Transformation of an acceleration vector under a basis change

In summary, the conversation discusses the use of co-basis frame fields in the stationary frame of the Schwarzschild spacetime and the calculation of the 4-velocity and 4-acceleration of a stationary observer in this frame. The conversation then delves into the application of a boost in the r-direction, which is equivalent to a transformation from Schwarzschild to Painleve coordinates. However, there is disagreement among the participants about the validity of this boost and its effect on the metric. One participant suggests that the 4-acceleration of a Painleve observer is zero, while another points out that the boost may only affect the 4-acceleration of the observer whose 4-velocity covector is used in the
  • #36
Mentz114 said:
These remarks don't help because what I've done is standard frame field stuff which I suspect you are not familiar with.

I have a basic understanding of what frame fields are. I don't understand which coordinate chart you are using; you seem to be mixing together expressions written in the global Schwarzschild chart and expressions written in a local Minkowski frame.

I agree with what you said in this quote about the actual physics involved:

Mentz114 said:
The static frame field is accelerating and will always be accelerating from any viewpoint. The boosted static frame is now moving and so is a different physical setup with a different acceleration vector which happens to be zero for the boost I chose. All observers will agree on this too.

But I don't see how your calculations correspond to this physics.
 
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  • #37
PeterDonis said:
...
I agree with what you said in this quote about the actual physics involved:

But I don't see how your calculations correspond to this physics.
I don't think I can make it any clearer. There are two frame fields - one is stationary wrt the source, the other is free-falling. They are represented by the basis covectors I gave. They have different acceleration vectors - no problem.
 
  • #38
I'm curious: you weren't suggesting that we look at purely temporal (not sure how else to say this...purely t-direction?) velocities for each of the two different frame fields and see that one had a nonzero acceleration while the other did not, were you?
 
  • #39
Mentz114 said:
I don't think I can make it any clearer. There are two frame fields - one is stationary wrt the source, the other is free-falling. They are represented by the basis covectors I gave. They have different acceleration vectors - no problem.

Yes, I understand that part, at least the physics of it. But there's a lot more that has been said in this thread than just the above. For example: my understanding is that, by the definition of a frame field, the timelike vector (or covector) of the basis *is* the 4-velocity of the observer whose frame field it is. For example, the 4-velocity of a static observer *is* the vector [itex]s_0[/itex] of the first frame field you wrote down. But you say the 4-velocity of that observer is (1, 0, 0, 0).
 
  • #40
Muphrid said:
I'm curious: you weren't suggesting that we look at purely temporal (not sure how else to say this...purely t-direction?) velocities for each of the two different frame fields and see that one had a nonzero acceleration while the other did not, were you?
No, I wasn't suggesting that.

Can I make it clear that as far as I'm concerned my original problem was because I was wrong in my expectation. The physics is clear to me now.

There's no point in pursuing this further.
 
  • #41
PeterDonis said:
For example, the 4-velocity of a static observer *is* the vector [itex]s_0[/itex] of the first frame field you wrote down. But you say the 4-velocity of that observer is (1, 0, 0, 0).

Just to elaborate a bit on this: as I understand it, the 4-velocity *covector* of the static observer in the s frame field should be [itex]s_0[/itex], i.e.,

[tex]u_\mu = \sqrt{\frac{r - 2m}{r}} dt[/tex]

The 4-velocity *vector* is obtained by raising an index, thus:

[tex]u^\mu = g^{\mu \nu} u_{\nu} = g^{tt} u_t \partial_t = \sqrt{\frac{r}{r - 2m}} \partial_t[/tex]

This, of course, is just the timelike vector of the *vector* frame field corresponding to the covector frame field you wrote down, i.e., it is the vector [itex]s^0[/itex] of the vector frame field [itex]s^0[/itex], [itex]s^1[/itex], [itex]s^2[/itex], [itex]s^3[/itex]; the other three vectors would be obtained by raising an index on the other three covectors, i.e.:

[tex]s^1 = \sqrt{\frac{r - 2m}{r}} \partial_r[/tex]

[tex]s^2 = \frac{1}{r} \partial_\theta[/tex]

[tex]s^3 = \frac{1}{r sin \theta} \partial_\phi[/tex]

[Edit: I understand we're in agreement about the physics, this is more for my understanding of the frame field mathematical machinery.]
 
  • #42
PeterDonis said:
Just to elaborate a bit on this: as I understand it, the 4-velocity *covector* of the static observer in the s frame field should be [itex]s_0[/itex], i.e.,

[tex]u_\mu = \sqrt{\frac{r - 2m}{r}} dt[/tex][snip]

Those vectors look right. If you do the tensor product you should get the metric.
 
  • #43
Mentz114 said:
Those vectors look right.

Ok, good.

Mentz114 said:
If you do the tensor product you should get the metric.

The tensor product [itex]g=-s_0\otimes s_0 + s_1\otimes s_1 + s_2\otimes s_2 + s_3\otimes s_3 [/itex] gives the Schwarzschild metric. Is that what you mean?
 
  • #44
PeterDonis said:
Ok, good.

The tensor product [itex]g=-s_0\otimes s_0 + s_1\otimes s_1 + s_2\otimes s_2 + s_3\otimes s_3 [/itex] gives the Schwarzschild metric. Is that what you mean?
Yes. Where are these questions leading ? I think there's an error the h0 in my OP. Should be 1 not -1 I think.
 
  • #45
Mentz114 said:
Yes. Where are these questions leading ?

I'm trying to do the calculations myself, for my own edification.

Mentz114 said:
I think there's an error the h0 in my OP. Should be 1 not -1 I think.

Meaning, +dt instead of -dt? I think I agree; I'm trying to relate the covectors you wrote to the frame field vectors for the infalling observer that are given (in terms of the Schwarzschild chart) on the Wiki page on frame fields:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frame_fields_in_general_relativity
 
  • #46
PeterDonis said:
Meaning, +dt instead of -dt? I think I agree; I'm trying to relate the covectors you wrote to the frame field vectors for the infalling observer that are given (in terms of the Schwarzschild chart) on the Wiki page on frame fields:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frame_fields_in_general_relativity

Hmm. When I lower indexes on the components of the frame field vectors for Lemaitre observers, I get the same signs that are in the OP; [itex]h_0[/itex] has a minus sign and [itex]h_1[/itex] has a plus sign for the [itex]dt[/itex] term.
 
  • #47
PeterDonis said:
Hmm. When I lower indexes on the components of the frame field vectors for Lemaitre observers, I get the same signs that are in the OP; [itex]h_0[/itex] has a minus sign and [itex]h_1[/itex] has a plus sign for the [itex]dt[/itex] term.
The h cobasis is correct. It's h0 that has the positive time component. I don't why I suddenly thought it was wrong. If you did confirm my result it would be a bonus although it's unlikely to be wrong because it gives the expected accelerations.
 
  • #48
Mentz114 said:
The h cobasis is correct. It's h0 that has the positive time component.

Yes, that's what I get as well.
 

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