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Raychaudhuri equation

In general relativity, the Raychaudhuri equation, or Landau–Raychaudhuri equation,[1] is a fundamental result describing the motion of nearby bits of matter.

The equation is important as a fundamental lemma for the Penrose–Hawking singularity theorems and for the study of exact solutions in general relativity, but has independent interest, since it offers a simple and general validation of our intuitive expectation that gravitation should be a universal attractive force between any two bits of mass–energy in general relativity, as it is in Newton's theory of gravitation.

The equation was discovered independently by the Indian physicist Amal Kumar Raychaudhuri[2] and the Soviet physicist Lev Landau.[3]

Mathematical statement edit

Given a timelike unit vector field   (which can be interpreted as a family or congruence of nonintersecting world lines via the integral curve, not necessarily geodesics), Raychaudhuri's equation can be written

 

where

 

are (non-negative) quadratic invariants of the shear tensor

 

and the vorticity tensor

 

respectively. Here,

 

is the expansion tensor,   is its trace, called the expansion scalar, and

 

is the projection tensor onto the hyperplanes orthogonal to  . Also, dot denotes differentiation with respect to proper time counted along the world lines in the congruence. Finally, the trace of the tidal tensor   can also be written as

 

This quantity is sometimes called the Raychaudhuri scalar.

Intuitive significance edit

The expansion scalar measures the fractional rate at which the volume of a small ball of matter changes with respect to time as measured by a central comoving observer (and so it may take negative values). In other words, the above equation gives us the evolution equation for the expansion of the timelike congruence. If the derivative (with respect to proper time) of this quantity turns out to be negative along some world line (after a certain event), then any expansion of a small ball of matter (whose center of mass follows the world line in question) must be followed by recollapse. If not, continued expansion is possible.

The shear tensor measures any tendency of an initially spherical ball of matter to become distorted into an ellipsoidal shape. The vorticity tensor measures any tendency of nearby world lines to twist about one another (if this happens, our small blob of matter is rotating, as happens to fluid elements in an ordinary fluid flow which exhibits nonzero vorticity).

The right hand side of Raychaudhuri's equation consists of two types of terms:

  1. terms which promote (re)-collapse
    • initially nonzero expansion scalar,
    • nonzero shearing,
    • positive trace of the tidal tensor; this is precisely the condition guaranteed by assuming the strong energy condition, which holds for the most important types of solutions, such as physically reasonable fluid solutions,
  2. terms which oppose (re)-collapse
    • nonzero vorticity, corresponding to Newtonian centrifugal forces,
    • positive divergence of the acceleration vector (e.g., outward pointing acceleration due to a spherically symmetric explosion, or more prosaically, due to body forces on fluid elements in a ball of fluid held together by its own self-gravitation).

Usually one term will win out. However, there are situations in which a balance can be achieved. This balance may be:

  • stable: in the case of hydrostatic equilibrium of a ball of perfect fluid (e.g. in a model of a stellar interior), the expansion, shear, and vorticity all vanish, and a radial divergence in the acceleration vector (the necessary body force on each blob of fluid being provided by the pressure of surrounding fluid) counteracts the Raychaudhuri scalar, which for a perfect fluid is   in geometrized units. In Newtonian gravitation, the trace of the tidal tensor is  ; in general relativity, the tendency of pressure to oppose gravity is partially offset by this term, which under certain circumstances can become important.
  • unstable: for example, the world lines of the dust particles in the Gödel solution have vanishing shear, expansion, and acceleration, but constant vorticity just balancing a constant Raychuadhuri scalar due to nonzero vacuum energy ("cosmological constant").

Focusing theorem edit

Suppose the strong energy condition holds in some region of our spacetime, and let   be a timelike geodesic unit vector field with vanishing vorticity, or equivalently, which is hypersurface orthogonal. For example, this situation can arise in studying the world lines of the dust particles in cosmological models which are exact dust solutions of the Einstein field equation (provided that these world lines are not twisting about one another, in which case the congruence would have nonzero vorticity).

Then Raychaudhuri's equation becomes

 

Now the right hand side is always negative or zero, so the expansion scalar never increases in time.

Since the last two terms are non-negative, we have

 

Integrating this inequality with respect to proper time   gives

 

If the initial value   of the expansion scalar is negative, this means that our geodesics must converge in a caustic (  goes to minus infinity) within a proper time of at most   after the measurement of the initial value   of the expansion scalar. This need not signal an encounter with a curvature singularity, but it does signal a breakdown in our mathematical description of the motion of the dust.

