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Exact solutions in general relativity

In general relativity, an exact solution is a solution of the Einstein field equations whose derivation does not invoke simplifying assumptions, though the starting point for that derivation may be an idealized case like a perfectly spherical shape of matter. Mathematically, finding an exact solution means finding a Lorentzian manifold equipped with tensor fields modeling states of ordinary matter, such as a fluid, or classical non-gravitational fields such as the electromagnetic field.

Background and definition

These tensor fields should obey any relevant physical laws (for example, any electromagnetic field must satisfy Maxwell's equations). Following a standard recipe which is widely used in mathematical physics, these tensor fields should also give rise to specific contributions to the stress–energy tensor  .[1] (A field is described by a Lagrangian, varying with respect to the field should give the field equations and varying with respect to the metric should give the stress-energy contribution due to the field.)

Finally, when all the contributions to the stress–energy tensor are added up, the result must be a solution of the Einstein field equations

 

In the above field equations,   is the Einstein tensor, computed uniquely from the metric tensor which is part of the definition of a Lorentzian manifold. Since giving the Einstein tensor does not fully determine the Riemann tensor, but leaves the Weyl tensor unspecified (see the Ricci decomposition), the Einstein equation may be considered a kind of compatibility condition: the spacetime geometry must be consistent with the amount and motion of any matter or non-gravitational fields, in the sense that the immediate presence "here and now" of non-gravitational energy–momentum causes a proportional amount of Ricci curvature "here and now". Moreover, taking covariant derivatives of the field equations and applying the Bianchi identities, it is found that a suitably varying amount/motion of non-gravitational energy–momentum can cause ripples in curvature to propagate as gravitational radiation, even across vacuum regions, which contain no matter or non-gravitational fields.

Difficulties with the definition

Any Lorentzian manifold is a solution of the Einstein field equation for some right hand side. This is illustrated by the following procedure:

This shows that there are two complementary ways to use general relativity:

  • One can fix the form of the stress–energy tensor (from some physical reasons, say) and study the solutions of the Einstein equations with such right hand side (for example, if the stress–energy tensor is chosen to be that of the perfect fluid, a spherically symmetric solution can serve as a stellar model)
  • Alternatively, one can fix some geometrical properties of a spacetime and look for a matter source that could provide these properties. This is what cosmologists have done since the 2000s: they assume that the Universe is homogeneous, isotropic, and accelerating and try to realize what matter (called dark energy) can support such a structure.

Within the first approach the alleged stress–energy tensor must arise in the standard way from a "reasonable" matter distribution or non-gravitational field. In practice, this notion is pretty clear, especially if we restrict the admissible non-gravitational fields to the only one known in 1916, the electromagnetic field. But ideally we would like to have some mathematical characterization that states some purely mathematical test which we can apply to any putative "stress–energy tensor", which passes everything which might arise from a "reasonable" physical scenario, and rejects everything else. Unfortunately, no such characterization is known. Instead, we have crude tests known as the energy conditions, which are similar to placing restrictions on the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a linear operator. On the one hand, these conditions are far too permissive: they would admit "solutions" which almost no-one believes are physically reasonable. On the other, they may be far too restrictive: the most popular energy conditions are apparently violated by the Casimir effect.

Einstein also recognized another element of the definition of an exact solution: it should be a Lorentzian manifold (meeting additional criteria), i.e. a smooth manifold. But in working with general relativity, it turns out to be very useful to admit solutions which are not everywhere smooth; examples include many solutions created by matching a perfect fluid interior solution to a vacuum exterior solution, and impulsive plane waves. Once again, the creative tension between elegance and convenience, respectively, has proven difficult to resolve satisfactorily.

In addition to such local objections, we have the far more challenging problem that there are very many exact solutions which are locally unobjectionable, but globally exhibit causally suspect features such as closed timelike curves or structures with points of separation ("trouser worlds"). Some of the best known exact solutions, in fact, have globally a strange character.

Types of exact solution

Many well-known exact solutions belong to one of several types, depending upon the intended physical interpretation of the stress–energy tensor:

  • Vacuum solutions:  ; these describe regions in which no matter or non-gravitational fields are present,
  • Electrovacuum solutions:   must arise entirely from an electromagnetic field which solves the source-free Maxwell equations on the given curved Lorentzian manifold; this means that the only source for the gravitational field is the field energy (and momentum) of the electromagnetic field,
  • Null dust solutions:   must correspond to a stress–energy tensor which can be interpreted as arising from incoherent electromagnetic radiation, without necessarily solving the Maxwell field equations on the given Lorentzian manifold,
  • Fluid solutions:   must arise entirely from the stress–energy tensor of a fluid (often taken to be a perfect fluid); the only source for the gravitational field is the energy, momentum, and stress (pressure and shear stress) of the matter comprising the fluid.

