Is the schwarzchild radius a radius of curvature?

In summary, the Schwarzschild coordinate is not a radius of curvature, but rather a coordinate that is constant on nested two-spheres in a spherically symmetric Lorentzian spacetime. The intrinsic curvature is of interest in general relativity, as it is independent of any embedding in a higher dimensional space. Extrinsic and intrinsic curvature are not mutually exclusive, as both can be calculated for an embedded manifold. Negative radius of curvature is associated with divergence of initially parallel geodesics, while positive curvature is associated with convergence. A saddle surface or hyperboloid of one sheet is an example of a two-dimensional manifold with nonconstant negative Gaussian curvature. Extrinsic curvature measures how the normal vectors are changing on a hyperslice, while intrinsic
  • #1
kmarinas86
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EDIT: Is the Schwarzschild coordinate a radius of curvature in the geodesic?

And also, in physics, what do I make of a negative radius of curvature?
 
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  • #2
No, the Schwarzschild coordinate is just a cordinate. You should probably read about "intrinsic" vs "extinsic" curvature. The 2-d surface of a sphere is an example of a surface with a positive (intrinsic) curvature, while the 2-d surface of a sadle-sheet is an example of a surface with a negative curvature.

Intrinsic curvatures are of the sort of interest in GR, as they are indepenent of any particular embedding. See for instance

http://mathworld.wolfram.com/IntrinsicCurvature.html

A curvature such as Gaussian curvature which is detectable to the "inhabitants" of a surface and not just outside observers. An extrinsic curvature, on the other hand, is not detectable to someone who can't study the three-dimensional space surrounding the surface on which he resides.
 
  • #3
A curvature such as Gaussian curvature which is detectable to the "inhabitants" of a surface and not just outside observers. An extrinsic curvature, on the other hand, is not detectable to someone who can't study the three-dimensional space surrounding the surface on which he resides.
Hmm, interesting definition, extrinsic and intrinsic curvature are defined here as mutually exclusive.
 
  • #4
They aren't really mutually exclusive, because a 3-d observer can calculate both sorts of curvature for an embedded 2-d manifold. The situation is that anyone can compute the intrinsic curvature, but only when one has an embedding diagram can the extrinsic curvature be defined.
 
  • #5
So intrinsic curvature is not recognized as an extrinsic curvature as well?
 
  • #6
So intrinsic curvature is not recognized as an extrinsic curvature as well?

When speaking about space-time it is desirable to define curvature intrinsically, to avoid having to assume that the universe is embedded in a higher dimensional space.
 
  • #7
Crosson said:
When speaking about space-time it is desirable to define curvature intrinsically, to avoid having to assume that the universe is embedded in a higher dimensional space.
I understand that. However the quote claimed that extrinsic curvature cannot be detected on the surface, so that implies that extrinsic curvature does not include intrinsic curvature.
 
  • #8
Curvature, curvature

Hi all,

kmarinas86 said:
Is the Schwarzschild coordinate a radius of curvature in the geodesic?

As pervect already noted, the Schwarzschild radial coordinate r is a certain monotonic function on a spherically symmetric (four-dimensional) Lorentzian spacetime, i.e. one featuring a family of nested two-spheres inside members of an appropriate family of three-dimensional spatial hyperslices. This function is constant on the spheres and has the property that the surface area of the sphere labeled by [itex]r=r_0[/itex] is [itex]A = 4 \pi \, r_0^2[/itex].

You mentioned "geodesic": note that in differential geometry geodesic curvature has a technical meaning closely related to path curvature of a curve, i.e. if [itex]\vec{X}[/itex] is the unit tangent vector to a curve, then [itex]\nabla_{\vec{X}} \vec{X}[/itex] is the acceleration vector, which is orthogonal to [itex]\vec{X}[/itex] and whose magnitude is the path curvature (the reciprocal of the radius of curvature).

