space-time said:
I have pretty much learned how to derive the left side of Einstein's field equations now (the Einstein tensor that is). Now I need to grasp that stress energy momentum tensor.
Does anybody know of any good sources that will tell me how to derive the components of this tensor?
I like
http://web.mit.edu/edbert/GR/gr2b.pdf - let me know if it works for you, or if you go "huh, what". I haven't had a lot of feedback on this recommendation. Let me summarize what I see as the key ideas below.
The basic idea is that there is a well-known 4-vector in SR, called the number-flux density. And if you have a swarm of particles, and you take the tensor product of the number-flux density 4-vector, and the energy-momentum 4-vector, you get the stress-energy tensor.
This really only gets the stress-energy tensor for a swarm of idealized particles (that interact by bouncing on contact with no long range fields). I haven't seen much on how to justify generalizing the idea, but it's a starting point that the stress-energy tensor is the lorentz invariant description of the energy and momentum density contained in such a particle swarm.
I ask this because some of the meanings for the elements that I have heard confuse me.
For example, T00 is said to be the energy density, but no source that I have seen has made any mention of volume. I'd think that energy density in this case would be something like relativistic energy divided by volume, but I have seen no mention of volume anywhere.
The majority of papers don't talk about volume :(. I can give you my take on the issue, but without a paper to back me up I can't be sure how much I may be speculating, though it all makes sense to me.
The first thing that seems obvious is that the concept of a volume element depends on the velocity of the observer, due to Lorentz contraction (and the relativity of simultaneity).
A signed volume element can be represented as a three-form you can find discussion of this in MTW, so it's not speculative yet, and it does talk about volume, though it's a signed volume, so we have to ignore the sign issues, which may come back at a later time to be an annoyance or a real issue, depending on how precise one needs to be.,
You can find the hodges dual of this three-form, and it will be a vector. I'm not sure if you're familiar with these concepts (hodges dual and three-forms. They most naturally arise from clifford algebra, IMO). If not, you may have to just go with the idea that it's not self-consistent to think of a volume element as being a lorentz invariant scalar, but that it is plausible it could be a 4-vector.
So (and here's where it starts to get to be possibly speculative), we can start with the idea that we can represent a volume element in special relativity via a vector. A scalar isn't good enough, so a vector seems reasonable. When we multiply the stress-energy tensor by a vector representing the volume element, we get the energy and momentum contained within that volume element.
What we need to do to make this match the textbooks is to say that the vector representing a unit volume for an observer moving at a 4-velocity u is just the 4-velocity u.
The textbooks omit talking about this interpretation of the 4-velocity as a volume element, and simply say that the way you get the total amount of energy and momentum in a unit volume for an observer moving with a 4-velocity u is to multiply the stress energy tensor via the 4-velocity. MTW, in particular, says this (so it's not speculation). But they don't go so far as to actually say that the 4-velocity represents a unit volume element. Why they don't say this, I don't know. Either they didn't think it was needed, or there is some potential for argument or error with this seemingly simple interpretation, I don't know. [add] One posibility is due to the sign issue, Our "vector" might actually be a "pseudovector" due to the lack of invariance under reflection along the time axis.
The same problem holds true with the other elements in the top which are said to be the "momentum density".
Furthermore, I have seen some sources refer to the top row (aside from T
00) as energy flux, which confuses me because it does not seem like it would be the same thing as momentum density.
The worst part of it all, is that I haven't seen a single formula to derive these elements.
Can anyone link me to any good sources explaining how to properly derive the elements of this tensor or explain it themselves (preferably in a mathematical way)?[/QUOTE]
I've seen the same claims, and I've noticed the same lack of references. The results of my own thinking are above, I don't think there's anything really silly about my interpretation. But it's not the same as a good paper, I'll admit.