In addition to such well established phenomena as fluids or electromagnetic waves, one can contemplate models in which the gravitational field is produced entirely by the field energy of various exotic hypothetical fields:

One possibility which has received little attention (perhaps because the mathematics is so challenging) is the problem of modeling an elastic solid. Presently, it seems that no exact solutions for this specific type are known.

Below we have sketched a classification by physical interpretation. Solutions can also be organized using the Segre classification of the possible algebraic symmetries of the Ricci tensor:

  • non-null electrovacuums have Segre type   and isotropy group SO(1,1) x SO(2),
  • null electrovacuums and null dusts have Segre type   and isotropy group E(2),
  • perfect fluids have Segre type   and isotropy group SO(3),
  • Lambda vacuums have Segre type   and isotropy group SO(1,3).

The remaining Segre types have no particular physical interpretation and most of them cannot correspond to any known type of contribution to the stress–energy tensor.

Examples

Noteworthy examples of vacuum solutions, electrovacuum solutions, and so forth, are listed in specialized articles (see below). These solutions contain at most one contribution to the energy–momentum tensor, due to a specific kind of matter or field. However, there are some notable exact solutions which contain two or three contributions, including:

  • NUT-Kerr–Newman–de Sitter solution contains contributions from an electromagnetic field and a positive vacuum energy, as well as a kind of vacuum perturbation of the Kerr vacuum which is specified by the so-called NUT parameter,
  • Gödel dust contains contributions from a pressureless perfect fluid (dust) and from a positive vacuum energy.

Constructing solutions

The Einstein field equations are a system of coupled, nonlinear partial differential equations. In general, this makes them hard to solve. Nonetheless, several effective techniques for obtaining exact solutions have been established.

The simplest involves imposing symmetry conditions on the metric tensor, such as stationarity (symmetry under time translation) or axisymmetry (symmetry under rotation about some symmetry axis). With sufficiently clever assumptions of this sort, it is often possible to reduce the Einstein field equation to a much simpler system of equations, even a single partial differential equation (as happens in the case of stationary axisymmetric vacuum solutions, which are characterized by the Ernst equation) or a system of ordinary differential equations (as happens in the case of the Schwarzschild vacuum).

This naive approach usually works best if one uses a frame field rather than a coordinate basis.

A related idea involves imposing algebraic symmetry conditions on the Weyl tensor, Ricci tensor, or Riemann tensor. These are often stated in terms of the Petrov classification of the possible symmetries of the Weyl tensor, or the Segre classification of the possible symmetries of the Ricci tensor. As will be apparent from the discussion above, such Ansätze often do have some physical content, although this might not be apparent from their mathematical form.

This second kind of symmetry approach has often been used with the Newman–Penrose formalism, which uses spinorial quantities for more efficient bookkeeping.

Even after such symmetry reductions, the reduced system of equations is often difficult to solve. For example, the Ernst equation is a nonlinear partial differential equation somewhat resembling the nonlinear Schrödinger equation (NLS).

But recall that the conformal group on Minkowski spacetime is the symmetry group of the Maxwell equations. Recall too that solutions of the heat equation can be found by assuming a scaling Ansatz. These notions are merely special cases of Sophus Lie's notion of the point symmetry of a differential equation (or system of equations), and as Lie showed, this can provide an avenue of attack upon any differential equation which has a nontrivial symmetry group. Indeed, both the Ernst equation and the NLS have nontrivial symmetry groups, and some solutions can be found by taking advantage of their symmetries. These symmetry groups are often infinite dimensional, but this is not always a useful feature.