Optical equations edit

There is also an optical (or null) version of Raychaudhuri's equation for null geodesic congruences.

 .

Here, the hats indicate that the expansion, shear and vorticity are only with respect to the transverse directions. When the vorticity is zero, then assuming the null energy condition, caustics will form before the affine parameter reaches  .

Applications edit

The event horizon is defined as the boundary of the causal past of null infinity. Such boundaries are generated by null geodesics. The affine parameter goes to infinity as we approach null infinity, and no caustics form until then. So, the expansion of the event horizon has to be nonnegative. As the expansion gives the rate of change of the logarithm of the area density, this means the event horizon area can never go down, at least classically, assuming the null energy condition.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Spacetime as a deformable solid, M. O. Tahim, R. R. Landim, and C. A. S. Almeida, arXiv:0705.4120v1.
  2. ^ Dadhich, Naresh (August 2005). "Amal Kumar Raychaudhuri (1923–2005)" (PDF). Current Science. 89: 569–570.
  3. ^ The large scale structure of space-time by Stephen W. Hawking and G. F. R. Ellis, Cambridge University Press, 1973, p. 84, ISBN 0-521-09906-4.

References edit

  • Poisson, Eric (2004). A Relativist's Toolkit: The Mathematics of Black Hole Mechanics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-83091-5. See chapter 2 for an excellent discussion of Raychaudhuri's equation for both timelike and null geodesics, as well as the focusing theorem.
  • Carroll, Sean M. (2004). Spacetime and Geometry: An Introduction to General Relativity. San Francisco: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-8053-8732-3. See appendix F.
  • Stephani, Hans; Kramer, Dietrich; MacCallum, Malcolm; Hoenselaers, Cornelius; Hertl, Eduard (2003). Exact Solutions to Einstein's Field Equations (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-46136-7. See chapter 6 for a very detailed introduction to geodesic congruences, including the general form of Raychaudhuri's equation.
  • Hawking, Stephen & Ellis, G. F. R. (1973). The Large Scale Structure of Space-Time. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-09906-4. See section 4.1 for a discussion of the general form of Raychaudhuri's equation.
  • Raychaudhuri, A. K. (1955). "Relativistic cosmology I.". Phys. Rev. 98 (4): 1123–1126. Bibcode:1955PhRv...98.1123R. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.98.1123. hdl:10821/7599. Raychaudhuri's paper introducing his equation.
  • Dasgupta, Anirvan; Nandan, Hemwati & Kar, Sayan (2009). "Kinematics of geodesic flows in stringy black hole backgrounds". Phys. Rev. D. 79 (12): 124004. arXiv:0809.3074. Bibcode:2009PhRvD..79l4004D. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.79.124004. S2CID 118628925. See section IV for derivation of the general form of Raychaudhuri equations for three kinematical quantities (namely expansion scalar, shear and rotation).
  • Kar, Sayan & SenGupta, Soumitra (2007). "The Raychaudhuri equations: A Brief review". Pramana. 69 (1): 49–76. arXiv:gr-qc/0611123. Bibcode:2007Prama..69...49K. doi:10.1007/s12043-007-0110-9. S2CID 119438891. See for a review on Raychaudhuri equations.

