From field equation to equation of motion

In summary, Einstein's field equations can be solved to get a specific metric, and from there the equation of motion for a particle facing gravitational force can be derived.
  • #1
Madster
22
0
Dear fellow relativiters,

I never fully got how to get from the field equations of Einstein's
[itex] R_{ \mu \nu} - \frac{1}{2} g_{ \mu \nu} R= -\frac{8 \pi G}{c^4} T_{ \mu \nu} [/itex]

to a special metric, let's say the FRW metric

[itex] ds^2 = c^2 dt^2 - a(t)^2 \cdot (\frac{dx^2}{1-kx^2} + x^2 d\Omega^2) [/itex]
and from there the equation of motion for a particle facing gravitational force.

In the above I left out [itex] \Lambda g_{\mu\nu} [/itex] the term that represents that the metric itself is a solution and that gravity is repulsive on scales of vacuum energy.
So in Newtonian approximation I should get something like the inverse square law + [itex] \Lambda \cdot \vec{r} [/itex] ?

Thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
To get from the EFE to a specific metric, you just have to solve the EFE! In practice this means specifying a stress energy tensor. In the case of FRW, it's a perfect fluid. Then you impose homogeneity and isotropy, and literally compute the metric from the differential equations.

Since gravitational force don't exist in GR, you kind of have to do a Newtonian approximation to get such a thing to pop out.
 
  • #3
The field equations are highly non-linear second-order differential equations. Only a few exact solutions are known, so you're going to be hard-pressed to try to solve them for a specific stress-energy.As for your question regarding a Newtonian Cosmological Constant, the form of the field equations with zero cosmological constant is:

[tex]G_{\mu \nu}=\kappa T_{\mu \nu}[/tex]

Compare this with the analogous Poisson equation for Newtonian gravity:

[tex]\nabla^2 \phi =4\pi G\rho[/tex]

The field equations with nonzero CC are:

[tex]G_{\mu \nu}=\kappa T_{\mu \nu}-g_{\mu \nu}\Lambda[/tex]

Because the metric is analogous to the Newtonian potential, this suggests a modified Poisson equation of the form:

[tex]\nabla^2 \phi =4\pi G\rho-\phi \Lambda[/tex]

However, if we assume the gravitational field is weak (which is the only time when Newtonian gravity is accurate anyway) and we linearize the field equations with [itex]g_{\mu \nu }=\eta_{\mu \nu }+h_{\mu \nu }[/itex] and [itex]|h_{\mu \nu}|\ll 1[/itex], then we get the following field equations:

[tex]G_{\mu \nu}=\kappa T_{\mu \nu}-\eta_{\mu \nu}\Lambda[/tex]

where [itex]G_{\mu \nu}=-\frac{1}{2} \partial^{\alpha} \partial_{\alpha}(h_{\mu \nu}-\frac{1}{2}\eta_{\mu \nu} h^{\sigma}_{~\sigma })[/itex], though the form of the Einstein Tensor isn't really important for our purposes. These field equations imply (because the 00 component of the Minkowski metric is of magnitude 1) a Newtonian Poisson equation of the following form:

[tex]\nabla^2 \phi =4\pi G\rho-\Lambda[/tex]

This is clearly much simpler than the previous form we considered. If we switch to regular units and apply Gauss' Law to a spherically symmetric mass then we obtain a modified version of Newton's Law:

[tex]\nabla^2 \phi=\nabla \cdot (\nabla\phi )=\nabla \cdot(-\mathbf{g})[/tex]
[tex]\int \nabla\cdot \mathbf{g}dV=\int \mathbf{g}\cdot d\mathbf{A}=\int (-4\pi G \rho +\Lambda c^2)dV[/tex]
[tex]g\int dA=-4\pi G\int \rho dV + \Lambda c^2 \int dV[/tex]
[tex]4\pi r^2g=-4\pi GM + \frac{4}{3}\pi r^3 \Lambda c^2[/tex]
[tex]g=-\frac{GM}{r^2} + \frac{\Lambda c^2 r}{3}[/tex]

[tex]\ddot{\mathbf{r}}=\left ( \frac{\Lambda c^2}{3}- \frac{GM}{r^3}\right )\mathbf{r}[/tex]
 
  • #4
Madster said:
[itex] ds^2 = c^2 dt^2 - a(t)^2 \cdot (\frac{dx^2}{1-kx^2} + x^2 d\Omega^2) [/itex]
and from there the equation of motion for a particle facing gravitational force.

The equation of motion for matter in a gravitational field generally requires separate postulates. However, specifying the form of the stress energy tensor in terms of the matter fields does place some constraints on the equations of motion for the matter fields, since the stress-energy tensor is divergence free according to the EFE. In some cases, the constraint is strong enough to specify the equations of motion for the matter fields completely. There is a discussion starting on p3 of http://arxiv.org/abs/1006.3903 .
 
Last edited:
  • #5
atyy said:
You can't. The equation of motion for matter in a gravitational field is a separate postulate. For example, the equation of motion for the electromagnetic field in gravity is Maxwell's equations. The EFE and Maxwell's equations are a system of equations that must be simultaneously solved.

Well, it's relatively straightforward to derive the equations of motion straight from the metric:

[tex]\left (\frac{\partial}{\partial x^\mu } -\frac{d}{d\lambda} \left [\frac{\partial}{\partial(dx^\mu/d\lambda )} \right ] \right ) g_{\alpha \beta} \frac{dx^\alpha}{d\lambda} \frac{dx^\beta}{d\lambda }=0[/tex]
 
  • #6
atyy said:
You can't. The equation of motion for matter in a gravitational field is a separate postulate. For example, the equation of motion for the electromagnetic field in gravity is Maxwell's equations. The EFE and Maxwell's equations are a system of equations that must be simultaneously solved.

