L g m n k T m n displaystyle R mu nu frac 1 2 Rg mu nu Lambda g mu nu kappa T mu nu nbsp The sign of the cosmological term would change in both these versions if the metric sign convention is used rather than the MTW metric sign convention adopted here Equivalent formulations edit Taking the trace with respect to the metric of both sides of the EFE one getsR D 2 R D L k T displaystyle R frac D 2 R D Lambda kappa T nbsp where D is the spacetime dimension Solving for R and substituting this in the original EFE one gets the following equivalent trace reversed form R m n 2 D 2 L g m n k T m n 1 D 2 T g m n displaystyle R mu nu frac 2 D 2 Lambda g mu nu kappa left T mu nu frac 1 D 2 Tg mu nu right nbsp In D 4 dimensions this reduces toR m n L g m n k T m n 1 2 T g m n displaystyle R mu nu Lambda g mu nu kappa left T mu nu frac 1 2 T g mu nu right nbsp Reversing the trace again would restore the original EFE The trace reversed form may be more convenient in some cases for example when one is interested in weak field limit and can replace g m n displaystyle g mu nu nbsp in the expression on the right with the Minkowski metric without significant loss of accuracy The cosmological constant editMain article Cosmological constant In the Einstein field equationsG m n L g m n k T m n displaystyle G mu nu Lambda g mu nu kappa T mu nu nbsp the term containing the cosmological constant L was absent from the version in which he originally published them Einstein then included the term with the cosmological constant to allow for a universe that is not expanding or contracting This effort was unsuccessful because any desired steady state solution described by this equation is unstable and observations by Edwin Hubble showed that our universe is expanding Einstein then abandoned L remarking to George Gamow that the introduction of the cosmological term was the biggest blunder of his life 17 The inclusion of this term does not create inconsistencies For many years the cosmological constant was almost universally assumed to be zero More recent astronomical observations have shown an accelerating expansion of the universe and to explain this a positive value of L is needed 18 19 The cosmological constant is negligible at the scale of a galaxy or smaller Einstein thought of the cosmological constant as an independent parameter but its term in the field equation can also be moved algebraically to the other side and incorporated as part of the stress energy tensor T m n v a c L k g m n displaystyle T mu nu mathrm vac frac Lambda kappa g mu nu nbsp This tensor describes a vacuum state with an energy density rvac and isotropic pressure pvac that are fixed constants and given byr v a c p v a c L k displaystyle rho mathrm vac p mathrm vac frac Lambda kappa nbsp where it is assumed that L has SI unit m 2 and k is defined as above The existence of a cosmological constant is thus equivalent to the existence of a vacuum energy and a pressure of opposite sign This has led to the terms cosmological constant and vacuum energy being used interchangeably in general relativity Features editConservation of energy and momentum edit General relativity is consistent with the local conservation of energy and momentum expressed as b T a b T a b b 0 displaystyle nabla beta T alpha beta T alpha beta beta 0 nbsp Derivation of local energy momentum conservation Contracting the differential Bianchi identityR a b g d e 0 displaystyle R alpha beta gamma delta varepsilon 0 nbsp with gab gives using the fact that the metric tensor is covariantly constant i e gab g 0 R g b g d e R g b e g d R g b d e g 0 displaystyle R gamma beta gamma delta varepsilon R gamma beta varepsilon gamma delta R gamma beta delta varepsilon gamma 0 nbsp The antisymmetry of the Riemann tensor allows the second term in the above expression to be rewritten R g b g d e R g b g e d R g b d e g 0 displaystyle R gamma beta gamma delta varepsilon R gamma beta gamma varepsilon delta R gamma beta delta varepsilon gamma 0 nbsp which is equivalent to R b d e R b e d R g b d e g 0 displaystyle R beta delta varepsilon R beta varepsilon delta R gamma beta delta varepsilon gamma 0 nbsp using the definition of the Ricci tensor Next contract again with the metricg b d R b d e R b e d R g b d e g 0 displaystyle g beta delta left R beta delta varepsilon R beta