Transformation law in curved space-time

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the transformation laws applicable in curved spacetime, particularly in the context of general relativity and the Schwarzschild metric. Participants explore the nature of transformations, such as diffeomorphisms and Lorentz transformations, and their implications for the laws of physics in both flat and curved geometries.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants inquire about the existence of transformation laws analogous to Lorentz transformations for general metrics.
  • It is proposed that any diffeomorphism is permissible in the context of general relativity.
  • There is a discussion about the nature of coordinates in general relativity, emphasizing that they are merely labels and do not represent physical quantities like position vectors.
  • Some participants assert that in general relativity, the laws of physics cannot be expressed without Christoffel symbols.
  • There is a suggestion to look for diffeomorphisms that preserve the form of the metric for a given coordinate system.
  • Participants discuss the concept of Killing vectors and their relevance to transformations in the Schwarzschild metric.
  • One participant expresses uncertainty about the existence of boosts in the Schwarzschild metric, noting that it is not homogeneous.
  • Another participant suggests boosting the frame of a static observer in Schwarzschild spacetime as an alternative to traditional Lorentz boosts.
  • There is a proposal to use tetrads to transform between different reference frames in the Schwarzschild geometry.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the nature of transformations in curved spacetime, particularly regarding the applicability of Lorentz transformations and the role of Killing vectors. The discussion remains unresolved, with multiple competing perspectives on how to approach transformations in the context of general relativity.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight limitations in understanding how to apply transformations in curved spacetime and the dependence on specific metrics, such as the Schwarzschild metric. There is also mention of the need for case-by-case analysis when dealing with different reference frames.

jfy4
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Hi,

I am wondering what are the transformation laws (Lorentz transformations) for a general metric, if they exist.
 
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Any diffeomorphism is allowed.
 
Wait,

Are you saying that if I take the coordinate 4 vector, and put it through a diffeomorphism, that is an acceptable transformation? That is, realistic?
 
There are no position (t,x) 4-vectors in general relativity.

Coordinates (t,x) are just labels of points in a manifold.

There are velocity 4-vectors (in the tangent space at each spacetime point through which the particle's worldline goes),just as in special relativity.
 
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atyy said:
There are no position (t,x) 4-vectors in general relativity.

Coordinates (t,x) are just labels of points in a manifold.

True, but changing a chart (U,x) (P in U) to a different one (U',x') (P in U') requires that the <labels> of that point transform in a specific way similar to 4-vector components in the tangent space at P.
 
atyy said:
There are no position (t,x) 4-vectors in general relativity.

Coordinates (t,x) are just labels of points in a manifold.

There are velocity 4-vectors (in the tangent space at each spacetime point through which the particle's worldline goes),just as in special relativity.

Sure, fair enough. It's a little disconcerting the use of the phrase "spacetime point" though, when those points don't exist.


My OP is about how the lorentz transformations are valid in flat space-time. I was wondering if there is a transformation group or rules analogous to the lorentz transformations in flat space-time, except for a general metric.
 
In both special and general relativity, if you allow Christoffel symbols to be used in writing the laws of physics, then any transformation (more precisely, "diffeomorphism" as DaleSpam says above) will preserve the form of the laws.

In special relativity (flat spacetime), if Christoffel symbols are not allowed in writing the laws of physics, then Lorentz transformations will preserve the form of the laws.

In general relativity (curved spacetime), there is no way to write the laws of physics without Christoffel symbols.
 
atyy said:
In special relativity (flat spacetime), if Christoffel symbols are not allowed in writing the laws of physics, then Lorentz transformations will preserve the form of the laws.

In general relativity (curved spacetime), there is no way to write the laws of physics without Christoffel symbols.
That is a good way of putting it.

In flat spacetime the other thing that the Lorentz transform preserves is the form of the metric. I suppose for any given coordinate system on some spacetime you could look for the set of all diffeomorphisms which preserve the form of the metric.
 
DaleSpam said:
That is a good way of putting it.

In flat spacetime the other thing that the Lorentz transform preserves is the form of the metric. I suppose for any given coordinate system on some spacetime you could look for the set of all diffeomorphisms which preserve the form of the metric.

In which case one would look for the Killing vectors of the spacetime.

The Killing vectors for the Schwarzschild spacetime are given in http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/March01/Carroll3/Carroll7.html

And those for Minkowski spacetime are given in http://mathworld.wolfram.com/KillingVectors.html .
 
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  • #10
Thanks for you responses guys.

Is it possible for me to get an example of what your saying? Say, I want to boost in the schwarzschild metric the [tex]u_{1}[/tex] component of velocity.

normally I would use a lorentz boost. How would I do it not for flat space?
 