Emmy Noether showed that a slight but profound generalization of Lie's notion of symmetry can result in an even more powerful method of attack. This turns out to be closely related to the discovery that some equations, which are said to be completely integrable, enjoy an infinite sequence of conservation laws. Quite remarkably, both the Ernst equation (which arises several ways in the studies of exact solutions) and the NLS turn out to be completely integrable. They are therefore susceptible to solution by techniques resembling the inverse scattering transform which was originally developed to solve the Korteweg-de Vries (KdV) equation, a nonlinear partial differential equation which arises in the theory of solitons, and which is also completely integrable. Unfortunately, the solutions obtained by these methods are often not as nice as one would like. For example, in a manner analogous to the way that one obtains a multiple soliton solution of the KdV from the single soliton solution (which can be found from Lie's notion of point symmetry), one can obtain a multiple Kerr object solution, but unfortunately, this has some features which make it physically implausible.[2]

There are also various transformations (see Belinski-Zakharov transform) which can transform (for example) a vacuum solution found by other means into a new vacuum solution, or into an electrovacuum solution, or a fluid solution. These are analogous to the Bäcklund transformations known from the theory of certain partial differential equations, including some famous examples of soliton equations. This is no coincidence, since this phenomenon is also related to the notions of Noether and Lie regarding symmetry. Unfortunately, even when applied to a "well understood", globally admissible solution, these transformations often yield a solution which is poorly understood and their general interpretation is still unknown.

Existence of solutions

Given the difficulty of constructing explicit small families of solutions, much less presenting something like a "general" solution to the Einstein field equation, or even a "general" solution to the vacuum field equation, a very reasonable approach is to try to find qualitative properties which hold for all solutions, or at least for all vacuum solutions. One of the most basic questions one can ask is: do solutions exist, and if so, how many?

To get started, we should adopt a suitable initial value formulation of the field equation, which gives two new systems of equations, one giving a constraint on the initial data, and the other giving a procedure for evolving this initial data into a solution. Then, one can prove that solutions exist at least locally, using ideas not terribly dissimilar from those encountered in studying other differential equations.

To get some idea of "how many" solutions we might optimistically expect, we can appeal to Einstein's constraint counting method. A typical conclusion from this style of argument is that a generic vacuum solution to the Einstein field equation can be specified by giving four arbitrary functions of three variables and six arbitrary functions of two variables. These functions specify initial data, from which a unique vacuum solution can be evolved. (In contrast, the Ernst vacuums, the family of all stationary axisymmetric vacuum solutions, are specified by giving just two functions of two variables, which are not even arbitrary, but must satisfy a system of two coupled nonlinear partial differential equations. This may give some idea of how just tiny a typical "large" family of exact solutions really is, in the grand scheme of things.)

However, this crude analysis falls far short of the much more difficult question of global existence of solutions. The global existence results which are known so far turn out to involve another idea.

Global stability theorems

We can imagine "disturbing" the gravitational field outside some isolated massive object by "sending in some radiation from infinity". We can ask: what happens as the incoming radiation interacts with the ambient field? In the approach of classical perturbation theory, we can start with Minkowski vacuum (or another very simple solution, such as the de Sitter lambdavacuum), introduce very small metric perturbations, and retain only terms up to some order in a suitable perturbation expansion—somewhat like evaluating a kind of Taylor series for the geometry of our spacetime. This approach is essentially the idea behind the post-Newtonian approximations used in constructing models of a gravitating system such as a binary pulsar. However, perturbation expansions are generally not reliable for questions of long-term existence and stability, in the case of nonlinear equations.

The full field equation is highly nonlinear, so we really want to prove that the Minkowski vacuum is stable under small perturbations which are treated using the fully nonlinear field equation. This requires the introduction of many new ideas. The desired result, sometimes expressed by the slogan that the Minkowski vacuum is nonlinearly stable, was finally proven by Demetrios Christodoulou and Sergiu Klainerman only in 1993.[3] Analogous results are known for lambdavac perturbations of the de Sitter lambdavacuum (Helmut Friedrich) and for electrovacuum perturbations of the Minkowski vacuum (Nina Zipser). In contrast, anti-de Sitter spacetime is known to be unstable under certain conditions.[4][5]

The positive energy theorem

Another issue we might worry about is whether the net mass-energy of an isolated concentration of positive mass-energy density (and momentum) always yields a well-defined (and non-negative) net mass. This result, known as the positive energy theorem was finally proven by Richard Schoen and Shing-Tung Yau in 1979, who made an additional technical assumption about the nature of the stress–energy tensor. The original proof is very difficult; Edward Witten soon presented a much shorter "physicist's proof", which has been justified by mathematicians—using further very difficult arguments. Roger Penrose and others have also offered alternative arguments for variants of the original positive energy theorem.