varepsilon delta R gamma beta delta varepsilon gamma right 0 nbsp to get R d d e R d e d R g d d e g 0 displaystyle R delta delta varepsilon R delta varepsilon delta R gamma delta delta varepsilon gamma 0 nbsp The definitions of the Ricci curvature tensor and the scalar curvature then show thatR e 2 R g e g 0 displaystyle R varepsilon 2 R gamma varepsilon gamma 0 nbsp which can be rewritten as R g e 1 2 g g e R g 0 displaystyle left R gamma varepsilon tfrac 1 2 g gamma varepsilon R right gamma 0 nbsp A final contraction with ged gives R g d 1 2 g g d R g 0 displaystyle left R gamma delta tfrac 1 2 g gamma delta R right gamma 0 nbsp which by the symmetry of the bracketed term and the definition of the Einstein tensor gives after relabelling the indices G a b b 0 displaystyle G alpha beta beta 0 nbsp Using the EFE this immediately gives b T a b T a b b 0 displaystyle nabla beta T alpha beta T alpha beta beta 0 nbsp which expresses the local conservation of stress energy This conservation law is a physical requirement With his field equations Einstein ensured that general relativity is consistent with this conservation condition Nonlinearity edit The nonlinearity of the EFE distinguishes general relativity from many other fundamental physical theories For example Maxwell s equations of electromagnetism are linear in the electric and magnetic fields and charge and current distributions i e the sum of two solutions is also a solution another example is Schrodinger s equation of quantum mechanics which is linear in the wavefunction The correspondence principle edit The EFE reduce to Newton s law of gravity by using both the weak field approximation and the slow motion approximation In fact the constant G appearing in the EFE is determined by making these two approximations Derivation of Newton s law of gravity Newtonian gravitation can be written as the theory of a scalar field F which is the gravitational potential in joules per kilogram of the gravitational field g F see Gauss s law for gravity 2 F x t 4 p G r x t displaystyle nabla 2 Phi left vec x t right 4 pi G rho left vec x t right nbsp where r is the mass density The orbit of a free falling particle satisfies x t g F x t t displaystyle ddot vec x t vec g nabla Phi left vec x t t right nbsp In tensor notation these becomeF i i 4 p G r d 2 x i d t 2 F i displaystyle begin aligned Phi ii amp 4 pi G rho frac d 2 x i dt 2 amp Phi i end aligned nbsp In general relativity these equations are replaced by the Einstein field equations in the trace reversed formR m n K T m n 1 2 T g m n displaystyle R mu nu K left T mu nu tfrac 1 2 Tg mu nu right nbsp for some constant K and the geodesic equation d 2 x a d t 2 G b g a d x b d t d x g d t displaystyle frac d 2 x alpha d tau 2 Gamma beta gamma alpha frac dx beta d tau frac dx gamma d tau nbsp To see how the latter reduces to the former we assume that the test particle s velocity is approximately zerod x b d t d t d t 0 0 0 displaystyle frac dx beta d tau approx left frac dt d tau 0 0 0 right nbsp and thus d d t d t d t 0 displaystyle frac d dt left frac dt d tau right approx 0 nbsp and that the metric and its derivatives are approximately static and that the squares of deviations from the Minkowski metric are negligible Applying these simplifying assumptions to the spatial components of the geodesic equation gives d 2 x i d t 2 G 00 i displaystyle frac d 2 x i dt 2 approx Gamma 00 i nbsp where two factors of dt dt have been divided out This will reduce to its Newtonian counterpart provided F i G 00 i 1 2 g i a g a 0 0 g 0 a 0 g 00 a displaystyle Phi i approx Gamma 00 i tfrac 1 2 g i alpha left g alpha 0 0 g 0 alpha 0 g 00 alpha right nbsp Our assumptions force a i and the time 0 derivatives to be zero So this simplifies to2 F i g i j g 00 j g 00 i displaystyle 2 Phi i approx g ij left g 00 j right approx g 00 i nbsp which is satisfied by letting g 00 c 2 2 F displaystyle g 00 approx c 2 2 Phi nbsp Turning to the Einstein equations we only need the time time componentR 00 K T 00 1 2 T g 00 displaystyle R 00 K left T 00 tfrac 1 2 Tg 00 right nbsp the low speed and static field assumptions imply that T m n diag T 00 0 0 0 diag r c 4 0 0 0 displaystyle T mu nu approx operatorname diag left T 00 0 0 0 right approx operatorname diag left rho c 4 0 0 0 right nbsp SoT g a b T a b g 00 T 00 