cianfa72
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- About the constrains for the topology of spacetime given by Robertson - Walker metric
I'm keep watching the lectures on GR from F.P. Shuller and D. Giulini -- International Winter School on Gravity and Light.
As far as I can tell, the spacetime metric ##g_{a b}## in the Robertson-Walker (RW) form relies on the hypothesis of spatial homogeneity & isotropy (which provide constraints for the spacelike hypersurfaces of the relevant spacetime foliations). This implies a constrain on the topology of the spacetime itself. Namely its topology must be the product topology of a maximally symmetric 3D Riemman manifold ##\Sigma## times ##\mathbb R## -- see Lecture 18.
In the definition of product topology enter the topology of ##\Sigma## as topological 3D manifold plus the standard topology of ##\mathbb R##. So far so good.
I was thinking that assumption might be too restrictive, putting a too strong constrain on the possible solutions of Einstein Field Equations (EFEs).
What do you think about ?
As far as I can tell, the spacetime metric ##g_{a b}## in the Robertson-Walker (RW) form relies on the hypothesis of spatial homogeneity & isotropy (which provide constraints for the spacelike hypersurfaces of the relevant spacetime foliations). This implies a constrain on the topology of the spacetime itself. Namely its topology must be the product topology of a maximally symmetric 3D Riemman manifold ##\Sigma## times ##\mathbb R## -- see Lecture 18.
In the definition of product topology enter the topology of ##\Sigma## as topological 3D manifold plus the standard topology of ##\mathbb R##. So far so good.
I was thinking that assumption might be too restrictive, putting a too strong constrain on the possible solutions of Einstein Field Equations (EFEs).
What do you think about ?
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