Doing General Relativity with Cartesian coordinates?

kochanskij
Messages
45
Reaction score
4
Is it possible to do general relativity but avoid the difficult mathematics of generalized coordinates, tensors, and computing the metric of a space-time manifold by using ordinary cartesian coordinates in a 5 dimensional space?

We can picture a curved 4 dimensional spacetime as being embedded in a Euclidean 5 dimensional space. Cartesian retangular coordinates would work in this Euclidean space. Then you could add a constraint that only points in that 5-D space that fall on the 4-D curved "hypersurface" are allowed.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
If you have a basic knowledge of SR, there are a few educational papers that describe how you can draw Lorentzian space-time diagrams on a 3D surface to model part of the space-time around a massive nonrotating body (specifically, the R-T plane of Schwarzschild solution to a black hole).

See for instance Marolf's paper at http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9806123

To actually get any qunatitative results out of this, though, will be messy. Having the embedding diagram doesn't really make it much simpler to calculate geodesic curves, for instance.

The idea is that you just have to draw the normal space-time diagrams of SR on the surface of a curved sheet of paper rather than a flat one is somewhat useful conceptually, though.

This particular embedding isn't a euclidian one, though - if you look at a small, flat piece of the curved paper, the space-time diagram on that flat piece transforms via the Lorentz transform, so it will only be useful to people who understand SR well enough to know what that means.

NOt quite what you asked for, but you might find it interesting.
 
OK, so this has bugged me for a while about the equivalence principle and the black hole information paradox. If black holes "evaporate" via Hawking radiation, then they cannot exist forever. So, from my external perspective, watching the person fall in, they slow down, freeze, and redshift to "nothing," but never cross the event horizon. Does the equivalence principle say my perspective is valid? If it does, is it possible that that person really never crossed the event horizon? The...
ASSUMPTIONS 1. Two identical clocks A and B in the same inertial frame are stationary relative to each other a fixed distance L apart. Time passes at the same rate for both. 2. Both clocks are able to send/receive light signals and to write/read the send/receive times into signals. 3. The speed of light is anisotropic. METHOD 1. At time t[A1] and time t[B1], clock A sends a light signal to clock B. The clock B time is unknown to A. 2. Clock B receives the signal from A at time t[B2] and...
In this video I can see a person walking around lines of curvature on a sphere with an arrow strapped to his waist. His task is to keep the arrow pointed in the same direction How does he do this ? Does he use a reference point like the stars? (that only move very slowly) If that is how he keeps the arrow pointing in the same direction, is that equivalent to saying that he orients the arrow wrt the 3d space that the sphere is embedded in? So ,although one refers to intrinsic curvature...
Back
Top