1 c 2 r c 4 r c 2 displaystyle T g alpha beta T alpha beta approx g 00 T 00 approx frac 1 c 2 rho c 4 rho c 2 nbsp and thus K T 00 1 2 T g 00 K r c 4 1 2 r c 2 c 2 1 2 K r c 4 displaystyle K left T 00 tfrac 1 2 Tg 00 right approx K left rho c 4 tfrac 1 2 left rho c 2 right left c 2 right right tfrac 1 2 K rho c 4 nbsp From the definition of the Ricci tensorR 00 G 00 r r G r 0 0 r G r l r G 00 l G 0 l r G r 0 l displaystyle R 00 Gamma 00 rho rho Gamma rho 0 0 rho Gamma rho lambda rho Gamma 00 lambda Gamma 0 lambda rho Gamma rho 0 lambda nbsp Our simplifying assumptions make the squares of G disappear together with the time derivativesR 00 G 00 i i displaystyle R 00 approx Gamma 00 i i nbsp Combining the above equations togetherF i i G 00 i i R 00 K T 00 1 2 T g 00 1 2 K r c 4 displaystyle Phi ii approx Gamma 00 i i approx R 00 K left T 00 tfrac 1 2 Tg 00 right approx tfrac 1 2 K rho c 4 nbsp which reduces to the Newtonian field equation provided 1 2 K r c 4 4 p G r displaystyle tfrac 1 2 K rho c 4 4 pi G rho nbsp which will occur if K 8 p G c 4 displaystyle K frac 8 pi G c 4 nbsp Vacuum field equations edit nbsp A Swiss commemorative coin from 1979 showing the vacuum field equations with zero cosmological constant top If the energy momentum tensor Tmn is zero in the region under consideration then the field equations are also referred to as the vacuum field equations By setting Tmn 0 in the trace reversed field equations the vacuum field equations also known as Einstein vacuum equations EVE can be written asR m n 0 displaystyle R mu nu 0 nbsp In the case of nonzero cosmological constant the equations areR m n L D 2 1 g m n displaystyle R mu nu frac Lambda frac D 2 1 g mu nu nbsp The solutions to the vacuum field equations are called vacuum solutions Flat Minkowski space is the simplest example of a vacuum solution Nontrivial examples include the Schwarzschild solution and the Kerr solution Manifolds with a vanishing Ricci tensor Rmn 0 are referred to as Ricci flat manifolds and manifolds with a Ricci tensor proportional to the metric as Einstein manifolds Einstein Maxwell equations editSee also Maxwell s equations in curved spacetime If the energy momentum tensor Tmn is that of an electromagnetic field in free space i e if the electromagnetic stress energy tensorT a b 1 m 0 F a ps F ps b 1 4 g a b F ps t F ps t displaystyle T alpha beta frac 1 mu 0 left F alpha psi F psi beta tfrac 1 4 g alpha beta F psi tau F psi tau right nbsp is used then the Einstein field equations are called the Einstein Maxwell equations with cosmological constant L taken to be zero in conventional relativity theory G a b L g a b k m 0 F a ps F ps b 1 4 g a b F ps t F ps t displaystyle G alpha beta Lambda g alpha beta frac kappa mu 0 left F alpha psi F psi beta tfrac 1 4 g alpha beta F psi tau F psi tau right nbsp Additionally the covariant Maxwell equations are also applicable in free space F a b b 0 F a b g 1 3 F a b g F b g a F g a b 1 3 F a b g F b g a F g a b 0 displaystyle begin aligned F alpha beta beta amp 0 F alpha beta gamma amp tfrac 1 3 left F alpha beta gamma F beta gamma alpha F gamma alpha beta right tfrac 1 3 left F alpha beta gamma F beta gamma alpha F gamma alpha beta right 0 end aligned nbsp where the semicolon represents a covariant derivative and the brackets denote anti symmetrization The first equation asserts that the 4 divergence of the 2 form F is zero and the second that its exterior derivative is zero From the latter it follows by the Poincare lemma that in a coordinate chart it is possible to introduce an electromagnetic field potential Aa such that F a b A a b A b a A a b A b a displaystyle F alpha beta A alpha beta A beta alpha A alpha beta A beta alpha nbsp in which the comma denotes a partial derivative This is often taken as equivalent to the covariant Maxwell equation from which it is derived 20 However there are global solutions of the equation that may lack a globally defined potential 21 Solutions editMain article Solutions of the Einstein field equations The solutions of the Einstein field equations are metrics of spacetime These metrics describe the structure of the spacetime including the inertial motion of objects in the spacetime As the field equations are non linear they cannot always be completely solved i e without making approximations For example