See also

References

  1. ^ Stephani et al. 2009
  2. ^ Belinski, V.; Verdaguer, E. (2001). Gravitational solitons. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-80586-4. A monograph on the use of soliton methods to produce stationary axisymmetric vacuum solutions, colliding gravitational plane waves, and so forth.
  3. ^ Christodoulou, Demetrios; Klainerman, Sergiu (2014). The global nonlinear stability of the Minkowski space. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-60315-5. OCLC 881139781.
  4. ^ Bizoń, Piotr; Rostworowski, Andrzej (2011). "Weakly Turbulent Instability of Anti–de Sitter Spacetime". Physical Review Letters. 107 (3): 031102. arXiv:1104.3702. Bibcode:2011PhRvL.107c1102B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.107.031102. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 21838346. S2CID 31556930.
  5. ^ Moschidis, Georgios (2018-12-11). "A proof of the instability of AdS for the Einstein—massless Vlasov system". arXiv:1812.04268 [math.AP].

Further reading

  • Krasiński, A. (1997). Inhomogeneous Cosmological Models. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-48180-5.
  • MacCallum, M. A. H. (2006). "Finding and using exact solutions of the Einstein equations". AIP Conference Proceedings. Vol. 841. pp. 129–143. arXiv:gr-qc/0601102. Bibcode:2006AIPC..841..129M. doi:10.1063/1.2218172. An up-to-date review article, but too brief, compared to the review articles by Bičák 2000 or Bonnor, Griffiths & MacCallum 1994.
  • MacCallum, Malcolm A.H. (2013). "Exact Solutions of Einstein's equations". Scholarpedia. 8 (12): 8584. Bibcode:2013SchpJ...8.8584M. doi:10.4249/scholarpedia.8584.
  • Rendall, Alan M. (27 September 2002). "Local and Global Existence Theorems for the Einstein Equations". Living Reviews in Relativity. 5 (1): 6. doi:10.12942/lrr-2002-6. PMC 5255525. PMID 28163637. Retrieved August 11, 2005. A thorough and up-to-date review article.
  • Friedrich, Helmut (2005). "Is general relativity 'essentially understood' ?". Annalen der Physik. 15 (1–2): 84–108. arXiv:gr-qc/0508016. Bibcode:2006AnP...518...84F. doi:10.1002/andp.200510173. S2CID 37236624. An excellent and more concise review.
  • Bičák, Jiří (2000). "Selected Solutions of Einstein's Field Equations: Their Role in General Relativity and Astrophysics". Einstein's Field Equations and Their Physical Implications. Lecture Notes in Physics. Vol. 540. pp. 1–126. arXiv:gr-qc/0004016. doi:10.1007/3-540-46580-4_1. ISBN 978-3-540-67073-5. S2CID 119449917. An excellent modern survey.
  • Bonnor, W.B.; Griffiths, J.B.; MacCallum, M.A.H. (1994). "Physical interpretation of vacuum solutions of Einstein's equations. Part II. Time-dependent solutions". Gen. Rel. Grav. 26 (7): 637–729. Bibcode:1994GReGr..26..687B. doi:10.1007/BF02116958. S2CID 189835151.
  • Bonnor, W. B. (1992). "Physical interpretation of vacuum solutions of Einstein's equations. Part I. Time-independent solutions". Gen. Rel. Grav. 24 (5): 551–573. Bibcode:1992GReGr..24..551B. doi:10.1007/BF00760137. S2CID 122301194. A wise review, first of two parts.
  • Griffiths, J. B. (1991). . Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-853209-1. Archived from the original on 2007-06-10. The definitive resource on colliding plane waves, but also useful to anyone interested in other exact solutions.
  • Hoenselaers, C.; Dietz, W. (1985). Solutions of Einstein's Equations: Techniques and Results. Springer. ISBN 3-540-13366-6.
  • Ehlers, Jürgen; Kundt, Wolfgang (1962). "Exact solutions of the gravitational field equations". In Witten, L. (ed.). Gravitation: An Introduction to Current Research. Wiley. pp. 49–101. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-0013-5F17-4. OCLC 504779224. A classic survey, including important original work such as the symmetry classification of vacuum pp-wave spacetimes.
  • Stephani, Hans; Kramer, Dietrich; MacCallum, Malcolm; Hoenselaers, Cornelius; Herlt, Eduard (2009) [2003]. Exact Solutions of Einstein's Field Equations (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-46702-5.