On the other hand, the Gaussian curvature of the sphere with surface area [itex]4 \pi \, r^2[/itex] is [itex]K=1/r^2[/itex]. The intrinsic and extrinsic curvature of submanifolds (of larger dimension than a curve) are "measured" in units of reciprocal area, i.e. sectional curvature. On the other hand, the path curvature of a curve is "measured" in units of reciprocal length. The path curvature of a great circle on a two-sphere embedded as an ordinary round sphere in [itex]E^3[/itex] would be [itex]1/r[/itex].

kmarinas86 said:
And also, in physics, what do I make of a negative radius of curvature?

Assuming you are asking about something like negative Gaussian curvature in a two-dimensional manifold, or negative sectional curvatures in a spatial hyperslice in a spacetime, this is associated, via the Jacobi geodesic deviation formula, with divergence of nearby and initially parallel geodesics. A positive Gaussian curvature is associated with convergence of nearby and initially parallel geodesics.

For example, in on ordinary sphere (two dimensional Riemannian manifold with constant positive Gaussian curvature), longitude circles are geodesics, and two nearby longitudes are initially parallel at the equator. As you move North, they converge (positive curvature). In the hyperbolic plane (two dimensional Riemannian manifold with constant negative Gaussian curvature), two intially parallel geodesics diverge (look for pictures of the Poincare disk model in good textbooks). In the Schwarzschild vacuum solution, the sectional curvature associated with components [itex]R_{trtr}[/itex] is also negative, which means that initially parallel and radially outgoing null geodesics (in particular) will diverge; this leads to the phenomenon called "gravitational red shift".

pervect said:
The 2-d surface of a sphere is an example of a surface with a positive (intrinsic) curvature, while the 2-d surface of a sadle-sheet is an example of a surface with a negative curvature.

To avoid confusion, a saddle surface or hyperboloid of one sheet is a two-dimensional Riemannian manifold embedded in [itex]E^3[/itex] which has nonconstant negative Gaussian curvature.

MeJennifer said:
Hmm, interesting definition, extrinsic and intrinsic curvature are defined here as mutually exclusive.

No, no, not at all. For example, a three-dimensional spatial hyperslice in a Lorentzian manifold has both extrinsic curvature, which is measured by a symmetric rank two tensor field (this tensor field is essentially the negative of the expansion tensor of a timelike unit vector field which agrees with the normals to the slice on the slice itself), and intrinsic curvature, which is measured by a rank four tensor field, the three-dimensional Riemann curvature tensor of the hyperslice.

The extrinsic curvature measures how the normal vectors are changing as we move around the slice, i.e. how the slice is "bending" in the bigger manifold. The intrinsic curvature doesn't depend upon the embedding, only on the metric tensor induced in the hyperslice by restricting the metric tensor of the bigger manifold.

MeJennifer, you should probably look at a good textbook on surface theory, since it would be difficult to imagine a more fundamental distinction in "metric geometry" than that between extrinsic and intrinsic curvature.

Consider a two dimensional Riemannian manifold embedded in [itex]E^3[/itex]. There are many ways of embedding a two-manifold so that it has a given intrinsic geometry (determined from the induced metric tensor) but dramatically different extrinsic geometry. For example, the Dover reprint of the classic text by Struik shows some nice pictures of two embedded surfaces which both have vanishing Gaussian curvature, but which have very different extrinsic curvature and which look very different.

MeJennifer said:
So intrinsic curvature is not recognized as an extrinsic curvature as well?

They are completely distinct concepts, as should apparent from the fact that one is measured by a fourth rank tensor and the other by a second rank tensor!

MeJennifer said:
I understand that. However the quote claimed that extrinsic curvature cannot be detected on the surface, so that implies that extrinsic curvature does not include intrinsic curvature.