  • #11
I have limited experience with Killing vectors, but if the link atyy gave is correct then there are no Killing vectors corresponding to boosts in the Schwarzschild metric. This would imply that there is no boost which preserves the form of the metric for a Schwarzschild spacetime, which is not surprising since the spacetime is not homogenous.
 
  • #12
jfy4 said:
Thanks for you responses guys.

Is it possible for me to get an example of what your saying? Say, I want to boost in the schwarzschild metric the [tex]u_{1}[/tex] component of velocity.

normally I would use a lorentz boost. How would I do it not for flat space?

Instead of boosting the metric, try boosting the frame or coframe of a static observer. For instance, boosting a static observer in Schwarzschild spacetime by [itex]\beta=\sqrt{2m/r}[/itex] will take you to the Painleve coords. I've got details somewhere because I've done it but no time to search now ...

A good example of a boost in Minkowski spacetime is here

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Born_coordinates

where the frame-field is boosted to make a rotating frame.[edit: the sqrt is not showing properly ...]
[tex]\beta=\sqrt{2m/r}[/tex]
 
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  • #13
I really appreciate you guys bearing with me. Let me attempt to be more explicit.

In flat space-time, we can use a transformation to go between two different frames of reference by a linear transformation known as the Lorentz transformation, correct?

[tex]x_{\alpha}=\Lambda^{\beta}_{\alpha}x_{\beta}+a_{\alpha}[/tex]

This will give us a transformation into a new reference frame. [tex]\Lambda[/tex] is only good though, in its well known form, for flat space-time.

So now here is what I want to know, and I will once again try an example:

Lets say I have two different reference frames in say, the Scharwzschild geometry. I would like to transform between them. Is there an already known general way to transform between reference frames there, or must it be done in a case by case basis. Or is it not possible? Or something else...?

Thanks again.
 
  • #14
I'm not sure exactly how, but I'd try something like this.

Look up the Killing vector at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwarzschild_coordinates

For each Killing vector, find the integral curves.

eg. for sinVdW+cotWcosVdV,

the integral curve has coordinates t,r,V,W which are functions of a parameter L, and which are solutions of

dt/dL=0
dr/dL=0
dV/dL=cotWcosV
dW/dL=sinV

If you move each point along the integral curve that it's on by the same amount of the curve parameter, the form of the Schwarzschild solution should remain unchanged (assuming you started from the a coordinate system that is within the class of "preferred" coordinates).

An example of the type of computation is given in http://www.math.ku.edu/~lerner/GR09/LieDerivatives.pdf
 
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  • #15
jfy4 said:
Lets say I have two different reference frames in say, the Scharwzschild geometry. I would like to transform between them. Is there an already known general way to transform between reference frames there, or must it be done in a case by case basis. Or is it not possible? Or something else...?

Take two 'shell' observers in the Schwarzschild geometry. Suppose [itex]\lambda_a^A[/itex] is the tetrad that transforms between the frame basis and the holonomic basis so that
[tex] \lambda_A^a \lambda_B^b g_{ab}=\eta_{AB}[/tex]

Now let [itex]\rho, \mu[/itex] be [itex]\lambda[/itex] evaluated at two points so we can write

[tex] \mu_A^a \mu_B^b g_{ab}^{(\mu)}=\eta_{AB}=\rho_A^a \rho_B^b g_{ab}^{(\rho)}[/tex]

from which

[tex] \mu_A^a \mu_B^b }=\left(g^{ab(\mu)}\right) \cdot \left( g_{ab}^{(\rho)}\right)\rho_A^a \rho_B^b[/tex]

(indexes don't have their usual significance here because the tetrads are matrices not tensors).

So it appears that the transformation that takes [itex]\rho\rho \rightarrow \mu\mu[/itex] is

[tex] \left(g^{ab(\mu)}\right) \cdot \left( g_{ab}^{(\rho)}\right)[/tex]

This is meant to be the product of 2 matrices, giving a transformation matrix. I think that the square root of this matrix will transform one frame basis to the other.

That is expected for a comparison between static frames. It will be more interesting for two radially infalling frames.

[edit]
It comes down to a simple matrix equation
[tex] \mu=D \cdot \rho, \rightarrow \ D=\mu \cdot \rho^{-1}[/tex]
 
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  • #16
You have received two answers already, but I don't understand the question. Specifically, what do you mean by this?
jfy4 said:
Lets say I have two different reference frames in say, the Scharwzschild geometry.
What does it mean to have two different reference frames in the Schwarzschild geometry?
 