there is no known complete solution for a spacetime with two massive bodies in it which is a theoretical model of a binary star system for example However approximations are usually made in these cases These are commonly referred to as post Newtonian approximations Even so there are several cases where the field equations have been solved completely and those are called exact solutions 9 The study of exact solutions of Einstein s field equations is one of the activities of cosmology It leads to the prediction of black holes and to different models of evolution of the universe One can also discover new solutions of the Einstein field equations via the method of orthonormal frames as pioneered by Ellis and MacCallum 22 In this approach the Einstein field equations are reduced to a set of coupled nonlinear ordinary differential equations As discussed by Hsu and Wainwright 23 self similar solutions to the Einstein field equations are fixed points of the resulting dynamical system New solutions have been discovered using these methods by LeBlanc 24 and Kohli and Haslam 25 The linearized EFE editMain article Linearized gravity The nonlinearity of the EFE makes finding exact solutions difficult One way of solving the field equations is to make an approximation namely that far from the source s of gravitating matter the gravitational field is very weak and the spacetime approximates that of Minkowski space The metric is then written as the sum of the Minkowski metric and a term representing the deviation of the true metric from the Minkowski metric ignoring higher power terms This linearization procedure can be used to investigate the phenomena of gravitational radiation Polynomial form editDespite the EFE as written containing the inverse of the metric tensor they can be arranged in a form that contains the metric tensor in polynomial form and without its inverse First the determinant of the metric in 4 dimensions can be writtendet g 1 24 e a b g d e k l m n g a k g b l g g m g d n displaystyle det g tfrac 1 24 varepsilon alpha beta gamma delta varepsilon kappa lambda mu nu g alpha kappa g beta lambda g gamma mu g delta nu nbsp using the Levi Civita symbol and the inverse of the metric in 4 dimensions can be written as g a k 1 6 e a b g d e k l m n g b l g g m g d n det g displaystyle g alpha kappa frac tfrac 1 6 varepsilon alpha beta gamma delta varepsilon kappa lambda mu nu g beta lambda g gamma mu g delta nu det g nbsp Substituting this definition of the inverse of the metric into the equations then multiplying both sides by a suitable power of det g to eliminate it from the denominator results in polynomial equations in the metric tensor and its first and second derivatives The action from which the equations are derived can also be written in polynomial form by suitable redefinitions of the fields 26 See also editConformastatic spacetimes Einstein Hilbert action Equivalence principle Exact solutions in general relativity General relativity resources History of general relativity Hamilton Jacobi Einstein equation Mathematics of general relativity Numerical relativity Ricci calculusNotes edit a b Einstein Albert 1916 The Foundation of the General Theory of Relativity Annalen der Physik 354 7 769 Bibcode 1916AnP 354 769E doi 10 1002 andp 19163540702 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 02 06 Einstein Albert November 25 1915 Die Feldgleichungen der Gravitation Sitzungsberichte der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin 844 847 Retrieved 2017 08 21 Misner Thorne amp Wheeler 1973 p 916 ch 34 Carroll Sean 2004 Spacetime and Geometry An Introduction to General Relativity Addison Wesley pp 151 159 ISBN 0 8053 8732 3 Gron Oyvind Hervik Sigbjorn 2007 Einstein s General Theory of Relativity With Modern Applications in Cosmology illustrated ed Springer Science amp Business Media p 180 ISBN 978 0 387 69200 5 With the choice of the Einstein gravitational constant as given here k 8pG c4 the stress energy tensor on the right side of the equation must be written with each component in units of energy density i e energy per volume equivalently pressure In Einstein s original publication the choice is k 8pG c2 in which case the stress energy tensor components have units of mass density Adler Ronald Bazin Maurice Schiffer Menahem 1975 Introduction to general