External links

exact, solutions, general, relativity, this, article, needs, attention, from, expert, physics, specific, problem, article, more, opinionated, than, encyclopedic, citations, other, revisions, needed, make, standard, treatment, standard, topic, wikiproject, phys. This article needs attention from an expert in Physics The specific problem is article is more opinionated than encyclopedic citations and other revisions needed to make it a standard treatment of a standard topic WikiProject Physics may be able to help recruit an expert April 2021 In general relativity an exact solution is a solution of the Einstein field equations whose derivation does not invoke simplifying assumptions though the starting point for that derivation may be an idealized case like a perfectly spherical shape of matter Mathematically finding an exact solution means finding a Lorentzian manifold equipped with tensor fields modeling states of ordinary matter such as a fluid or classical non gravitational fields such as the electromagnetic field Contents 1 Background and definition 2 Difficulties with the definition 3 Types of exact solution 3 1 Examples 4 Constructing solutions 5 Existence of solutions 6 Global stability theorems 7 The positive energy theorem 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground and definition EditThese tensor fields should obey any relevant physical laws for example any electromagnetic field must satisfy Maxwell s equations Following a standard recipe which is widely used in mathematical physics these tensor fields should also give rise to specific contributions to the stress energy tensor T a b displaystyle T alpha beta 1 A field is described by a Lagrangian varying with respect to the field should give the field equations and varying with respect to the metric should give the stress energy contribution due to the field Finally when all the contributions to the stress energy tensor are added up the result must be a solution of the Einstein field equations G a b k T a b displaystyle G alpha beta kappa T alpha beta In the above field equations G a b displaystyle G alpha beta is the Einstein tensor computed uniquely from the metric tensor which is part of the definition of a Lorentzian manifold Since giving the Einstein tensor does not fully determine the Riemann tensor but leaves the Weyl tensor unspecified see the Ricci decomposition the Einstein equation may be considered a kind of compatibility condition the spacetime geometry must be consistent with the amount and motion of any matter or non gravitational fields in the sense that the immediate presence here and now of non gravitational energy momentum causes a proportional amount of Ricci curvature here and now Moreover taking covariant derivatives of the field equations and applying the Bianchi identities it is found that a suitably varying amount motion of non gravitational energy momentum can cause ripples in curvature to propagate as gravitational radiation even across vacuum regions which contain no matter or non gravitational fields Difficulties with the definition EditAny Lorentzian manifold is a solution of the Einstein field equation for some right hand side This is illustrated by the following procedure take any Lorentzian manifold compute its Einstein tensor G a b displaystyle G alpha beta which is a purely mathematical operation divide by the Einstein gravitational constant k displaystyle kappa declare the resulting symmetric second rank tensor field to be the stress energy tensor T a b displaystyle T alpha beta This shows that there are two complementary ways to use general relativity One can fix the form of the stress energy tensor from some physical reasons say and study the solutions of the Einstein equations with such right hand side for example if the stress energy tensor is chosen to be that of the perfect fluid a spherically symmetric solution can serve as a stellar model Alternatively one can fix some geometrical properties of a spacetime and look for a matter source that could provide these properties This is what cosmologists have done since the 2000s they assume that the Universe is homogeneous isotropic and accelerating and try to realize what matter called dark energy can support such a structure Within the first approach the alleged stress energy tensor must arise in the standard way from a reasonable matter distribution or non gravitational field In practice this notion is pretty clear especially if we restrict the admissible non gravitational fields to the only one known in 1916 the electromagnetic field But ideally we would like to have some mathematical characterization that states some purely mathematical test which we can apply to any putative stress energy tensor which passes everything which might arise from a reasonable physical scenario and rejects everything else Unfortunately no such characterization is known Instead we have crude tests known as the energy conditions which are similar to placing restrictions on the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a linear operator On the one hand these conditions are far too permissive they would admit solutions which almost no one believes are physically reasonable On the other they may be far too restrictive the most popular energy conditions are apparently violated by the Casimir effect Einstein also recognized another element of the definition of an exact solution it should be a Lorentzian manifold meeting additional criteria i e a smooth manifold But in working with general relativity it turns out to be very