Buckethead said:
I find it interesting though that there is a difference between rotating and non-rotating for an ideal situation where there is 100% frame dragging inside the shell.
As pervect pointed out in his post, you have to be very careful about what "rotating" and "non-rotating" mean. See below.
Buckethead said:
I thought the gravity increases but there remains no curvature even if the sphere is rotating.
That is not correct. If the sphere is rotating, spacetime inside it is curved, not flat.
Buckethead said:
In addition there would be uniform frame dragging throughout the inside of the shell
The presence of frame dragging, which is
not present inside a non-rotating shell, is because spacetime is curved, not flat. There is no frame dragging in flat spacetime.
I don't know if the frame dragging is uniform inside the shell, though. As I said before, I have not tried to work through the math. I have also not been able to find a reference online that gives a metric for this case.
Buckethead said:
the balls could rotate with the shell and not feel rotational forces
As I said before, I also don't know that the angular velocity that makes the tension in the string between the balls zero (which is what "not feel rotational forces" means, see below) is the same as the angular velocity of the shell. I would need to work through the math, which is not a simple exercise.
However, we can at least see some qualitative features without doing the detailed math. First, consider the case of a non-rotating spherical shell. By "non-rotating" here, we mean, heuristically, that the shell has zero angular velocity relative to an observer at rest at infinity. (A more precise mathematical treatment would define an angular momentum tensor for the shell in terms of the asymptotically flat metric of the spacetime and show that it was zero.) Spacetime inside the shell is flat. That means if we have two balls connected by a string, and we let them all float freely inside the shell, starting them out at mutual rest (and at rest relative to the shell, for simplicity) with the string under zero tension, the string will stay under zero tension, and the balls and string will all stay at rest relative to each other. In this state, the angular velocity of the balls, relative to the shell, will be zero. And since the shell has zero angular velocity relative to infinity, the balls will also have zero angular velocity relative to infinity.
But there is another way we can measure "rotation", which is purely local. Suppose we put a set of three gyroscopes on each ball, with the gyroscopes set to point in three mutually perpendicular directions. One direction is "straight up", perpendicular to the plane in which the balls and the string lie. Another direction is along the string. The third direction is perpendicular to the first two. Now, as the balls float freely, the gyroscope directions will all remain the same, not just relative to the shell, but relative to the balls and string.
Now suppose we start the balls and string rotating around their common center of mass (which will be at the midpoint of the string, if we assume constant density for the balls and constant mass per unit length for the string). In other words, we leave the center of mass of the balls/string motionless relative to the shell, but give the balls a nonzero angular velocity about that center of mass, and therefore a nonzero angular velocity relative to the shell and to infinity. This will have the following effects:
(1) There will be nonzero tension in the string.
(2) The gyroscope directions will change, relative to the balls and string. More precisely, the two gyroscopes in the plane of the balls and string will change direction--to an observer on one ball, looking along the string towards the other ball, the gyroscope that started out pointing along the string will point in a direction that gradually changes relative to the string, and the other gyroscope in that plane will stay perpendicular to it, so it will also point in a direction that gradually changes. The gyroscopes give a local definition of "non-rotating", and so really what their changing direction relative to the string is telling us is that the balls and string are rotating, in a local sense (relative to local gyroscopes).
(Note that there are other complications here which I won't go into right now, to do with the relationship between the two senses of "rotating", local relative to the gyroscopes and global relative to an observer at rest at infinity. In Newtonian physics the two would be the same, but in relativity they are not. The various effects that cause them to be different go by names like "Thomas precession", "de Sitter precession", and "Lense-Thirring precession". The last of the three is also called "frame dragging", and we'll discuss that a bit below, but a full discussion would require an "I" or possibly even "A" level thread.)
Now let's consider the case of a rotating shell. First we need to specify what we mean when we say the shell is rotating. As above, we mean, heuristically, that the shell has nonzero angular velocity relative to an observer at rest at infinity. A more precise mathematical treatment would say that the angular momentum tensor of the shell, defined in terms of the asymptotically flat metric of the spacetime, is nonzero.
Next we put the balls and string inside the shell, along with the gyroscopes on each ball, and ask what the tension in the string will be and in what directions the gyroscopes will point, for a given angular velocity of the balls and string relative to an observer at rest at infinity. (Note that this will no longer be the same as the angular velocity of the balls and string relative to the shell.) We will find, generally speaking, the following:
(1) There will be some nonzero angular velocity at which the tension in the string will be zero and the gyroscope directions will not change relative to the direction of the string, the same as for zero angular velocity in flat spacetime. (As I said above, I do not know if this angular velocity will the same as the angular velocity of the shell relative to infinity; I think it won't, but I haven't done the math.) At this angular velocity, the balls and string will be "non-rotating" locally (relative to the gyroscopes), but globally, relative to infinity, they will be rotating. This is due to "frame dragging" by the shell, and it indicates, as noted before, that spacetime inside the shell is not flat.
(2) At an angular velocity larger than the one found in #1 above, the tension in the string will be nonzero and the gyroscope directions will change, relative to the string, the same way they did in the flat spacetime case above for any nonzero angular velocity.
(3) At an angular velocity
smaller than the one found in #1 above (which includes zero angular velocity, and also negative angular velocities, i.e., rotation in the opposite sense relative to infinity), the tension in the string will be nonzero and the gyroscope directions will change, relative to the string, in the
opposite way from #2 above. This would be similar to the behavior in flat spacetime for a nonzero angular velocity in the opposite sense.