How Does the 3D Metric Relate to Volume in a Closed Universe?

In summary, the differential volume element for a closed universe with k=+1 is given by:dV = \sqrt{\mathop{det}\nolimits_3(g)}dr d\theta d\varphiwhere det_3(g) is the determinant of the spatial metric when t=0 and dt=0. This is obtained by using the metric ds^2 = c^2dt^2 - a^2[dr^2/(1-kr^2) + r^2(dθ^2 +sin^2θ dφ^2)] and setting dt=0 and t=0.
  • #1
QuarkDecay
47
2
The final result must be V=2π2α3
Hint says we must use the dV in the spherical system (dV=r2sin2θdrdθdφ) as well as the equation of the three-dimensional metric ds2= c2dt2 - a2[ dr2/(1-kr2) +r2(dθ2 +sin2θ dφ2) ]

For a closed universe we know k=+1 and with dt=0

My problem is, I don't understand how the 3-d metric correlates with the dV. Are they the same? Could I do V=∫ds2 = ∫∫∫- a2[ dr2/(1-kr2) +r2(dθ2 +sin2θ dφ2) r2sin2θdrdθdφ
 
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  • #2
Short Answer:
In this example you would define your differential spatial volume as:
[itex]dV = \sqrt{\mathop{det}\nolimits_3(g)}dr d\theta d\varphi[/itex]
where [itex]det_3(g)[/itex] is the determinant of the spatial metric when you set t=0 (defining your manifold) and dt=0 (since you want submanifold of constant t value) in matrix form:
[tex]g = \left[\begin{array}{ccc}\frac{1}{1-kr^2} & 0 & 0\\ 0 & r^2 & 0\\ 0 & 0 & r^2 \sin^2(\theta)\end{array}\right][/tex]
This depends on the fact that the spatial coordinates are orthogonal to your time coordinate and the time coordinate is basically normalized (up to unit scaling via c). Note that for space-time hyper-volumes we use [itex]\sqrt{-\mathop{det}\nolimits_4(g)}[/itex] due to the signature yielding a negative determinant. This determinant is not quite a "determinant" but rather a "pseudo-determinant". It is not the determinant of an operator defined by the product of its eigen-values. The metric is a mapping from vector to co-vector which then can map a vector to a number. I'm not 100% sure how to describe this metric determinant quantity other than how it manifests below...

Very Long Answer:
The root of your problem is how to get the area of a hyper-surface in a curved space (manifold) from the metric structure. Critical to this is the idea of differential forms and the extension of the metric onto these.

Picture a volume function, called the determinant that maps, in this case four 4-vectors to a 4-volume. For a curved manifold it must map four differential vectors to a differential 4-volume [itex]d^4\mathbf{x} = det[d\mathbf{x}_1,d\mathbf{x}_2,d\mathbf{x}_3,d\mathbf{x}_4][/itex].

You also have the "dot" product defined by the metric such that [itex]ds^2 = d\mathbf{x}\bullet d\mathbf{x}[/itex]. Once you have a 4-volume and a 1-volume (length) you can subtractively define a 3-volume and then a 2-volume how orthogonal (as defined by our metric) forms multiply to give higher measure forms. In this case we can define a spatial 3-volume form by how it combines with a unit, orthogonal time-like vector form to yield a space-time 4-volume form, i.e. our determinant.

[tex]dx\wedge dy\wedge dz :c dt \mapsto det[\hat{e}_1 dx, \hat{e}_2 dy, \hat{e}_3 dz,\hat{e}_4 c dt][/tex]

So, getting back to your problem. You notice that the metric for your chosen coordinate has dt coefficient independent of the other variables. This means that in this metric the coordinate t direction is orthogonal to the other coordinates, and that its differential length is a constant. This means that we can treat the t=0 spatial submanifold as a 3-manifold with the intrinsic metric obtained by setting dt=0 and t=0:
[tex] ds^2 =a^2\left[ \frac{dr^2}{1-r^2} + r^2(d\theta^2 +\sin^2(θ) d\varphi^2)\right][/tex]

Ok so far? The big question then is at this point how do you get that differential 3-volume and integrate over this 3-manifold? (similar to the question you might have asked of how to calculate the 4-volume of the space-time region from t=0 to t=42seconds or some value...)

This gets a little complicated conceptually unless you embed your manifold in some larger vector space but let's give it a go... Given you are using some coordinate system on the manifold defining a point as a continuous function of your coordinates [itex]p=p(r,\theta,\phi)[/itex] there is a differential of this point valued function [itex]dp= \partial_r p dr + \partial_\theta p d\theta + \partial_\varphi p d\varphi[/itex]. This differential lives in the tangent space which is where your metric is defined [itex]ds^2 = dp\bullet dp[/itex]. So these "partial derivatives of position" are mappings from the point on the manifold into this tangent space.

