Does General Relativity Theory Account for Accelerating Frames?

In summary: With this in mind, the mass at the center of the Schwarzschild solution is non-inertial/accelerating.
  • #1
exmarine
241
11
I thought that one of the features of GRT was to allow for ACCELERATING reference frames. Yet none of my textbooks seem to show any examples of this. Even the Kerr metric, for a rotating black hole or mass, seems to be "inertial" in the translational directions.

(1) Is all that correct?

(2) And what would a metric matrix look like if I were accelerating in say my own x-direction?
 
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  • #2
(1) No. The Christoffel symbols are not zero for the Kerr metric.
(2)
[itex]ds^2 = \left(1+\frac{\alpha x}{c^2}\right)^2 dct^2 - \left(dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2 \right)[/itex]
[itex]||g_{\mu \nu}|| = \begin{bmatrix} \left(1+\frac{\alpha x}{c^2}\right)^2 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\
0 & -1 & 0 & 0 \\
0 & 0 & -1 & 0 \\
0 & 0 & 0 & -1 \end{bmatrix}[/itex]
[itex]\alpha[/itex] is the proper acceleration you undergo, or the number of "g's" you would experience in pilot speak.
[itex]\alpha =\sqrt{|g_{\mu \nu A^{\mu }A^{\nu}}|}[/itex] where [itex]A^{\mu }[/itex]is the 4-acceleration "of the accelerated observer" for which this line element is appropriate.
 
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  • #3
Thanks, but... Let's go back to a simpler case. They ain't all zero for the Schwarzschild metric either. Does that mean that the mass at the center of it is, or could be non-"inertial" / accelerating? I must be missing something basic.
 
  • #4
The only metric which is inertial is ##ds^2=-c^2 dt^2+dx^2+dy^2+dz^2##. Any metric different from this one (except by sign convention) is non-inertial.
exmarine said:
Thanks, but... Let's go back to a simpler case. They ain't all zero for the Schwarzschild metric either. Does that mean that the mass at the center of it is, or could be non-"inertial" / accelerating? I must be missing something basic.
Yes, a mass at rest in the Schwarzschild coordinates is non-inertial/accelerating. To verify this simply hold an accelerometer.
 
  • #5
exmarine said:
I thought that one of the features of GRT was to allow for ACCELERATING reference frames. Yet none of my textbooks seem to show any examples of this. Even the Kerr metric, for a rotating black hole or mass, seems to be "inertial" in the translational directions.

(1) Is all that correct?

(2) And what would a metric matrix look like if I were accelerating in say my own x-direction?

The definition of an accelerating (or non-inertial) frame is that a particle at "rest" in that frame has a nonzero proper acceleration. The proper acceleration [itex]A^\mu[/itex] is defined to be:

[itex]A^\mu = \frac{d}{d \tau} U^\mu + \Gamma^\mu_{\nu \lambda} U^\mu U^\lambda[/itex]

where [itex]U^\mu[/itex] is the 4-velocity, which in terms of coordinates is [itex]U^\mu = \frac{d}{d \tau} x^\mu[/itex], and where [itex]\Gamma^\mu_{\nu \lambda}[/itex] is the connection coefficients.

An object at rest in a frame means that we can get frame-centered coordinates so that the 4-velocity components are all zero except for [itex]U^t[/itex], which is constant. So the expression for proper acceleration becomes:

[itex]A^\mu = \Gamma^\mu_{t t} U^t U^t[/itex]

So an accelerated frame is one where the connection coefficients [itex]\Gamma^\mu_{t t}[/itex] are nonzero.
 
  • #6
exmarine said:
(1) Is all that correct?

Take a set of 4 orthonormal basis vectors ##e_{\alpha}## such that ##e_0 = u## is the 4-velocity of the desired observer; one has to transport the ##e_{\alpha}## along this observer's world-line using the appropriate transport law (e.g. Lie transport) so that orthonormality is preserved everywhere along the world-line.

The ##e_{\alpha}## constitute a local Lorentz frame and the frame is accelerating if ##\nabla_{e_0}e_0 \neq 0##. The frame is rotating if ##\nabla^{\perp}_{e_0}e_i \neq 0## where ##\nabla^{\perp}## is the orthogonal projection of the derivative operator onto the local rest space of ##e_0##.

exmarine said:
Even the Kerr metric, for a rotating black hole or mass, seems to be "inertial" in the translational directions.

I'm not entirely sure what you mean by this but the canonical rest frames of observers who follow orbits of the time translation symmetry, meaning the Copernican frames of those observers who are at rest with respect to the distant stars, are both accelerating and rotating in Kerr space-time.
 
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  • #7
Wow - it will take me a while to absorb everything you folks are saying. Back to the Schwarzschild for a moment. If I am outside the horizon, I cannot tell the difference between my acceleration, say out some radial, or if there is some mass behind me so to speak? I *think* I understand that, equivalence principle and all. What I am trying to understand is the possible state of motion(s) of that mass behind me. Is it, or must it be "inertial", or can it be accelerating, etc.? I guess that information is not in my metric matrix? THANKS!
 
