Static spacetime as static universe

In summary, static spacetime refers to a theoretical model of the universe in which space and time are considered unchanging and immovable. This means that all objects and events within the universe exist and occur in a fixed and predictable manner. This concept is often used in the study of general relativity and cosmology, and it has implications for our understanding of the origin and structure of the universe. While this model may seem counterintuitive to our experience of a constantly changing world, it provides important insights into the fundamental nature of the universe.
  • #1
johank
2
0
When Einstein conceived GR he added the cosmological constant in an attempt to create a static universe model. The problem with this was that it was unstable.

I've recently read about static spacetime (static spacetime admits a global, non-vanishing, timelike Killing vector field K which is irrotational). Would a static spacetime also be a static universe?
 
Space news on Phys.org
  • #2
Hi, johank,

Welcome to PF!

johank said:
Would a static spacetime also be a static universe?

The static spacetimes that people write down are not normally intended as cosmological models. For example, the Schwarzschild metric is usually applied as a model of the spacetime surrounding a spherically symmetric, gravitating body such as the earth.

The Hawking singularity theorem http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singularity_theorems , combined with observation, proves that there was a big bang singularity. (This is within the context of GR, not other theories, and it assumes certain energy conditions http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_condition .) That means that, since about the 1970's, it's been clear that no static spacetime can be a valid cosmological model of our universe.

-Ben
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #3
bcrowell said:
The Hawking singularity theorem http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singularity_theorems , combined with observation, proves that there was a big bang singularity. (This is within the context of GR, not other theories, and it assumes certain energy conditions http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_condition .) That means that, since about the 1970's, it's been clear that no static spacetime can be a valid cosmological model of our universe.
I think this statement is misleading without further explanation, for instance one can read in the wiki article:
Wiki quote
"Hawking's singularity theorem is for the whole universe, and works backwards-in-time: in Hawking's original formulation, it guaranteed that the Big Bang has infinite density. Hawking later revised his position in "A Brief History of Time" (1988) where he stated "There was in fact no singularity at the beginning of the universe" (p50). This revision followed from quantum mechanics, in which general relativity must break down at times less than the Planck time. Hence general relativity cannot be used to show a singularity
" End Quote

So what the Hawking theorem proved in the 70's first version is that every FRW solution of General relativity (without cosmological constant) must have an initial singularity with infinite density, so first of all it only applies to a certain type of GR solutions and it claims nothing about other cosmological models, static or otherwise. But the later revision of the theorem doesn't even assert this.
This is reinforced later in the article by remembering that :
Wiki quote
"During inflation, the universe violates the stronger dominant energy condition (but not the weak energy condition), and inflationary cosmologies avoid the initial big-bang singularity, rounding them out to a smooth beginning." End quote

And also when it says:
Wiki quote
"Singularities can be found in all the black-hole spacetimes, the Schwarzschild metric, the Reissner–Nordström metric and the Kerr metric, and in all cosmological solutions which don't have a scalar field energy or a cosmological constant" End quote

I think it is important to clarify this as Hawking theorem is often used to make unwarranted claims about cosmology and it usually is used pretending to prove things it actually doesn't prove at all, I'm not sure if this is done relying on the fact not many people know exactly what the theorem says and how it has been revised based on QM or by posterior observations like accelerated expansion interpreted as CC, but it is obvious the theorem has as "a priori" assumptions not only an expanding universe, but no cosmological constant or no inflationists scenarios so it can hardly say anything about any other model.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #4
TrickyDicky said:
bcrowell said:
The Hawking singularity theorem http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singularity_theorems , combined with observation, proves that there was a big bang singularity. (This is within the context of GR, not other theories, and it assumes certain energy conditions http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_condition .) That means that, since about the 1970's, it's been clear that no static spacetime can be a valid cosmological model of our universe.
I think this statement is misleading without further explanation,
No, the statement is not misleading without further explanation. Please see the text in bold above.

TrickyDicky said:
for instance one can read in the wiki article:
Wiki quote
"Hawking's singularity theorem is for the whole universe, and works backwards-in-time: in Hawking's original formulation, it guaranteed that the Big Bang has infinite density. Hawking later revised his position in "A Brief History of Time" (1988) where he stated "There was in fact no singularity at the beginning of the universe" (p50). This revision followed from quantum mechanics, in which general relativity must break down at times less than the Planck time. Hence general relativity cannot be used to show a singularity
" End Quote

So what the Hawking theorem proved in the 70's first version is that every FRW solution of General relativity (without cosmological constant) must have an initial singularity with infinite density, so first of all it only applies to a certain type of GR solutions and it claims nothing about other cosmological models, static or otherwise.
No, this is incorrect. The Hawking singularity theorem is not restricted to FRW cosmologies.

TrickyDicky said:
I think it is important to clarify this as Hawking theorem is often used to make unwarranted claims about cosmology and it usually is used pretending to prove things it actually doesn't prove at all, I'm not sure if this is done relying on the fact not many people know exactly what the theorem says and how it has been revised based on QM or by posterior observations like accelerated expansion interpreted as CC, but it is obvious the theorem has as "a priori" assumptions not only an expanding universe, but no cosmological constant or no inflationists scenarios so it can hardly say anything about any other model.
There are various versions of the Hawking singularity theorem, which are based on various energy conditions. The long and the short of it is that the validity of the result is not affected by the cosmological constant.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #5
johank said:
When Einstein conceived GR he added the cosmological constant in an attempt to create a static universe model. The problem with this was that it was unstable.
What do you mean by unstable? What do you think is exactly the problem?
 