  • #17
The transformation between different points the Gull-Painleve free-falling worldline is interesting.

We have
[tex] \mu=\left[ \begin{array}{cccc}<br /> 1 & 0 & 0 & 0\\\<br /> \,\sqrt{\frac{2M}{R_1}} & 1 & 0 & 0\\\<br /> 0 & 0 & R_1 & 0\\\<br /> 0 & 0 & 0 & \sin\left( \theta\right) \,R_1 \end{array} \right][/tex]

and (obviously)

[tex] \rho=\left[ \begin{array}{cccc}<br /> 1 & 0 & 0 & 0\\\<br /> \,\sqrt{\frac{2M}{R_2}} & 1 & 0 & 0\\\<br /> 0 & 0 & R_2 & 0\\\<br /> 0 & 0 & 0 & \sin\left( \theta\right) \,R_2 \end{array} \right][/tex]

[tex] D=\mu \cdot \rho^{-1}=<br /> \left[ \begin{array}{cccc}<br /> 1 & 0 & 0 & 0\\\<br /> \,\sqrt{\frac{2M}{R1}}-\,\sqrt{\frac{2M}{R2}} & 1 & 0 & 0\\\<br /> 0 & 0 & \frac{R1}{R2} & 0\\\ 0 & 0 & 0 & \frac{R1}{R2}<br /> \end{array} \right][/tex]

Which seems to say that all the local times are the same and that Gallilean relativity is used for velocity addition.

This is born out (I think ) by the conclusions in the "River Model" paper arXiv:gr-qc/0411060v2 .
 
  • #18
DaleSpam said:
You have received two answers already, but I don't understand the question. Specifically, what do you mean by this?What does it mean to have two different reference frames in the Schwarzschild geometry?

Perhaps my understanding of reference frames is wrong. But I meant reference frames in the same manner that they come across is a Relativity textbook. That is, just as they are in flat space, when one first learns about them in special relativity.

Except, I was wondering if there is a method to transform between frames in a geometry other than [tex]diag(-1,1,1,1)[/tex], which is reserved for Lorentz transformations. And as you pointed out, It looks like there is. Is my question clear now?
 
  • #19
jfy4 said:
Except, I was wondering if there is a method to transform between frames in a geometry other than diag(-1,1,1,1) , which is reserved for Lorentz transformations. And as you pointed out, It looks like there is.

Your question is clear to me. To find frames that correspond to physical observers in GR requires frame fields, and there is a way to transform between the frame bases .
 
  • #20
jfy4 said:
Perhaps my understanding of reference frames is wrong. But I meant reference frames in the same manner that they come across is a Relativity textbook. That is, just as they are in flat space, when one first learns about them in special relativity.

Except, I was wondering if there is a method to transform between frames in a geometry other than [tex]diag(-1,1,1,1)[/tex], which is reserved for Lorentz transformations. And as you pointed out, It looks like there is. Is my question clear now?
Are you talking about co-located observers or distant observers?
 
  • #21
Mentz114 said:
Your question is clear to me. To find frames that correspond to physical observers in GR requires frame fields, and there is a way to transform between the frame bases .
That is true if they are co-located or if the curvature is negligible. Is that true when they are not co-located and there is significant curvature?
 
  • #22
Mentz114 said:
Your question is clear to me. To find frames that correspond to physical observers in GR requires frame fields, and there is a way to transform between the frame bases .

DaleSpam said:
That is true if they are co-located or if the curvature is negligible. Is that true when they are not co-located and there is significant curvature?

This brings me confusion... if curvature is negligible and the observers are co-located, then what would be the point of using these "frame fields"? Regardless of curvature, locally curvature vanishes and space-time is flat, then one could use Lorentz transformations, correct? I am asking this question, or I thought I was, for the case that curvature is present. That is I am wondering if transformation laws exist for a general metric, not evaluated locally to approximate flat space-time.

Am I asking the question the wrong way? It seems this may be the case...
 
  • #23
jfy4 said:
That is I am wondering if transformation laws exist for a general metric, not evaluated locally to approximate flat space-time.

In curved spacetime there's no globally valid transformation between frames as there is in flat spacetime.

To define a frame ( or observer, who has clocks and rulers ) in curved spacetime we must know something about the worldline, along which the frame is carried.

Although two observer may experience locally flat spacetime, there can still be differences in clock rate and ruler length between them. For instance the static observer example I gave earlier shows that the clock rates differ by the ratio of [itex]\sqrt{g_{00}}[/itex] evaluated at the two points.
 
  • #24
Mentz114 said:
In curved spacetime there's no globally valid transformation between frames as there is in flat spacetime.