External links edit

raychaudhuri, equation, general, relativity, landau, fundamental, result, describing, motion, nearby, bits, matter, equation, important, fundamental, lemma, penrose, hawking, singularity, theorems, study, exact, solutions, general, relativity, independent, int. In general relativity the Raychaudhuri equation or Landau Raychaudhuri equation 1 is a fundamental result describing the motion of nearby bits of matter The equation is important as a fundamental lemma for the Penrose Hawking singularity theorems and for the study of exact solutions in general relativity but has independent interest since it offers a simple and general validation of our intuitive expectation that gravitation should be a universal attractive force between any two bits of mass energy in general relativity as it is in Newton s theory of gravitation The equation was discovered independently by the Indian physicist Amal Kumar Raychaudhuri 2 and the Soviet physicist Lev Landau 3 Contents 1 Mathematical statement 2 Intuitive significance 3 Focusing theorem 4 Optical equations 4 1 Applications 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksMathematical statement editGiven a timelike unit vector field X displaystyle vec X nbsp which can be interpreted as a family or congruence of nonintersecting world lines via the integral curve not necessarily geodesics Raychaudhuri s equation can be written 8 8 2 3 2 s 2 2 w 2 E X a a X a a displaystyle dot theta frac theta 2 3 2 sigma 2 2 omega 2 E vec X a a dot X a a nbsp where 2 s 2 s m n s m n 2 w 2 w m n w m n displaystyle 2 sigma 2 sigma mn sigma mn 2 omega 2 omega mn omega mn nbsp are non negative quadratic invariants of the shear tensor s a b 8 a b 1 3 8 h a b displaystyle sigma ab theta ab frac 1 3 theta h ab nbsp and the vorticity tensor w a b h m a h n b X m n displaystyle omega ab h m a h n b X m n nbsp respectively Here 8 a b h m a h n b X m n displaystyle theta ab h m a h n b X m n nbsp is the expansion tensor 8 displaystyle theta nbsp is its trace called the expansion scalar and h a b g a b X a X b displaystyle h ab g ab X a X b nbsp is the projection tensor onto the hyperplanes orthogonal to X displaystyle vec X nbsp Also dot denotes differentiation with respect to proper time counted along the world lines in the congruence Finally the trace of the tidal tensor E X a b displaystyle E vec X ab nbsp can also be written as E X a a R m n X m X n displaystyle E vec X a a R mn X m X n nbsp This quantity is sometimes called the Raychaudhuri scalar Intuitive significance editThe expansion scalar measures the fractional rate at which the volume of a small ball of matter changes with respect to time as measured by a central comoving observer and so it may take negative values In other words the above equation gives us the evolution equation for the expansion of the timelike congruence If the derivative with respect to proper time of this quantity turns out to be negative along some world line after a certain event then any expansion of a small ball of matter whose center of mass follows the world line in question must be followed by recollapse If not continued expansion is possible The shear tensor measures any tendency of an initially spherical ball of matter to become distorted into an ellipsoidal shape The vorticity tensor measures any tendency of nearby world lines to twist about one another if this happens our small blob of matter is rotating as happens to fluid elements in an ordinary fluid flow which exhibits nonzero vorticity The right hand side of Raychaudhuri s equation consists of two types of terms terms which promote re collapse initially nonzero expansion scalar nonzero shearing positive trace of the tidal tensor this is precisely the condition guaranteed by assuming the strong energy condition which holds for the most important types of solutions such as physically reasonable fluid solutions terms which oppose re collapse nonzero vorticity corresponding to Newtonian centrifugal forces positive divergence of the acceleration vector e g outward pointing acceleration due to a spherically symmetric explosion or more prosaically due to body forces on fluid elements in a ball of fluid held together by its own self gravitation Usually one term will win out However there are situations in which a balance can be achieved This balance may be stable in the case of hydrostatic equilibrium of a ball of perfect fluid e g in a model of a stellar interior the expansion shear and vorticity all vanish and a radial divergence in the acceleration vector the necessary body force on each blob of fluid being provided by the pressure of surrounding fluid counteracts the Raychaudhuri scalar which for a perfect fluid is E X a a 4 p m 3 p displaystyle E vec X a a 4 pi mu 3p nbsp in geometrized units In Newtonian gravitation the trace of the tidal tensor is 4 p m displaystyle 4 pi mu nbsp in general relativity the tendency of pressure to oppose gravity is partially offset by this term which under certain circumstances can become important unstable for example the world lines of the dust particles in the Godel solution have vanishing shear expansion and acceleration but constant vorticity just balancing a constant Raychuadhuri scalar due to nonzero vacuum energy cosmological constant Focusing theorem editSuppose the strong energy condition holds in some region of our spacetime and let X displaystyle