To define differential surface and volume elements we construct differential forms from the components you can think of as "partial differentials"
[tex] d_r p = \partial_r p dr,\quad d_\theta p = \partial_\theta p d\theta, \quad d_\varphi p =\partial_\varphi p d\varphi[/tex]
[tex]d\mathbf{V} = d_r p \wedge d_\theta p \wedge d_\varphi p[/tex]
which is an oriented volume form with the wedge products here being totally antisymmetric tensor products we use to express partial determinants in that original determinant function. To get a simple scalar volume you need the magnitude of this thing which is where we invoke the good ole metric again.

The way the metric extends to differential forms is, if we follow the convention that the wedge of two unit vectors defines a unit area etc:
[tex](a\wedge b \wedge c)\bullet (a\wedge b \wedge c) =
(a\bullet a)(b\bullet b)(c\bullet c) + (a\bullet b)(b\bullet c)(c\bullet a) + (a\bullet c)(b\bullet a)(c\bullet b)...[/tex]
[tex] - (a\bullet a)(b\bullet c)(c\bullet b)-(a\bullet c)(b\bullet b)(c\bullet a) - (a\bullet b)(b\bullet a)(c\bullet c)[/tex]
Since the wedge product is totally anti-symmetric and each factor vector may have components in the direction of any or all of the other factors we must sum over all the permutations (with minus sign for odd permutations due to antisymmetry).

That's the mess for general coordinates but if you work with orthogonal coordinates and bases (but not necessarily orthonormal) i.e. with coordinates with a diagonalized metric, then only the first term will be non-zero. But in general this quantity will end up being, for your differential volume element:
[tex]d\mathbf{V}\bullet d\mathbf{V} = \mathop{det}(g) dr^2d\theta^2 d\varphi^2[/tex]
where the determinant of [itex] g[/itex] is the matrix determinant of the 3-metric. So we take the square root and get:
[itex]dV = \sqrt{\mathop{det}(g)}dr d\theta d\varphi[/itex]

Note this is what we do in a much simplified form in Calc III, when we define the "vector" and "scalar" differental surface elements:
[tex] d\mathbf{S} = d_u \mathbf{r}\times d_v\mathbf{r} =\left(\frac{\partial \mathbf{r}}{\partial u}\times\frac{\partial \mathbf{r}}{\partial v}\right) dudv,
\quad dS =
|d\mathbf{S}|[/tex]
 
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  • #3
So I trying solving this by using the formula of dV=... but I couldn't solve the Integral, plus my book says the solution is supposed to be easy. Also we haven't been taught this type of math.
I've searched for a solution on the internet and I found this from a page;


242372

Which is the solution I was looking for exactly.
I just don't understand how they calculated the l=2πa(t)sinx from the dl2.
It seems like the part of
(dθ2 + sin2θdφ2)=
= ∫dθ∫dφ (0≤θ≤π), (0≤φ≤2π)

and why use that formula of V=∫s(x')a(t)dx'

V is supposed to be dependent on x,θ and φ right? why only the dx'?

What do the dx2, dθ2 etc actually mean?
 
  • #4
QuarkDecay said:
I just don't understand how they calculated the l=2πa(t)sinx from the dl2
The sphere is defined by letting ##\mathcal X## constant. The equator also has ##\theta = \pi / 2##. So ##dl = a(t) \sin \mathcal X d\varphi##. You just integrate this over the range of ##\varphi \in (0, 2 \pi)## and get the result.
QuarkDecay said:
and why use that formula of V=∫s(x')a(t)dx'
He is just integrating the area over the radius, which is the definition of volume. The usage of ##\mathcal X'## is because he is integrating, so he uses a different notation, ##\mathcal X'## instead of ##\mathcal X## because he already called the radius ##\mathcal X##.
QuarkDecay said:
V is supposed to be dependent on x,θ and φ right? why only the dx'?
Yes, V is ultimately related to all variables, but you already worked out some of them when you found the area of the sphere, so now the remaining variable is ##\mathcal X##.
 
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What is the volume of a closed universe?

The volume of a closed universe is a theoretical concept in physics that refers to the total amount of space contained within a closed universe. It is a fundamental aspect of the study of cosmology and the structure of the universe.

How is the volume of a closed universe calculated?

The volume of a closed universe is typically calculated using mathematical models and equations derived from the theory of general relativity. These models take into account various factors such as the curvature of space and the expansion of the universe.

Is the volume of a closed universe finite or infinite?

The volume of a closed universe is believed to be finite, meaning that it has a definite size and can be measured. This is based on the current understanding of the universe and its properties, but it is still a topic of ongoing research and debate among scientists.

How does the volume of a closed universe affect its eventual fate?

The volume of a closed universe is closely linked to its eventual fate. If the volume is large enough, the universe will continue to expand forever. However, if the volume is small enough, the universe will eventually collapse in on itself in a "Big Crunch" scenario.

Can the volume of a closed universe change over time?

According to current theories, the volume of a closed universe is constant and does not change over time. However, this is subject to change as new discoveries and advancements in physics may lead to a better understanding of the nature of the universe and its properties.

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