Electric field of charged black hole.

In summary: I don't know what to make of your equations, although I might be able to tell you where you can find them, if you're interested.In summary, the conversation discusses the equation for the electric field of a charged non-rotating black hole at a distance r. There is some confusion about the correct formula, with one person mentioning a possible error due to dimensional reasons. Another person suggests using the Maxwell equations in curved spacetime to derive the correct equation. The conversation then delves into a discussion about the definition of the electric field and its analogy to the Maxwell equations in material media. There is also a mention of the Reissner-Nordström solution and the different coordinate systems used to describe the electric field.
  • #1
Gavroy
235
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hi, i just wanted to know if i am right, that the electric field of a charged non-rotating black hole at distance r is:

[tex]E=\frac{Qq}{4 \pi \epsilon_0r^2}\sqrt{\left(1-\frac{2GM}{c^2 r}+\frac{Q^{2}G}{4\pi\epsilon_{0} c^4 r^2}\right)c^2} [/tex]
 
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  • #2
Gavroy said:
hi, i just wanted to know if i am right, that the electric field of a charged non-rotating black hole at distance r is:

[tex]E=\frac{Qq}{4 \pi \epsilon_0r^2}\sqrt{\left(1-\frac{2GM}{c^2 r}+\frac{Q^{2}G}{4\pi\epsilon_{0} c^4 r^2}\right)c^2} [/tex]

This can't be correct, for dimensional reasons alone (the factor of c shouldn't be there, as well as the two different charges). Where did you get that formula? I've never seen it before. The electromagnetic field of a black hole shouldn't be different from that of any other charged bodies, i.e. it should obey the coulomb law.
 
  • #3
oh sorry, yes, faults came by using copy & paste, it was supposed to be this equation:
[tex]E=\frac{Q}{4 \pi \epsilon_0r^2}\sqrt{\left(1-\frac{2GM}{c^2 r}+\frac{Q^{2}G}{4\pi\epsilon_{0} c^4 r^2}\right)} [/tex]
i just tried to write the 4 dim maxwell equations in curved spacetime in a three dimensional form.
 
  • #4
Gavroy said:
oh sorry, yes, faults came by using copy & paste, it was supposed to be this equation:
[tex]E=\frac{Q}{4 \pi \epsilon_0r^2}\sqrt{\left(1-\frac{2GM}{c^2 r}+\frac{Q^{2}G}{4\pi\epsilon_{0} c^4 r^2}\right)} [/tex]
i just tried to write the 4 dim maxwell equations in curved spacetime in a three dimensional form.

And how did you go about it? Which steps did you take? Or did you just write this down?
 
  • #5
do you possesses Landau Lifgarbagez "The Classical Theory of fields"? if so, page 277 § 90!(otherwise, i will have to write the whole derivation down for you)

anyway, at this page they derive the equation:
[tex]div \frac{E}{g_{00}}=4 \pi \rho [/tex] (they do not use SI units)
now i only took the 00 component of the reissner-nordström metric, put it in there and wanted to apply gauss' theorem.

but i was highly unsure about this, as one might have to integrate over the r in the 00 component of the metric tensor as well?
 
  • #6
Eq 5.2.2 and 5.2.3 of http://www.physics.uoguelph.ca/poisson/research/agr.pdf might be useful.
 
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  • #7
maybe if you tell me what this should actually mean?

afais they do not calculate the electric field itself.
 
  • #8
I'm not certain, but Eq 5.2.3 looks to me like the radial component of the electric field. I'm guessing F is the electromagnetic field tensor, and that the superscripts "t" and "r" indicate time and radial components.
 
