GRstudent said:
I didn't understand the last instruction "So you just solve for the Christoffel symbols (multiply both sides by gασ to just get Γσμβδσσ=Γσμβ) and you have your usual expression for the Christoffel symbols in terms of the metric."
Like I said, do the calculation yourself with your own indices. You only have to use that
<br />
g^{\mu\nu}g_{\nu\rho} = \delta^{\mu}_{\rho}<br />
Have you read Carroll's notes? The calculation is there stated very explicitly, and it doesn't get any more explicit than that I'm afraid. Just do the calculation yourself following the steps.
I have the feeling that you don't get the point of this calculation in the first place. What you want in GR is to write the connection in terms of the metric, such that it doesn't introduce new degrees of freedom. The geometry is then uniquely determined by the metric!
One way to achieve this is to put the covariant derivative of the metric to zero and to put the torsion to zero. There are pictures which make clear what this means for the geometry in every textbook on GR. Now, metric compatibility gives you
<br />
D*\frac{1}{2}D(D+1)<br />
conditions (why?). The connection has also this number of independent components (why?), and it appears only algebraically multiplied by a metric (which is invertable) in the metric compatibility condition. This means you can solve for it! The index permutation mentioned earlier and in Carroll notes gives you the solution for the connection.
The Riemann tensor then only depends on the metric, and that is the statement that the geometry is uniquely defined by the metric.