Gravitational red- or rather blue-shift when approaching Schwarzschild radius

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the gravitational blueshift of photons as they approach the Schwarzschild radius, described by the formula \(\frac{\lambda_R}{\lambda_E} = \sqrt{\frac{1-2GM/r_R}{1-2GM/r_E}}\). This formula indicates that as the receiver's position \(r_R\) nears the Schwarzschild radius, the photon's frequency and energy increase towards infinity for a static observer located just above the horizon. It is established that the energy of a photon is observer-dependent, with static observers measuring a blueshift relative to those at infinity. The concept of energy conservation in General Relativity is also discussed, highlighting that while energy is not conserved for static observers near the event horizon, the energy-at-infinity remains a constant of motion for the photon.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of the Schwarzschild metric in General Relativity
  • Familiarity with gravitational redshift and blueshift concepts
  • Knowledge of static observers in the context of black holes
  • Basic grasp of energy conservation principles in General Relativity
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the implications of the Schwarzschild radius on photon behavior
  • Learn about the Komar energy and its significance in General Relativity
  • Explore the concept of energy conservation in non-static gravitational fields
  • Investigate the differences between Newtonian mechanics and General Relativity regarding energy
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Physicists, astrophysicists, and students of General Relativity interested in the behavior of light near black holes and the implications of gravitational effects on energy measurements.

birulami
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I found http://physicspages.com/2013/05/05/schwarzschild-metric-gravitational-redshift/: <br /> \frac{\lambda_R}{\lambda_E} = \sqrt{\frac{1-2GM/r_R}{1-2GM/r_E}}<br /> where the indexes R and E are for receiver and emitter respectively, and the speed of light is normalized to 1.

Most other sources on the net I found only show the limit for ##r_R\to\infty##, so I was happy to see the explicit formula without the limit, because I wanted to see the frequency shift when the photon approaches the Schwarzschild radius of the mass ##M##. This looks like ##\lambda_R## then tends to zero, meaning the photon's frequency and energy go to infinity.

But for which observer does this hold? I take it it is the one near the Schwarzschild radius, not someone looking from the outside?
 
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This formula assumes both R and E are outside the event horizon.

Note that a formula for R at infinity is sufficient to find the more general formula - assume we have a mirror at infinity and follow the path E -> infinity -> R.
 
mfb said:
This formula assumes both R and E are outside the event horizon.
Yes, that is what I assume, with ##r_R## being just very slightly larger than the Schwarzschild radius (assuming a situation where the event horizon is at the Schwarzschild radius). So it is true that the energy of the photon is on its way to infinity at ##r_R## then?
 
birulami said:
for which observer does this hold?

For an observer that is stationary at some ##r_R## above the horizon. The closer ##r_R## is to the horizon, the greater the energy and frequency the observer will measure photons coming inward to him to have.
 
birulami said:
Yes, that is what I assume, with ##r_R## being just very slightly larger than the Schwarzschild radius (assuming a situation where the event horizon is at the Schwarzschild radius). So it is true that the energy of the photon is on its way to infinity at ##r_R## then?

The energy of a photon depends on the observer. For the particular observer you mention, called a static observer, the energy and frequency of the photon are indeed blueshifted relative to the observer at infinity. There are no static observers at the event horizion of a black hole, but as you approach the limit of getting closer and closer to the event horizon, the energy measured by a static observer increases without bound.

Energies (or the sum of energies) observed by static observers are not a conserved quantity in GR though. In Newtonian mechanics, for instance, we'd say "the photon gains energy by falling in the gravitational field", so we wouldn't expect static observers to have a conserved energy. While our expectations of finding some additional "energy in the gravitational field" or "potential energy" to add or subtract wind up being eventually dashed, this is getting a bit-off topic. The most relative point is that if we went this route (considering some additive potential energy) and we tried to come up with a conserved quantity, we'd wind up trying to argue that the positive infinity canceled the negative infinity. Thus it's fortunate we can avoid taking this route.

It does turns out that under the proper conditions (a static metric, or more generally what's known as a stationary metric), the energy-at-infinity is both a constant of motion of the photon (it doesn't change as the photon falls in) , and the sum of the energies-at-infinity gives a measure of energy that is conserved. This is sometimes called the Komar energy.
 

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