useful to admit solutions which are not everywhere smooth examples include many solutions created by matching a perfect fluid interior solution to a vacuum exterior solution and impulsive plane waves Once again the creative tension between elegance and convenience respectively has proven difficult to resolve satisfactorily In addition to such local objections we have the far more challenging problem that there are very many exact solutions which are locally unobjectionable but globally exhibit causally suspect features such as closed timelike curves or structures with points of separation trouser worlds Some of the best known exact solutions in fact have globally a strange character Types of exact solution EditMany well known exact solutions belong to one of several types depending upon the intended physical interpretation of the stress energy tensor Vacuum solutions T a b 0 displaystyle T alpha beta 0 these describe regions in which no matter or non gravitational fields are present Electrovacuum solutions T a b displaystyle T alpha beta must arise entirely from an electromagnetic field which solves the source free Maxwell equations on the given curved Lorentzian manifold this means that the only source for the gravitational field is the field energy and momentum of the electromagnetic field Null dust solutions T a b displaystyle T alpha beta must correspond to a stress energy tensor which can be interpreted as arising from incoherent electromagnetic radiation without necessarily solving the Maxwell field equations on the given Lorentzian manifold Fluid solutions T a b displaystyle T alpha beta must arise entirely from the stress energy tensor of a fluid often taken to be a perfect fluid the only source for the gravitational field is the energy momentum and stress pressure and shear stress of the matter comprising the fluid In addition to such well established phenomena as fluids or electromagnetic waves one can contemplate models in which the gravitational field is produced entirely by the field energy of various exotic hypothetical fields Scalar field solutions T a b displaystyle T alpha beta must arise entirely from a scalar field often a massless scalar field these can arise in classical field theory treatments of meson beams or as quintessence Lambdavacuum solutions not a standard term but a standard concept for which no name yet exists T a b displaystyle T alpha beta arises entirely from a nonzero cosmological constant One possibility which has received little attention perhaps because the mathematics is so challenging is the problem of modeling an elastic solid Presently it seems that no exact solutions for this specific type are known Below we have sketched a classification by physical interpretation Solutions can also be organized using the Segre classification of the possible algebraic symmetries of the Ricci tensor non null electrovacuums have Segre type 1 1 11 displaystyle 1 1 11 and isotropy group SO 1 1 x SO 2 null electrovacuums and null dusts have Segre type 2 11 displaystyle 2 11 and isotropy group E 2 perfect fluids have Segre type 1 111 displaystyle 1 111 and isotropy group SO 3 Lambda vacuums have Segre type 1 111 displaystyle 1 111 and isotropy group SO 1 3 The remaining Segre types have no particular physical interpretation and most of them cannot correspond to any known type of contribution to the stress energy tensor Examples Edit Noteworthy examples of vacuum solutions electrovacuum solutions and so forth are listed in specialized articles see below These solutions contain at most one contribution to the energy momentum tensor due to a specific kind of matter or field However there are some notable exact solutions which contain two or three contributions including NUT Kerr Newman de Sitter solution contains contributions from an electromagnetic field and a positive vacuum energy as well as a kind of vacuum perturbation of the Kerr vacuum which is specified by the so called NUT parameter Godel dust contains contributions from a pressureless perfect fluid dust and from a positive vacuum energy Constructing solutions EditThe Einstein field equations are a system of coupled nonlinear partial differential equations In general this makes them hard to solve Nonetheless several effective techniques for obtaining exact solutions have been established The simplest involves imposing symmetry conditions on the metric tensor such as stationarity symmetry under time translation or axisymmetry symmetry under rotation about some symmetry axis With sufficiently clever assumptions of this sort it is often possible to reduce the Einstein field equation to a much simpler system of equations even a single partial differential equation as happens in the case of stationary axisymmetric vacuum solutions which are characterized by the Ernst equation or a system of ordinary differential equations as happens in the case of the Schwarzschild vacuum This naive approach usually works best if one uses a frame field rather than a coordinate basis A related idea involves imposing algebraic symmetry conditions on the Weyl tensor Ricci tensor or Riemann tensor These are often stated in terms of the Petrov classification of the possible symmetries of the Weyl tensor or the Segre classification of the possible symmetries of the Ricci tensor As will be apparent from the discussion above such Ansatze often do have some physical content although this might not be apparent from their mathematical form This second kind of symmetry approach has often been used with the Newman Penrose formalism which