  • #9
You have to be clear what you mean by "electric field". In natural units, the Reissner-Nordstrom solution is

[tex]ds^2 = - \Big(1 - \frac{2m}{r} + \frac{Q^2}{r^2} \Big) \; dt^2 + \Big(1 - \frac{2m}{r} + \frac{Q^2}{r^2} \Big)^{-1} \; dr^2 + r^2 (d\theta^2 + \sin^2 \theta \; d\phi^2)[/tex]

[tex]F = \frac{Q}{r^2} \; dt \wedge dr[/tex]

The coordinate 'r' is not "distance from the center". It can actually be defined as

[tex]r = \sqrt{\frac{A}{4\pi}}[/tex]

where A is the area of a sphere at given coordinates r and t. On a slice of constant t, the distance from the center is given by

[tex]\int_0^R \Big(1 - \frac{2m}{r} + \frac{Q^2}{r^2} \Big)^{-1/2} \; dr[/tex]

If you wanted, you could rewrite everything in terms of distance from the center, but I don't think it would clarify much.

Now, like I said at the beginning, you need to be clear what you mean by "electric field". To me, "electric field" is given by the physical definition you learned in freshman electromagnetism: it is the force per unit charge felt by a small test charge.

Physical quantities are always measured in a local inertial frame, so therefore we should find F in such a frame. From the metric, it is easy to write down the frame fields:

[tex]e^0 = \Big(1 - \frac{2m}{r} + \frac{Q^2}{r^2} \Big)^{1/2} \; dt, \qquad e^1 = \Big(1 - \frac{2m}{r} + \frac{Q^2}{r^2} \Big)^{-1/2} \; dr, \qquad e^2 = r \; d\theta, \qquad e^3 = r \sin \theta \; d\phi[/tex]

From this it is pretty obvious that

[tex]F = \frac{Q}{r^2} \; e^0 \wedge e^1[/tex]

since the extra factors cancel out. Therefore, the electric field is simply

[tex]E = \frac{Q}{r^2}[/tex]

I'm not sure if this agrees with Landau Lifgarbagez. How do they define E? And how do they define the divergence? I assume they mean the covariant definition of divergence, which might be different than what you assumed it was.
 
  • #10
sorry could not reply earlier...

well, they say: [tex]D^{\alpha}=-\sqrt{g_{00}}F^{0 \alpha}[/tex]
and [tex]E_{\alpha}=F_{0 \alpha}[/tex]
[tex]B_{\alpha \beta}=F_{\alpha \beta}[/tex]
[tex]H^{\alpha \beta}=- \sqrt{g_{00}}F^{\alpha \beta}[/tex]



now the three dimensional metric tensor is defined as:
[tex]\gamma_{\alpha \beta}=- g_{\alpha \beta}+h g_{\alpha } g_{\beta}[/tex]

and therefore: [tex]D_{\alpha}=\frac{E_{\alpha}}{\sqrt{h}}+g^{\beta}H_{\alpha \beta}[/tex]

this, one can write as:
[tex]D=\frac{E}{\sqrt{h}}+H \times g[/tex]
then, they find that:
[tex]\frac{1}{\sqrt{\gamma}}\frac{\partial}{\partial x^{\beta}}(\sqrt{\gamma} D^{\alpha})=4 \pi \rho[/tex]
or in three-dimensional notation:
[tex]div D= 4 \pi \rho[/tex]
AND THEN THEY SAY: The reader should note the analogy of the last equation to the Maxwell equations for the electromagnetic field in material media.

So I cannot believe that this effect does not exist, or where am I wrong?

They even go on by saying: We may say that with respect to its effect on the em-field a static gravitational field plays the role of a medium with electric and magnetic permeabilites:[tex]\epsilon= \mu =\frac{1}{\sqrt{h}}[/tex]
 
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  • #11
Gavroy said:
[tex]div D= 4 \pi \rho[/tex]
AND THEN THEY SAY: The reader should note the analogy of the last equation to the Maxwell equations for the electromagnetic field in material media.

How do they define [itex]\rho[/itex]?
 
  • #12
[tex]\rho=\sum_a \frac{e_a}{\gamma} \delta (r-r_a)[/tex]
 
  • #13
If one means the "local" electric field , as measured by using local clocks, rulers,and/ or springs to measure the force on a charge q, I'm pretty sure the answer must be

[tex] E = \frac{1}{4 \pi \epsilon_0} \frac{Q}{r^2}[/tex]

where r is the Schwarzschild coordinate.

This would differ from the electric field in coordinate form due to the metric coefficients being different from unity in , for example, Schwarzschild coordinates.

