ilp89
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I have a question about the paper:
C. G. . Callan, R. C. Myers and M. J. Perry, “Black Holes In String Theory,” Nucl. Phys. B
311, 673 (1989).
I have attached the relevant section.
I am having trouble using equations (2.1) and (2.4) to derive (2.5) and (2.6). When I do the calculation, I do not get any \phi' terms (i.e. first derivatives --- I do get all the second-derivatives of phi and all other terms).
For example, I don't understand how the (tt) and (θθ) equations can have \phi' terms. Doesn't (2.1a) contain
\nabla_{a}\nabla_{b}\phi = \partial_a \partial_b \varphi(r) = 0 unless a = b = r?
Thus shouldn't only the (rr) equation contain a \phi-term... and shouldn't it just be a second derivative?
For another example, since \nabla \phi is first-order in \lambda, isn't (\nabla \phi)^2 second-order in \lambda and thus irrelevant for equation (2.6)? This would lead me to conclude that there should be no first derivative of \phi in (2.6). Where does it come from?
I would greatly appreciate some insight. Tell me where I am going wrong!
Thanks in advance,
Chris
C. G. . Callan, R. C. Myers and M. J. Perry, “Black Holes In String Theory,” Nucl. Phys. B
311, 673 (1989).
I have attached the relevant section.
I am having trouble using equations (2.1) and (2.4) to derive (2.5) and (2.6). When I do the calculation, I do not get any \phi' terms (i.e. first derivatives --- I do get all the second-derivatives of phi and all other terms).
For example, I don't understand how the (tt) and (θθ) equations can have \phi' terms. Doesn't (2.1a) contain
\nabla_{a}\nabla_{b}\phi = \partial_a \partial_b \varphi(r) = 0 unless a = b = r?
Thus shouldn't only the (rr) equation contain a \phi-term... and shouldn't it just be a second derivative?
For another example, since \nabla \phi is first-order in \lambda, isn't (\nabla \phi)^2 second-order in \lambda and thus irrelevant for equation (2.6)? This would lead me to conclude that there should be no first derivative of \phi in (2.6). Where does it come from?
I would greatly appreciate some insight. Tell me where I am going wrong!
Thanks in advance,
Chris