Ignoring EM, there is no need for a separate postulate - first approximately circa 1938, Einstein, Infeld and Hoffman showed the geodesic postulate was unnecessary. It is has been proved a number of rigorous ways since then.

Even with EM, the way EM figures in the stress energy tensor leads to the result that solving the EFE for a body with charge and mass reproduces motion consistent with Lorentz force law.

For example, an early reference for the charged case is: http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PR/v95/i1/p243_1
 
Last edited:
  • #7
PAllen said:
Ignoring EM, there is no need for a separate postulate - first approximately circa 1938, Einstein, Infeld and Hoffman showed the geodesic postulate was unnecessary. It is has been proved a number of rigorous ways since then.

Even with EM, the way EM figures in the stress energy tensor leads to the result that solving the EFE for a body with charge and mass reproduces motion consistent with Lorentz force law.

For example, an early reference for the charged case is: http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PR/v95/i1/p243_1

Yes, I forgot about that. I changed my post while you were replying to my original version.
 
  • #8
elfmotat said:
The field equations with nonzero CC are:

[tex]G_{\mu \nu}=\kappa T_{\mu \nu}-g_{\mu \nu}\Lambda[/tex]

Because the metric is analogous to the Newtonian potential, this suggests a modified Poisson equation of the form:

[tex]\nabla^2 \phi =4\pi G\rho-\phi \Lambda[/tex]

Hi, thanks that helped me but could you please explain what makes the metric an analogy to a potential. I mean the metric just implies the distance (dot prodict) of two line elements.
 
  • #9
elfmotat said:
Well, it's relatively straightforward to derive the equations of motion straight from the metric:

[tex]\left (\frac{\partial}{\partial x^\mu } -\frac{d}{d\lambda} \left [\frac{\partial}{\partial(dx^\mu/d\lambda )} \right ] \right ) g_{\alpha \beta} \frac{dx^\alpha}{d\lambda} \frac{dx^\beta}{d\lambda }=0[/tex]

Is [tex] \lambda [/tex] the parameter of the particle's path?
How to derive this formlular?
thanks
 
Last edited:
  • #10
Madster said:
Is [tex] \lambda [/tex] the parameter of the particle's path?
How to derive this formlular?
thanks
λ is called an affine parameter.try this
http://www.mth.uct.ac.za/omei/gr/chap6/node6.html
 
  • #11
Madster said:
Hi, thanks that helped me but could you please explain what makes the metric an analogy to a potential. I mean the metric just implies the distance (dot prodict) of two line elements.

The field equations with zero CC simply say:

(second derivatives of the metric) = (constant)*(energy-momentum distribution)

The solution to this differential equation gives you a particular metric. Now, think about what Poisson's equation for Newtonian gravity says:

(second derivatives of the potential) = (constant)*(mass distribution)

The solution to this differential equation gives you a particular potential. The jump from Newtonian to Relativistic gravity is essentially one where the gravitational potential becomes a rank-2 tensor field (the metric) instead of just a scalar field.

Madster said:
Is [tex] \lambda [/tex] the parameter of the particle's path?
How to derive this formlular?
thanks

λ is a general affine parameter. You derive that equation from the principle of extremal proper time. Proper time is given by a path integral which we can parametrize with an affine parameter λ:

[tex]\tau = \int \sqrt{-g_{\mu \nu} \frac{dx^\mu}{d\lambda} \frac{dx^\nu}{d\lambda}}d\lambda [/tex]

So we see that the square root can be thought of as a Lagrangian (which we'll call L) that we can just plug into the Euler-Lagrange equation. It's easy to show that an equivalent Lagrangian is given by -L2, which helps simplify things a bit.
 
  • #13
elfmotat said:
The field equations with zero CC simply say:

(second derivatives of the metric) = (constant)*(energy-momentum distribution)

The solution to this differential equation gives you a particular metric. Now, think about what Poisson's equation for Newtonian gravity says:

(second derivatives of the potential) = (constant)*(mass distribution)

The solution to this differential equation gives you a particular potential. The jump from Newtonian to Relativistic gravity is essentially one where the gravitational potential becomes a rank-2 tensor field (the metric) instead of just a scalar field.

So if I get it correctly, what ever is linear in the potential in the Newtonian calculus, is in analogy linear in the metric in GR? Because the CC is linear with the metric in the field equation, I have to add a scalar field in the Poisson equation?
 

1. What is a field equation?

A field equation is a mathematical expression that describes the behavior of a physical field, such as the electromagnetic field or the gravitational field. These equations are used to understand the interactions between different particles and objects in the field.

2. How is a field equation related to an equation of motion?

An equation of motion is a specific type of field equation that describes the motion of a particle or object in a given field. It is derived from the more general field equation by considering the specific properties and forces acting on the particle.

3. What is the significance of solving a field equation for a particular system?

By solving a field equation for a particular system, we can understand the behavior and interactions of particles in that system. This allows us to make predictions and calculations about the system, which can be useful in various fields such as physics, engineering, and chemistry.

4. Can field equations be used to describe all types of fields?

Yes, field equations can be used to describe all types of fields, including gravitational, electromagnetic, and quantum fields. Each type of field may have its own specific equation, but they all fall under the general category of field equations.

5. How are field equations verified or tested?

Field equations can be tested and verified through experiments, observations, and simulations. By comparing the results of these tests to the predictions made by the field equations, we can determine the accuracy and validity of the equations.

Similar threads

  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
2
Views
569
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
6
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
5
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
62
Views
3K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
5
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
28
Views
3K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
8
Views
2K
Back
Top