vec X nbsp be a timelike geodesic unit vector field with vanishing vorticity or equivalently which is hypersurface orthogonal For example this situation can arise in studying the world lines of the dust particles in cosmological models which are exact dust solutions of the Einstein field equation provided that these world lines are not twisting about one another in which case the congruence would have nonzero vorticity Then Raychaudhuri s equation becomes 8 8 2 3 2 s 2 E X a a displaystyle dot theta frac theta 2 3 2 sigma 2 E vec X a a nbsp Now the right hand side is always negative or zero so the expansion scalar never increases in time Since the last two terms are non negative we have 8 8 2 3 displaystyle dot theta leq frac theta 2 3 nbsp Integrating this inequality with respect to proper time t displaystyle tau nbsp gives 1 8 1 8 0 t 3 displaystyle frac 1 theta geq frac 1 theta 0 frac tau 3 nbsp If the initial value 8 0 displaystyle theta 0 nbsp of the expansion scalar is negative this means that our geodesics must converge in a caustic 8 displaystyle theta nbsp goes to minus infinity within a proper time of at most 3 8 0 displaystyle 3 theta 0 nbsp after the measurement of the initial value 8 0 displaystyle theta 0 nbsp of the expansion scalar This need not signal an encounter with a curvature singularity but it does signal a breakdown in our mathematical description of the motion of the dust Optical equations editThere is also an optical or null version of Raychaudhuri s equation for null geodesic congruences 8 1 2 8 2 2 s 2 2 w 2 T m n U m U n displaystyle dot widehat theta frac 1 2 widehat theta 2 2 widehat sigma 2 2 widehat omega 2 T mu nu U mu U nu nbsp Here the hats indicate that the expansion shear and vorticity are only with respect to the transverse directions When the vorticity is zero then assuming the null energy condition caustics will form before the affine parameter reaches 2 8 0 displaystyle 2 widehat theta 0 nbsp Applications edit The event horizon is defined as the boundary of the causal past of null infinity Such boundaries are generated by null geodesics The affine parameter goes to infinity as we approach null infinity and no caustics form until then So the expansion of the event horizon has to be nonnegative As the expansion gives the rate of change of the logarithm of the area density this means the event horizon area can never go down at least classically assuming the null energy condition See also editCongruence general relativity for a derivation of the kinematical decomposition and of Raychaudhuri s equation Gravitational singularity Penrose Hawking singularity theorems for an application of the focusing theoremNotes edit Spacetime as a deformable solid M O Tahim R R Landim and C A S Almeida arXiv 0705 4120v1 Dadhich Naresh August 2005 Amal Kumar Raychaudhuri 1923 2005 PDF Current Science 89 569 570 The large scale structure of space time by Stephen W Hawking and G F R Ellis Cambridge University Press 1973 p 84 ISBN 0 521 09906 4 References editPoisson Eric 2004 A Relativist s Toolkit The Mathematics of Black Hole Mechanics Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 83091 5 See chapter 2 for an excellent discussion of Raychaudhuri s equation for both timelike and null geodesics as well as the focusing theorem Carroll Sean M 2004 Spacetime and Geometry An Introduction to General Relativity San Francisco Addison Wesley ISBN 0 8053 8732 3 See appendix F Stephani Hans Kramer Dietrich MacCallum Malcolm Hoenselaers Cornelius Hertl Eduard 2003 Exact Solutions to Einstein s Field Equations 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 46136 7 See chapter 6 for a very detailed introduction to geodesic congruences including the general form of Raychaudhuri s equation Hawking Stephen amp Ellis G F R 1973 The Large Scale Structure of Space Time Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 09906 4 See section 4 1 for a discussion of the general form of Raychaudhuri s equation Raychaudhuri A K 1955 Relativistic cosmology I Phys Rev 98 4 1123 1126 Bibcode 1955PhRv 98 1123R doi 10 1103 PhysRev 98 1123 hdl 10821 7599 Raychaudhuri s paper introducing his equation Dasgupta Anirvan Nandan Hemwati amp Kar Sayan 2009 Kinematics of geodesic flows in stringy black hole backgrounds Phys Rev D 79 12 124004 arXiv 0809 3074 Bibcode 2009PhRvD 79l4004D doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 79 124004 S2CID 118628925 See section IV for derivation of the general form of Raychaudhuri equations for three kinematical quantities namely expansion scalar shear and rotation Kar Sayan amp SenGupta Soumitra 2007 The Raychaudhuri equations A Brief review Pramana 69 1 49 76 arXiv gr qc 0611123 Bibcode 2007Prama 69 49K doi 10 1007 s12043 007 0110 9 S2CID 119438891 See for a review on Raychaudhuri equations External links editThe Meaning of Einstein s Field Equation by John C Baez and Emory F Bunn Raychaudhuri s equation takes center stage in this well known and highly recommended semi technical exposition of what Einstein s equation says Theoretical Cosmology by Raychaudhuri A K Clarendon Press 1979 https books google co in books about Theoretical Cosmology html id p1DApKmlaFoC amp redir esc y Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Raychaudhuri equation amp oldid 1153044063, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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