It depends upon what you mean by "detected". For example, the normal vectors for a spatial hyperslice are not part of the intrinsic geometry of that hyperslice. But if this hyperslice arises as one of the slices orthogonal to an irrotational timelike congruence, then we consider this congruence as the world lines of a certain family of observers, and then the expansion tensor of this congruence can in principle be measured by these observers.
 
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  • #9
Chris Hillman said:
It depends upon what you mean by "detected". For example, the normal vectors for a spatial hyperslice are not part of the intrinsic geometry of that hyperslice. But if this hyperslice arises as one of the slices orthogonal to an irrotational timelike congruence, then we consider this congruence as the world lines of a certain family of observers, and then the expansion tensor of this congruence can in principle be measured by these observers.
Well let me refrase it, can we conclude that if the symmetric rank two tensor field, the field that measures external curvature, shows a presence of curvature that that particular curvature can under no circumstances be detected by the Riemann tensor?
I (think) I understand te difference between internal and external but I am not sure if we could say that there is zero overlap.
 
  • #10
Huh?

Hi again, MeJennifer,

MeJennifer said:
Well let me refrase it, can we conclude that if the symmetric rank two tensor field, the field that measures external curvature, shows a presence of curvature that that particular curvature can under no circumstances be detected by the Riemann tensor?

I don't think I understand your question. Are you trying to ask what implications a nonzero extrinsic curvature tensor has for the three-dimensional Riemannian curvature of the hyperslice? (None: in particular, there are many ways of embedding a locally flat Riemannian three-manifold inside any four dimensional Lorentzian manifold, such that the extrinsic curvature is nonvanishing. Similar statements hold for Riemannian geometry, or in other dimensions; see for example horospheres in [itex]H^n[/itex].) Or what implications a nonzero intrinsic curvature tensor (three dimensional Riemannian curvature tensor, computed from the metric tensor induced on the hyperslice) has for the extrinsic curvature? (None, in the sense that one can find Lorentzian manifolds admitting hyperslices which are locally isometric say to [itex]S^3[/itex] but which have vanishing extrinsic curvature tensor, for example in the so-called "Einstein static universe".)

I (think) I understand te difference between internal and external but I am not sure if we could say that there is zero overlap.

I don't know what you mean by "zero overlap", but I think you should look at say Spivak's five volume textbook on differential geometry, which should help you to understand intrinsic versus extrinsic geometry. If you just want to see a bit about three dimensional Riemannian curvature (of a spatial hyperslice in a Lorentzian manifold) versus four dimensional Riemann curvature (of the big Lorentzian manifold), a standard citation for physics students is Hawking and Ellis, Large Scale Structure of Space-Time. A good key phrase here is Gauss-Codazzi equations.
 

1. What is the schwarzchild radius?

The schwarzchild radius is a theoretical concept in physics that represents the radius at which the escape velocity of an object would equal the speed of light. It is often associated with black holes, as it marks the point of no return for anything crossing the event horizon.

2. How is the schwarzchild radius calculated?

The schwarzchild radius is calculated using the formula Rs = 2GM/c2, where G is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the object, and c is the speed of light. This formula was derived by the German physicist Karl Schwarzchild in 1916.

3. Is the schwarzchild radius a physical distance?

No, the schwarzchild radius is not a physical distance. It is a mathematical concept used to describe the physical properties of a black hole. It represents the distance from the center of a black hole at which the gravitational pull becomes so strong that light cannot escape.

4. Is the schwarzchild radius a radius of curvature?

Yes, the schwarzchild radius is considered a radius of curvature. It is the radius at which the curvature of spacetime around a black hole becomes significant enough to prevent anything, including light, from escaping.

5. Can the schwarzchild radius change?

Yes, the schwarzchild radius can change depending on the mass of the black hole. As the mass of a black hole increases, its schwarzchild radius also increases. Conversely, if the mass decreases, the radius will also decrease. This means that the schwarzchild radius is not a fixed value, but rather a dynamic concept based on the mass of the black hole.

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