relativity 2d ed New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 000423 4 OCLC 1046135 Weinberg Steven 1993 Dreams of a Final Theory the search for the fundamental laws of nature Vintage Press pp 107 233 ISBN 0 09 922391 0 a b Stephani Hans Kramer D MacCallum M Hoenselaers C Herlt E 2003 Exact Solutions of Einstein s Field Equations Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 46136 7 Rendall Alan D 2005 Theorems on Existence and Global Dynamics for the Einstein Equations Living Rev Relativ 8 1 Article number 6 arXiv gr qc 0505133 Bibcode 2005LRR 8 6R doi 10 12942 lrr 2005 6 PMC 5256071 PMID 28179868 Misner Thorne amp Wheeler 1973 p 501ff Weinberg 1972 Peebles Phillip James Edwin 1980 The Large scale Structure of the Universe Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08239 1 Efstathiou G Sutherland W J Maddox S J 1990 The cosmological constant and cold dark matter Nature 348 6303 705 Bibcode 1990Natur 348 705E doi 10 1038 348705a0 S2CID 12988317 Collins P D B Martin A D Squires E J 1989 Particle Physics and Cosmology New York Wiley ISBN 0 471 60088 1 Peacock 1999 Gamow George April 28 1970 My World Line An Informal Autobiography Viking Adult ISBN 0 670 50376 2 Retrieved 2007 03 14 Wahl Nicolle 2005 11 22 Was Einstein s biggest blunder a stellar success News UofT University of Toronto Archived from the original on 2007 03 07 Turner Michael S May 2001 Making Sense of the New Cosmology Int J Mod Phys A 17 S1 180 196 arXiv astro ph 0202008 Bibcode 2002IJMPA 17S 180T doi 10 1142 S0217751X02013113 S2CID 16669258 Brown Harvey 2005 Physical Relativity Oxford University Press p 164 ISBN 978 0 19 927583 0 Trautman Andrzej 1977 Solutions of the Maxwell and Yang Mills equations associated with Hopf fibrings International Journal of Theoretical Physics 16 9 561 565 Bibcode 1977IJTP 16 561T doi 10 1007 BF01811088 S2CID 123364248 Ellis G F R MacCallum M 1969 A class of homogeneous cosmological models Comm Math Phys 12 2 108 141 Bibcode 1969CMaPh 12 108E doi 10 1007 BF01645908 S2CID 122577276 Hsu L Wainwright J 1986 Self similar spatially homogeneous cosmologies orthogonal perfect fluid and vacuum solutions Class Quantum Grav 3 6 1105 1124 Bibcode 1986CQGra 3 1105H doi 10 1088 0264 9381 3 6 011 S2CID 250907312 LeBlanc V G 1997 Asymptotic states of magnetic Bianchi I cosmologies Class Quantum Grav 14 8 2281 Bibcode 1997CQGra 14 2281L doi 10 1088 0264 9381 14 8 025 S2CID 250876974 Kohli Ikjyot Singh Haslam Michael C 2013 Dynamical systems approach to a Bianchi type I viscous magnetohydrodynamic model Phys Rev D 88 6 063518 arXiv 1304 8042 Bibcode 2013PhRvD 88f3518K doi 10 1103 physrevd 88 063518 S2CID 119178273 Katanaev M O 2006 Polynomial form of the Hilbert Einstein action Gen Rel Grav 38 8 1233 1240 arXiv gr qc 0507026 Bibcode 2006GReGr 38 1233K doi 10 1007 s10714 006 0310 5 S2CID 6263993 References editSee General relativity resources Misner Charles W Thorne Kip S Wheeler John Archibald 1973 Gravitation San Francisco W H Freeman ISBN 978 0 7167 0344 0 Weinberg Steven 1972 Gravitation and Cosmology John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 92567 5 Peacock John A 1999 Cosmological Physics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521410724 External links edit nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of General Relativity nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about General Relativity Einstein equations Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Caltech Tutorial on Relativity A simple introduction to Einstein s Field Equations The Meaning of Einstein s Equation An explanation of Einstein s field equation its derivation and some of its consequences Video Lecture on Einstein s Field Equations by MIT Physics Professor Edmund Bertschinger Arch and scaffold How Einstein found his field equations Physics Today November 2015 History of the Development of the Field EquationsExternal images edit The Einstein field equation on the wall of the Museum Boerhaave in downtown Leiden Suzanne Imber The impact of general relativity on the Atacama Desert Einstein field equation on the side of a train in Bolivia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Einstein field equations amp oldid 1183870965, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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