uses spinorial quantities for more efficient bookkeeping Even after such symmetry reductions the reduced system of equations is often difficult to solve For example the Ernst equation is a nonlinear partial differential equation somewhat resembling the nonlinear Schrodinger equation NLS But recall that the conformal group on Minkowski spacetime is the symmetry group of the Maxwell equations Recall too that solutions of the heat equation can be found by assuming a scaling Ansatz These notions are merely special cases of Sophus Lie s notion of the point symmetry of a differential equation or system of equations and as Lie showed this can provide an avenue of attack upon any differential equation which has a nontrivial symmetry group Indeed both the Ernst equation and the NLS have nontrivial symmetry groups and some solutions can be found by taking advantage of their symmetries These symmetry groups are often infinite dimensional but this is not always a useful feature Emmy Noether showed that a slight but profound generalization of Lie s notion of symmetry can result in an even more powerful method of attack This turns out to be closely related to the discovery that some equations which are said to be completely integrable enjoy an infinite sequence of conservation laws Quite remarkably both the Ernst equation which arises several ways in the studies of exact solutions and the NLS turn out to be completely integrable They are therefore susceptible to solution by techniques resembling the inverse scattering transform which was originally developed to solve the Korteweg de Vries KdV equation a nonlinear partial differential equation which arises in the theory of solitons and which is also completely integrable Unfortunately the solutions obtained by these methods are often not as nice as one would like For example in a manner analogous to the way that one obtains a multiple soliton solution of the KdV from the single soliton solution which can be found from Lie s notion of point symmetry one can obtain a multiple Kerr object solution but unfortunately this has some features which make it physically implausible 2 There are also various transformations see Belinski Zakharov transform which can transform for example a vacuum solution found by other means into a new vacuum solution or into an electrovacuum solution or a fluid solution These are analogous to the Backlund transformations known from the theory of certain partial differential equations including some famous examples of soliton equations This is no coincidence since this phenomenon is also related to the notions of Noether and Lie regarding symmetry Unfortunately even when applied to a well understood globally admissible solution these transformations often yield a solution which is poorly understood and their general interpretation is still unknown Existence of solutions EditGiven the difficulty of constructing explicit small families of solutions much less presenting something like a general solution to the Einstein field equation or even a general solution to the vacuum field equation a very reasonable approach is to try to find qualitative properties which hold for all solutions or at least for all vacuum solutions One of the most basic questions one can ask is do solutions exist and if so how many To get started we should adopt a suitable initial value formulation of the field equation which gives two new systems of equations one giving a constraint on the initial data and the other giving a procedure for evolving this initial data into a solution Then one can prove that solutions exist at least locally using ideas not terribly dissimilar from those encountered in studying other differential equations To get some idea of how many solutions we might optimistically expect we can appeal to Einstein s constraint counting method A typical conclusion from this style of argument is that a generic vacuum solution to the Einstein field equation can be specified by giving four arbitrary functions of three variables and six arbitrary functions of two variables These functions specify initial data from which a unique vacuum solution can be evolved In contrast the Ernst vacuums the family of all stationary axisymmetric vacuum solutions are specified by giving just two functions of two variables which are not even arbitrary but must satisfy a system of two coupled nonlinear partial differential equations This may give some idea of how just tiny a typical large family of exact solutions really is in the grand scheme of things However this crude analysis falls far short of the much more difficult question of global existence of solutions The global existence results which are known so far turn out to involve another idea Global stability theorems EditWe can imagine disturbing the gravitational field outside some isolated massive object by sending in some radiation from infinity We can ask what happens as the incoming radiation interacts with the ambient field In the approach of classical perturbation theory we can start with Minkowski vacuum or another very simple solution such as the de Sitter lambdavacuum introduce very small metric perturbations and retain only terms up to some order in a suitable perturbation expansion somewhat like evaluating a kind of Taylor series for the geometry of our spacetime This approach is essentially the idea behind the post Newtonian approximations used in constructing models of a gravitating system such as a binary pulsar However perturbation expansions are generally not reliable for questions of long term