Stingray said:
No. Think of a collection of initially stationary particles in flat spacetime. In an inertial reference frame, they stay fixed. In a rotating one, they rotate. Particles remaining fixed in the rotating frame can be easily shown to have a nonzero acceleration (computed using a covariant derivative). This is independent of coordinate system. Alternatively, such particles are not moving on geodesics. The metric of a flat spacetime in rotating coordinates looks very different from the usual one.
I am talking about diffeomorphism invariance, not just a simple coordinate change.
Take a stress-energy tensor of zero with boundary conditions of flat space at infinity, and solve and you should get the -1,1,1,1 diagonal metric for inertial frames in SR. Do a coordinate transformation, and
resolve for the metric with this new stress energy tensor ... you get the
same result. Yes, if you just did a simple coordinate transformation, you'd get a different metric, but I'm talking about diffeomorphism invariance here.
And this should make intuitive sense as well. If there is empty space, you shouldn't be able to tell if you are rotating or not (how could you, rotating with respect to
what?). Those two situations are related by a diffeomorphism and are physically equivalent.
Stingray said:
The end result, though, is that the concept of a rotating body does not depend on a choice of coordinates. The angular momentum of a Kerr spacetime would be the same in any frame.
Angular momentum can be changed just with a coordinate translation and boost. Also, considering a Kerr spacetime is a vacuum solution, there is no matter or energy to have any angular momentum. To endow empty space with momentum (instead of a field in space) seems to envoc an aether. That makes me uncomfortable. How can vacuum
itself have angular momentum?
Stingray said:
That of Schwarzschild is always zero. As already mentioned, the two spacetimes also have different Killing fields (symmetries). The existence of these objects is independent of coordinate choice.
Is there a theorem that enumerates symmetries so that you can prove no more exist?
For instance, when solving the hydrogen atom I never would have realized myself that there was an extra symmetry in the problem (the Runge-Lenz symmetry).
How can two completely empty spacetimes with the same boundary condition at infinity have different
physical content in their symmetries?