  • #6
bcrowell said:
No, the statement is not misleading without further explanation. Please see the text in bold above.
I was being polite, not only is misleading but wrong. Perhaps you should check the literature on this subject, there are several papers published in peer reviewed journals -see J.M.M. Senovilla, Phys. Rev. Lett. 64, 2219 (1990), or J.M.M. Senovilla Gen. Rel. Grav.30,701(1998) or "A singularity-free space-time" Chinea et al.Phys.Rev. D45 (1992) 481 available in arxiv-that show there are solutions within GR that are singularity free, in fact this is not just in journals , for instance in the textbook "An introduction to General relativity and cosmology" by Krasinski, page 231 you can read:
Quote
"the singularity theorems are not a general as it was initially claime. Several interesting solutions that do not contain any singularities have been found by Senovilla and coworkers (for an extended review see Senovilla (1998). They have not, so far, been shown to describe any actual astrophysical situations, but teir very existence proves that singularities are an inevitable part not of relativity as such, but of the collection of models of matter defined by the assumptions of the singularity theorems. " End Quote

If you are relatively new to GR, maybe you could inform yourself better about this before making evidently wrong statements.

bcrowell said:
No, this is incorrect. The Hawking singularity theorem is not restricted to FRW cosmologies.
More accurately is restricted to "the collection of models of matter defined by the assumptions of the singularity theorems" of which FRW cosmologies seem to be the main subset.
bcrowell said:
There are various versions of the Hawking singularity theorem, which are based on various energy conditions. The long and the short of it is that the validity of the result is not affected by the cosmological constant.
You are disagreeing here with the wiki page, perhaps you'd like to modify the phrase from it I quoted in my last post.
 
  • #7
TrickyDicky said:
I was being polite, not only is misleading but wrong. Perhaps you should check the literature on this subject, there are several papers published in peer reviewed journals -see J.M.M. Senovilla, Phys. Rev. Lett. 64, 2219 (1990), or J.M.M. Senovilla Gen. Rel. Grav.30,701(1998) or "A singularity-free space-time" Chinea et al.Phys.Rev. D45 (1992) 481 available in arxiv-that show there are solutions within GR that are singularity free, in fact this is not just in journals , for instance in the textbook "An introduction to General relativity and cosmology" by Krasinski, page 231 you can read:
Quote
"the singularity theorems are not a general as it was initially claime. Several interesting solutions that do not contain any singularities have been found by Senovilla and coworkers (for an extended review see Senovilla (1998). They have not, so far, been shown to describe any actual astrophysical situations, but teir very existence proves that singularities are an inevitable part not of relativity as such, but of the collection of models of matter defined by the assumptions of the singularity theorems. " End Quote
This is why my original post stated "...combined with observation..."

TrickyDicky said:
More accurately is restricted to "the collection of models of matter defined by the assumptions of the singularity theorems" of which FRW cosmologies seem to be the main subset.
I don't know what you mean by "main subset," but it looks like you've recognized your mistake.

TrickyDicky said:
You are disagreeing here with the wiki page, perhaps you'd like to modify the phrase from it I quoted in my last post.
I don't see any errors in the WP article. The WP article does not contradict anything I've said. You simply failed to read my post carefully enough to notice the assumptions that I explicitly stated.
 
  • #8
bcrowell said:
This is why my original post stated "...combined with observation..."
And once again with that assumption included your statement is either wrong or misleading without specifying what observations exactly together with Hawking theorem prove that there was a big bang singularity. Have you discovered a new theorem? Please share it with us.

bcrowell said:
I don't know what you mean by "main subset," but it looks like you've recognized your mistake.
what mistake? Since you are so careful with what is explicitly stated, If you read again my post I don't explicitly say that is restricted to FRW models but that the 1970's version proved that the FRW models must have an initial singularity and then go on to say that it only applies to a certain type of GR solutions, which is true.
BTW, have you already recognized your confusion about what the singularity theorems prove or not prove?
 

What is static spacetime?

Static spacetime is a mathematical concept used in the study of general relativity. It describes a state in which the geometry of the universe does not change with time. This means that the properties of space and time remain the same at all points in the universe.

How does static spacetime relate to a static universe?

A static universe is one in which the expansion of the universe is not occurring. This means that the universe remains the same size and shape over time. Static spacetime is a mathematical representation of this concept, where the geometry of the universe does not change with time.

Why is the idea of a static universe important in cosmology?

In the past, many scientists believed that the universe was static, meaning it did not change over time. This idea was supported by scientific evidence at the time. However, with the discovery of the expanding universe and the Big Bang theory, the concept of a static universe has been largely rejected. Still, studying static spacetime and the properties of a static universe can help scientists better understand the evolution of the universe.

What evidence supports the idea of a static universe?

One of the main pieces of evidence for a static universe was the observation of redshift in distant galaxies. Redshift is a phenomenon in which the light from an object appears to be moving away from an observer, indicating that the universe is expanding. However, this evidence has been refuted by the discovery of the cosmic microwave background radiation, which is considered a remnant of the Big Bang and supports the idea of an expanding universe.

Are there any current theories or models that support a static universe?

There are some alternative theories and models that propose a static or steady-state universe, such as the oscillatory universe model or the conformal cyclic cosmology. However, these theories are not widely accepted and are still being studied and debated by scientists. The prevailing scientific consensus is that the universe is expanding and is not static.

Similar threads

Replies
1
Views
1K
Replies
19
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
38
Views
2K
  • Cosmology
Replies
15
Views
2K
Replies
13
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
1
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
23
Views
3K
  • Sticky
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
15
Views
6K
Back
Top