sadegh4137 said:
we choose a coordinate system that metric becomes SR, at one point.
I know what's derivative but first derivative become zero! and second isn't!
is it regular?
according your reason, first derivative isn't zero!
I can't understand you!
Let's take a particular example: The surface of a sphere of radius 1 meter can be described by coordinates \theta and \phi. (You can think of \theta as latitude and \phi as longitude, although the mathematical convention is to have \theta run from 0 to \pi, rather than from -90 to +90, and \phi runs from 0 to 2\pi, rather than from -180 to +180)
The components of the metric tensor in this coordinate system are:
g_{\theta \theta} = 1
g_{\phi \phi} = sin^2(\theta)
Take a first derivative to get:
\dfrac{\partial}{\partial \theta} g_{\phi \phi} = 2 sin(\theta) cos(\theta)
Take a second derivative to get:
\dfrac{\partial^2}{\partial \theta^2} g_{\phi \phi} = 2 (cos^2(\theta) - sin^2(\theta))
At \theta = \dfrac{\pi}{2}, we have
g_{\theta \theta} = 1
g_{\phi \phi} = 1
\dfrac{\partial}{\partial \gamma} g_{\alpha\beta} = 0
where \alpha, \beta, \gamma are either \theta or \phi
So, the metric components and their first derivatives look just like flat space. But
the second derivative is nonzero, which means that the Riemann curvature tensor can be nonzero.