  • #8
The Schwarzschild solution is sourced by a static perfect fluid with 4-velocity field ##u^{\mu} = (-\xi_{\nu}\xi^{\nu})^{-1/2}\xi^{\mu}## where ##\xi^{\mu}## is the time-like Killing field of the resulting solution. The fluid has a 4-acceleration field given by ##a^{\mu} = \nabla^{\mu} \ln (-\xi_{\nu}\xi^{\nu})^{1/2}##.
 
  • #9
exmarine said:
What I am trying to understand is the possible state of motion(s) of that mass behind me. Is it, or must it be "inertial", or can it be accelerating, etc.?
That has nothing to do with whether or not a frame is inertial. However, according to Birkhoff's theorem any possible spherically symmetric distribution of matter will have the same curvature in the vacuum region outside. So from your local metric you cannot determine if you are outside a solid planet, a collapsing ball of dust, or an exploding star (assuming the same total mass for each).
 
  • #10
DaleSpam said:
So from your local metric you cannot determine if you are outside a solid planet, a collapsing ball of dust, or an exploding star (assuming the same total mass for each).

Oh true, a static perfect fluid is just one possible source obeying spherical symmetry. We can just as well have a freely falling collapsing dust sphere. Sorry about that!
 
  • #11
exmarine said:
(How do you quote from previous posts?)

Use the "Quote" button on the post you want to respond to, instead of the "New Reply" button at the bottom of the thread.
 
  • #12
Every mass in this universe is accelerating, in one direction or another. So it seems that there should be some anti-symmetric aspect in the local metric surrounding any mass?

Thanks for all the responses.
 
  • #13
exmarine said:
Every mass in this universe is accelerating, in one direction or another.

This sort of "acceleration" is frame-dependent; it's usually called "coordinate acceleration" since it depends on the coordinates you choose. But an object undergoing coordinate acceleration doesn't necessarily feel any acceleration; it might be in free fall, and you've just chosen coordinates that are non-inertial. For example, if you're standing at rest on the Earth's surface and you drop a rock, the rock has nonzero coordinate acceleration with respect to coordinates in which you are at rest; but the rock is in free fall and feels no acceleration.

The kind of acceleration that is invariant (i.e., independent of the coordinates you choose) is called "proper acceleration"; stevendaryl defined it in an earlier post. Most masses in the universe are *not* accelerating in this sense, because they're in free fall, feeling no acceleration, just like the rock in the example above.

exmarine said:
So it seems that there should be some anti-symmetric aspect in the local metric surrounding any mass?

I'm not sure what you mean by "anti-symmetric aspect in the local metric". The metric tensor is always symmetric.
 
  • #14
Yes, the masses are in free-fall. Maybe I can totally re-phrase my question. It seems that the near-earth metric would be biased slightly by the sun's metric - the Earth is accelerating towards the sun. That's what I mean by anti-symmetric - in the direction towards the sun. Could the solar metric be "added" to the Earth metric? I realize GRT is very non-linear, but wouldn't the solar metric be approximately constant over here? What would the metric here near the Earth look like if I super-imposed an approximately constant solar metric? Is that possible?
 
  • #15
Several off-topic and unproductive posts were removed to avoid derailing the thread.
 
  • #16
exmarine said:
I realize GRT is very non-linear, but wouldn't the solar metric be approximately constant over here?
You have hilighted the problem. GR is nonlinear, so you cannot simply add the metrics in general. However, in the case you mention the non linear terms are probably small enough to neglect for all but the most sensitive of experiments.

I am not sure what you are asking. Curvature is tidal gravity. So in principle you could measure the curvature/tidal effects and determine that the metric differed from Schwarzschild.
 

1. What is an accelerating frame in General Relativity Theory (GRT)?

An accelerating frame in GRT is a reference frame that is non-inertial, meaning it is accelerating or rotating with respect to an inertial frame. In GRT, the laws of physics are valid only in inertial frames, so understanding how they apply in accelerating frames is important for accurately describing the motion of objects.

2. How does acceleration affect time dilation in GRT?

In GRT, time dilation is a phenomenon where time passes at a slower rate for objects in a gravitational field or in accelerated motion. This means that in an accelerating frame, time will appear to pass at a slower rate for an observer compared to an inertial frame. This effect is known as gravitational time dilation.

3. How does GRT explain the Twin Paradox?

The Twin Paradox is a thought experiment where one twin travels near the speed of light while the other stays on Earth. When the traveling twin returns, they will have aged less than the twin on Earth. GRT explains this paradox by showing that time dilation occurs due to the acceleration of the traveling twin, and the effects of gravity on time also play a role.

4. Can an accelerating frame be equivalent to a gravitational field in GRT?

Yes, according to the Equivalence Principle in GRT, an accelerating frame is equivalent to a gravitational field. This means that an observer in an accelerating frame will experience the same effects as an observer in a gravitational field, such as time dilation and changes in spatial geometry.

5. How do we calculate the effects of acceleration on objects in GRT?

In GRT, the effects of acceleration on objects can be calculated using the equations of motion in non-inertial frames. This involves considering the effects of forces, such as gravity, on the objects and using the principles of GRT to determine the resulting motion. Advanced mathematical techniques, such as the use of tensors, are often used in these calculations.

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