To define a frame ( or observer, who has clocks and rulers ) in curved spacetime we must know something about the worldline, along which the frame is carried.

Although two observer may experience locally flat spacetime, there can still be differences in clock rate and ruler length between them. For instance the static observer example I gave earlier shows that the clock rates differ by the ratio of [itex]\sqrt{g_{00}}[/itex] evaluated at the two points.

Ok, I hear you. This seems to make some sense. However, humor me for a bit... If it were possible,

it would need to satisfy these relations right?:

[tex]g_{ab}\frac{\partial x^{\prime a}}{\partial x^{c}}\frac{\partial x^{\prime b}}{\partial x^{d}}=g_{cd}[/tex]

and transform accordingly:

[tex]x_a=T^{b}_{a}x_b+d_a[/tex]

where [tex]T[/tex] is the transform, and the set of partials are each a set of transforms.
 
  • #25
jfy4 said:
Ok, I hear you. This seems to make some sense. However, humor me for a bit... If it were possible,

it would need to satisfy these relations right?:

[tex]g_{ab}\frac{\partial x^{\prime a}}{\partial x^{c}}\frac{\partial x^{\prime b}}{\partial x^{d}}=g_{cd}[/tex]

and transform accordingly:

[tex]x_a=T^{b}_{a}x_b+d_a[/tex]

where [tex]T[/tex] is the transform, and the set of partials are each a set of transforms.

Yes, that looks right. I prefer primed indexes

[tex] g_{m^\prime n^\prime}=g_{mn}A^m_{m^\prime}A^n_{n^\prime}[/tex]

where [itex]A^m_{m^\prime}=\partial x^m /\partial x^{m^\prime }[/itex] . The transformation is

[tex] x_{a^\prime}=T^{a}_{a^\prime}x_a+d_a[/tex]

This is a global coordinate transformation, which may change the form of the metric.
 
  • #26
jfy4 said:
Ok, I hear you. This seems to make some sense. However, humor me for a bit... If it were possible,

it would need to satisfy these relations right?:

[tex]g_{ab}\frac{\partial x^{\prime a}}{\partial x^{c}}\frac{\partial x^{\prime b}}{\partial x^{d}}=g_{cd}[/tex]

and transform accordingly:

[tex]x_a=T^{b}_{a}x_b+d_a[/tex]

where [tex]T[/tex] is the transform, and the set of partials are each a set of transforms.

When you define it this way, then any nice transformation ("diffeomorphism", as DaleSpam said right at the start) is ok, ie.

t'=f0(t,x,y,z)
x'=f1(t,x,y,z)
y'=f2(t,x,y,z)
z'=f3(t,x,y,z)

Basically, it depends on what you mean by "same form", whether the answer is "any diffeomorphism", "those generated by the Killing vectors", or "a field of Lorentz transformations acting on frame fields".
 
  • #27
atyy said:
Basically, it depends on what you mean by "same form", whether the answer is "any diffeomorphism", "those generated by the Killing vectors", or "a field of Lorentz transformations acting on frame fields".

Yes, except that the transformation that connects the local frames along a geodesic is not always the LT. For instance the radially infalling frames in the GP chart are connected by a Gallilean transformation.

[edit] The transormation from the Schwarzschild coordinates ( holonomic frame) to the (local frame) G-P coords however is a boost by [itex]\beta=-\sqrt{2m/r}[/itex]. So there are transformations from a holonomic frame to a local frame, and those between local frames along a curve. I'm not sure what the significance of this might be.
 
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  • #28
Ok, After a day of researching (dont make fun if you think I accomplished little...)

this is what I have come up with.

I think we want this Lie group:

[tex]\mathcal{O}(1,3,\mathbb{F})[/tex]

This group is the norm preserving linear transformations (matrices) whos entries come from a field [tex]\mathbb{F}[/tex]. Then, we are interested in the set of these elements who are diffeomorphisms. Now this set is non-empty, cause it has the identity at least. Now I need to know if this whole group has elements who are all diffeomorphisms, or if it has some. If it has some, I need to know if this set forms a group.

what do you guys think?
 
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  • #29
You are allowed to make nonlinear changes of variables eg. between Rindler and Cartesian coordinates.
 
  • #30
atyy said:
You are allowed to make nonlinear changes of variables eg. between Rindler and Cartesian coordinates.

Doesn't this equation imply that transformations are linear?

[tex]g_{ab}\frac{\partial x^{\prime a}}{\partial x^{c}}\frac{\partial x^{\prime b}}{\partial x^{d}}=g_{cd}[/tex]
 

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