synoe
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Isometry is the symmetry s.t.
<br /> g^\prime_{\mu\nu}(x)=g_{\mu\nu}(x)<br />
under the transformation x^\mu\to x^{\prime\mu}(x). This means under infinitesimal transformation
<br /> x^\mu\to x^\mu+\epsilon \xi^\mu(x)<br />
where \epsilon is any infinitesimal constant, the vector field \xi^\mu(x) satisfies Killing equation:
<br /> \nabla_\mu\xi_\nu(x)+\nabla_\nu\xi_\mu(x)=0.<br />
I have questions about above description.
1. Why the infinitesimal parameter \epsilon is constant and \xi^\mu is depend on x? The most general form seems to be \epsilon(x)\xi^\mu(x).
2.Is this transformation global or local? It's global symmetry because \epsilon is constant?
3.I have seen the description like "isometry means the metric is independent on the coordinate of the isometry direction." That is, if the isometry transformation is x^0\to x^0+\epsilon\xi(x), g_{\mu\nu}=g_{\mu\nu}(x^1,\dots) or \partial_0g_{\mu\nu}=0. But I think this is true only when the Killing equation have a constant solution. The statement is true in more general?
<br /> g^\prime_{\mu\nu}(x)=g_{\mu\nu}(x)<br />
under the transformation x^\mu\to x^{\prime\mu}(x). This means under infinitesimal transformation
<br /> x^\mu\to x^\mu+\epsilon \xi^\mu(x)<br />
where \epsilon is any infinitesimal constant, the vector field \xi^\mu(x) satisfies Killing equation:
<br /> \nabla_\mu\xi_\nu(x)+\nabla_\nu\xi_\mu(x)=0.<br />
I have questions about above description.
1. Why the infinitesimal parameter \epsilon is constant and \xi^\mu is depend on x? The most general form seems to be \epsilon(x)\xi^\mu(x).
2.Is this transformation global or local? It's global symmetry because \epsilon is constant?
3.I have seen the description like "isometry means the metric is independent on the coordinate of the isometry direction." That is, if the isometry transformation is x^0\to x^0+\epsilon\xi(x), g_{\mu\nu}=g_{\mu\nu}(x^1,\dots) or \partial_0g_{\mu\nu}=0. But I think this is true only when the Killing equation have a constant solution. The statement is true in more general?