jinbaw
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I have a metric of the form ds^2 = (1-r^2)dt^2 -\frac{1}{1-r^2}dr^2-r^2 d\theta^2 - r^2 sin^2\theta d\phi^2
A singularity exists at r=\pm 1. By calculating R^{abcd}R_{abcd} i found out that this singularity is a coordinate singularity.
I found the geodesic equations for radial photons and performed the eddington-finkelstein coordinate transformation.
my metric turns out to be:
ds^2 = (1-r^2)dudv-r^2 d\theta^2 - r^2 sin^2\theta d\phi^2
where u and v are the constants of integration for the outgoing and incoming radial photons.
I also took a further coordinate transformation where T=(u+v)/2 and X = (u-v)/2
and the metric takes the form:
ds^2 = (1-r^2)dT^2-(1-r^2)dX^2-r^2 d\theta^2 - r^2 sin^2\theta d\phi^2
However for r=\pm 1 the metric still does not behave properly.
Do you suggest any other coordinate transformation? Thank you.
A singularity exists at r=\pm 1. By calculating R^{abcd}R_{abcd} i found out that this singularity is a coordinate singularity.
I found the geodesic equations for radial photons and performed the eddington-finkelstein coordinate transformation.
my metric turns out to be:
ds^2 = (1-r^2)dudv-r^2 d\theta^2 - r^2 sin^2\theta d\phi^2
where u and v are the constants of integration for the outgoing and incoming radial photons.
I also took a further coordinate transformation where T=(u+v)/2 and X = (u-v)/2
and the metric takes the form:
ds^2 = (1-r^2)dT^2-(1-r^2)dX^2-r^2 d\theta^2 - r^2 sin^2\theta d\phi^2
However for r=\pm 1 the metric still does not behave properly.
Do you suggest any other coordinate transformation? Thank you.