existence and stability in the case of nonlinear equations The full field equation is highly nonlinear so we really want to prove that the Minkowski vacuum is stable under small perturbations which are treated using the fully nonlinear field equation This requires the introduction of many new ideas The desired result sometimes expressed by the slogan that the Minkowski vacuum is nonlinearly stable was finally proven by Demetrios Christodoulou and Sergiu Klainerman only in 1993 3 Analogous results are known for lambdavac perturbations of the de Sitter lambdavacuum Helmut Friedrich and for electrovacuum perturbations of the Minkowski vacuum Nina Zipser In contrast anti de Sitter spacetime is known to be unstable under certain conditions 4 5 The positive energy theorem EditMain article Positive energy theorem Another issue we might worry about is whether the net mass energy of an isolated concentration of positive mass energy density and momentum always yields a well defined and non negative net mass This result known as the positive energy theorem was finally proven by Richard Schoen and Shing Tung Yau in 1979 who made an additional technical assumption about the nature of the stress energy tensor The original proof is very difficult Edward Witten soon presented a much shorter physicist s proof which has been justified by mathematicians using further very difficult arguments Roger Penrose and others have also offered alternative arguments for variants of the original positive energy theorem See also EditFriedmann Lemaitre Robertson Walker metric Petrov classification for algebraic symmetries of the Weyl tensorReferences Edit Stephani et al 2009 Belinski V Verdaguer E 2001 Gravitational solitons Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 80586 4 A monograph on the use of soliton methods to produce stationary axisymmetric vacuum solutions colliding gravitational plane waves and so forth Christodoulou Demetrios Klainerman Sergiu 2014 The global nonlinear stability of the Minkowski space Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 60315 5 OCLC 881139781 Bizon Piotr Rostworowski Andrzej 2011 Weakly Turbulent Instability of Anti de Sitter Spacetime Physical Review Letters 107 3 031102 arXiv 1104 3702 Bibcode 2011PhRvL 107c1102B doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 107 031102 ISSN 0031 9007 PMID 21838346 S2CID 31556930 Moschidis Georgios 2018 12 11 A proof of the instability of AdS for the Einstein massless Vlasov system arXiv 1812 04268 math AP Further reading EditKrasinski A 1997 Inhomogeneous Cosmological Models Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 48180 5 MacCallum M A H 2006 Finding and using exact solutions of the Einstein equations AIP Conference Proceedings Vol 841 pp 129 143 arXiv gr qc 0601102 Bibcode 2006AIPC 841 129M doi 10 1063 1 2218172 An up to date review article but too brief compared to the review articles by Bicak 2000 or Bonnor Griffiths amp MacCallum 1994 MacCallum Malcolm A H 2013 Exact Solutions of Einstein s equations Scholarpedia 8 12 8584 Bibcode 2013SchpJ 8 8584M doi 10 4249 scholarpedia 8584 Rendall Alan M 27 September 2002 Local and Global Existence Theorems for the Einstein Equations Living Reviews in Relativity 5 1 6 doi 10 12942 lrr 2002 6 PMC 5255525 PMID 28163637 Retrieved August 11 2005 A thorough and up to date review article Friedrich Helmut 2005 Is general relativity essentially understood Annalen der Physik 15 1 2 84 108 arXiv gr qc 0508016 Bibcode 2006AnP 518 84F doi 10 1002 andp 200510173 S2CID 37236624 An excellent and more concise review Bicak Jiri 2000 Selected Solutions of Einstein s Field Equations Their Role in General Relativity and Astrophysics Einstein s Field Equations and Their Physical Implications Lecture Notes in Physics Vol 540 pp 1 126 arXiv gr qc 0004016 doi 10 1007 3 540 46580 4 1 ISBN 978 3 540 67073 5 S2CID 119449917 An excellent modern survey Bonnor W B Griffiths J B MacCallum M A H 1994 Physical interpretation of vacuum solutions of Einstein s equations Part II Time dependent solutions Gen Rel Grav 26 7 637 729 Bibcode 1994GReGr 26 687B doi 10 1007 BF02116958 S2CID 189835151 Bonnor W B 1992 Physical interpretation of vacuum solutions of Einstein s equations Part I Time independent solutions Gen Rel Grav 24 5 551 573 Bibcode 1992GReGr 24 551B doi 10 1007 BF00760137 S2CID 122301194 A wise review first of two parts Griffiths J B 1991 Colliding Plane Waves in General Relativity Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 853209 1 Archived from the original on 2007 06 10 The definitive resource on colliding plane waves but also useful to anyone interested in other exact solutions Hoenselaers C Dietz W 1985 Solutions of Einstein s Equations Techniques and Results Springer ISBN 3 540 13366 6 Ehlers Jurgen Kundt Wolfgang 1962 Exact solutions of the gravitational field equations In Witten L ed Gravitation An Introduction to Current Research Wiley pp 49 101 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 0013 5F17 4 OCLC 504779224 A classic survey including important original work such as the symmetry classification of vacuum pp wave spacetimes Stephani Hans Kramer Dietrich MacCallum Malcolm Hoenselaers Cornelius Herlt Eduard 2009 2003 Exact Solutions of Einstein s Field Equations 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 46702 5 External links Edit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Exact solutions in general relativity amp oldid 1135403745, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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