I Calculate Time at Infinity for GR Observer: A Photon's Journey

Kara386
Messages
204
Reaction score
2
We were shown the answer to this question as a worked example: A photon is emitted from a radius ##r_2## and travels radially inward to ##r_1## until it's reflected by a fixed mirror and travels back to ##r_2##. Calculate the time taken for the photon to travel in and back, according to a stationary watcher at infinity. Use the Schwarzschild metric.

The answer then stated ##ds^2=0## for a photon, and as it is radially infalling ##d\theta## and ##d\phi## are also zero. Subbing these into the metric and integrating gave an expression for ##\Delta t##. I thought that would be the time measured by the photon. But the calculation ends there, and states that this is time as measured by the observer at infinity.

Is that because for the observer, spacetime is flat? So ##ds^2 = d\tau^2 = dt^2-dx^2-dy^2-dz^2##, but since the observer is stationary you just get ##d\tau = dt##. It just seems a bit strange that someone infinitely far away would measure the same time as the photon. But then I'm a week into my first GR course, so at the minute most of it seems odd!
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
No, you have to use the Schwarzschild line element rather than the Minkowskian. In the usual coordinates ##\mathrm{d} t## is the time increment of an observer very far from the mass responsible for the Schwarzschild gravitational field. You just have to calculate the radial light-like (null) geodesics in a Schwarzschild metric.
 
  • Like
Likes Kara386
Photons don't measure time. That's why ##ds=cd\tau=0## in this case.

The ##\Delta t## you calculated was the difference in time coordinate between the emission and reception events. In curved spacetime, the difference in time coordinates isn't necessarily anything to do with the time experienced by anyone (just as, on the curved surface of the Earth, the same latitude but a difference of 1° in our longitudes could mean anything from millimetres to hundreds of miles between us). However, the Schwarzschild time coordinate is chosen to be the time for an observer at infinity (##d\tau=dt## for an observer stationary at r=∞). So in this case, the coordinate time difference is the answer you were looking for. It's not the same as the time experienced by someone waiting at the emitter for the reflection to return.

I'm not sure it ever stops being odd, by the way. It does become more understandable.
 
  • Like
Likes Kara386
Ibix said:
Photons don't measure time. That's why ##ds=cd\tau=0## in this case.

The ##\Delta t## you calculated was the difference in time coordinate between the emission and reception events. In curved spacetime, the difference in time coordinates isn't necessarily anything to do with the time experienced by anyone (just as, on the curved surface of the Earth, the same latitude but a difference of 1° in our longitudes could mean anything from millimetres to hundreds of miles between us). However, the Schwarzschild time coordinate is chosen to be the time for an observer at infinity (##d\tau=dt## for an observer stationary at r=∞). So in this case, the coordinate time difference is the answer you were looking for. It's not the same as the time experienced by someone waiting at the emitter for the reflection to return.

Right ok, so for r tending to infinity, you get from the Schwarzschild metric (for a stationary observer) that ##dt=d\tau##? And that's different to the time experienced by someone at ##r_2##. If you had a stationary observer at ##r_2##, would this be the time ##d\tau## that they experience (setting c=1)?
##ds^2 = d\tau^2 = \left(1-\frac{2GM}{r}\right)(dt)^2##

So there's a factor of ##\sqrt{1 - \frac{2GM}{r}}## compared to the coordinate time, and that takes you to proper time?

Ibix said:
I'm not sure it ever stops being odd, by the way. It does become more understandable.
That's very reassuring, I'm quite glad it stays odd. My lecturer is treating it as somewhat mundane - but then he's a cosmologist, and he's also said things like galaxies are tiny. Which I suppose they might be, in the context of cosmology!

I didn't know coordinate time wasn't necessarily a quantity experienced by someone. Thanks for the answers, they're really helpful!
 
Kara386 said:
Right ok, so for r tending to infinity, you get from the Schwarzschild metric (for a stationary observer) that dt=dτdt=d\tau?
Yes.
Kara386 said:
If you had a stationary observer at ##r_2##, would this be the time ##d\tau## that they experience (setting c=1)?
##ds^2 = d\tau^2 = \left(1-\frac{2GM}{r}\right)(dt)^2##
That should be ##r_2## rather than r in the bracket. And strictly you should integrate ##d\tau## to get a finite length of time if you want to talk about the amount of time that's passed, but the integral is trivial in this case and you can just replace d with Δ. But basically yes.

Kara386 said:
My lecturer is treating it as somewhat mundane
Some aspects of it are (my analogy to coordinates on Earth is quite literally mundane, and I find it very useful). But the consequences of even the mundane stuff can be surprising.
Kara386 said:
I didn't know coordinate time wasn't necessarily a quantity experienced by someone.
Coordinates are just a way of "labelling" events in spacetime for easy reference. If you're going to be systematic about that labelling then it's reasonable that your time coordinate increasing should have some relationship to everyone's clock readings increasing. But it doesn't have to be the exact same thing - and that's where the ##\sqrt {1-2GM/r}## comes in, as you said.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and Kara386
Ibix said:
Yes.
That should be ##r_2## rather than r in the bracket. And strictly you should integrate ##d\tau## to get a finite length of time if you want to talk about the amount of time that's passed, but the integral is trivial in this case and you can just replace d with Δ. But basically yes.

Some aspects of it are (my analogy to coordinates on Earth is quite literally mundane, and I find it very useful). But the consequences of even the mundane stuff can be surprising.
Coordinates are just a way of "labelling" events in spacetime for easy reference. If you're going to be systematic about that labelling then it's reasonable that your time coordinate increasing should have some relationship to everyone's clock readings increasing. But it doesn't have to be the exact same thing - and that's where the ##\sqrt {1-2GM/r}## comes in, as you said.
Fantastic, thanks for your help, that's cleared up some misconceptions I had!
 
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...
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...
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...

Similar threads

Replies
17
Views
3K
Replies
8
Views
265
Replies
57
Views
5K
Replies
4
Views
1K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
55
Views
3K
Replies
11
Views
2K
Back
Top