This is because electromagnetism is a two-form, thus one expects normal force * area integrated over a surface to be a constant (even in curved space-time), the said constant being the total number of field lines emitted. And the area scales proportionally to 4 pi r^2 in Schwarzschild coordinates.
 
  • #14
Gavroy said:
[tex]div D= 4 \pi \rho[/tex]
AND THEN THEY SAY: The reader should note the analogy of the last equation to the Maxwell equations for the electromagnetic field in material media.

So I cannot believe that this effect does not exist, or where am I wrong?

They even go on by saying: We may say that with respect to its effect on the em-field a static gravitational field plays the role of a medium with electric and magnetic permeabilites:[tex]\epsilon= \mu =\frac{1}{\sqrt{h}}[/tex]



It is possible to do something like that, I don't have enough of Landau and Lifgarbagez to know why it doesn't seem to be working out with their equations.

http://www.physics.uoguelph.ca/poisson/research/agr.pdf, p135, section 5.2.1, second paragraph does exactly derive the electric field of the Reissner-Nordstrom black hole from Maxwell's equations without sources and the metric. The difference seems to be where you have goo, he has |g|.
 
  • #15
pervect said:
If one means the "local" electric field , as measured by using local clocks, rulers,and/ or springs to measure the force on a charge q, I'm pretty sure the answer must be

[tex] E = \frac{1}{4 \pi \epsilon_0} \frac{Q}{r^2}[/tex]

where r is the Schwarzschild coordinate.

This would differ from the electric field in coordinate form due to the metric coefficients being different from unity in , for example, Schwarzschild coordinates.

This is because electromagnetism is a two-form, thus one expects normal force * area integrated over a surface to be a constant (even in curved space-time), the said constant being the total number of field lines emitted. And the area scales proportionally to 4 pi r^2 in Schwarzschild coordinates.

I agree, and I think this is exactly what I said above.
 
  • #16
okay, it is not that i do not trust in what you say, but i do not understand what Landau & Lifgarbagez mean when they say, that the curvature of the spacetime behaves like the relative permittivity of a medium?
 
  • #17
They probably mean that light bends due to similar effects as far as the light is concerned in gravity and in a gradient of the refractive index.

In both cases the velocity of the wave closer to center (higher gravity or higher index of refraction) causes the light to slow down relative to the lower (gravity or refractive index). It is this slowing that causes the waves to bend trajectory toward the higher (gravity or index).

One crucial distinction; in the refractive index situation, the group velocity of the light really does slow down but there is no change in the energy (frequency) of any of the light. In the gravitational case of course you always measure c locally, but the gravitational redshift has the same effect on light trajectory as a velocity decrease; retarding the phase of the wavefront in the higher gravitational field and bending it inward.
 
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1. What is an electric field of a charged black hole?

The electric field of a charged black hole is a region of space surrounding the black hole where its electric charge exerts a force on other charged particles. This force can either attract or repel particles depending on their own charge.

2. How is the electric field of a charged black hole different from a neutral black hole?

A charged black hole has an electric field, while a neutral black hole does not. This is because a neutral black hole has an equal number of positive and negative charges, resulting in a net charge of zero. A charged black hole, on the other hand, has an unequal number of positive and negative charges, resulting in a net charge and therefore an electric field.

3. Can the electric field of a charged black hole be measured?

Yes, the electric field of a charged black hole can be measured indirectly by observing its effect on other charged particles or by measuring the strength of the electric field at a distance from the black hole. However, direct measurement is currently not possible due to the extreme conditions near a black hole.

4. Does the electric field of a charged black hole have an effect on its surroundings?

Yes, the electric field of a charged black hole has an effect on its surroundings. It can influence the motion and behavior of charged particles in the vicinity of the black hole, and can also affect the curvature of spacetime around the black hole.

5. Is the electric field of a charged black hole constant?

No, the electric field of a charged black hole is not constant. It can vary depending on the distance from the black hole, the magnitude of its charge, and the presence of other nearby objects. It also changes as the black hole evolves and its charge changes over time.

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