Harmonic coordinate condition

Harmonic coordinate condition

The harmonic coordinate condition is one of several coordinate conditions in general relativity, which make it possible to solve the Einstein field equations. A coordinate system is said to satisfy the harmonic coordinate condition if each of the coordinate functions xα (regarded as scalar fields) satisfies d'Alembert's equation. The parallel notion of a harmonic coordinate system in Riemannian geometry is a coordinate system whose coordinate functions satisfy Laplace's equation. Since d'Alembert's equation is the generalization of Laplace's equation to space-time, its solutions are also called "harmonic".

Contents

Motivation

The laws of physics can be expressed in a generally invariant form. In other words, the real world does not care about our coordinate systems. However, for us to be able to solve the equations, we must fix upon a particular coordinate system. A coordinate condition selects one (or a smaller set of) such coordinate system(s). The Cartesian coordinates used in special relativity satisfy d'Alembert's equation, so a harmonic coordinate system is the closest approximation available in general relativity to an inertial frame of reference in special relativity.

Derivation

In general relativity, we have to use the covariant derivative instead of the partial derivative in d'Alembert's equation, so we get:

0 = (x^\alpha)_{; \beta ; \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma} = ((x^\alpha)_{, \beta , \gamma} - (x^\alpha)_{, \sigma} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\beta \gamma}) g^{\beta \gamma} \!.

Since the coordinate xα is not actually a scalar, this is not a tensor equation. That is, it is not generally invariant. But coordinate conditions must not be generally invariant because they are supposed to pick out (only work for) certain coordinate systems and not others. Since the partial derivative of a coordinate is the Kronecker delta, we get:

0 = (\delta^\alpha_{\beta , \gamma} - \delta^\alpha_{\sigma} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\beta \gamma}) g^{\beta \gamma} = (0 - \Gamma^{\alpha}_{\beta \gamma}) g^{\beta \gamma} = - \Gamma^{\alpha}_{\beta \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma} \!.

And thus, dropping the minus sign, we get the harmonic coordinate condition (also known as the de Donder gauge [1]):

0 = \Gamma^{\alpha}_{\beta \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma} \!.

This condition is especially useful when working with gravitational waves.

Alternative form

Consider the covariant derivative of the density of the reciprocal of the metric tensor:

0 = (g^{\mu \nu} \sqrt {-g})_{; \rho} = (g^{\mu \nu} \sqrt {-g})_{, \rho} + g^{\sigma \nu} \Gamma^{\mu}_{\sigma \rho} \sqrt {-g} + g^{\mu \sigma} \Gamma^{\nu}_{\sigma \rho} \sqrt {-g} -  g^{\mu \nu} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\sigma \rho} \sqrt {-g} \!.

The last term  -  g^{\mu \nu} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\sigma \rho} \sqrt {-g} \! emerges because  \sqrt {-g} \! is not an invariant scalar, and so its covariant derivative is not the same as its ordinary derivative. Rather,  \sqrt {-g}_{; \rho} = 0 \! because  g^{\mu \nu}_{; \rho} =0 \!, while  \sqrt {-g}_{, \rho} = \sqrt {-g} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\sigma \rho} \!.

Contracting ν with ρ and applying the harmonic coordinate condition to the second term, we get:

0 = (g^{\mu \nu} \sqrt {-g})_{, \nu} + g^{\sigma \nu} \Gamma^{\mu}_{\sigma \nu} \sqrt {-g} + g^{\mu \sigma} \Gamma^{\nu}_{\sigma \nu} \sqrt {-g} -  g^{\mu \nu} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\sigma \nu} \sqrt {-g} \!
= (g^{\mu \nu} \sqrt {-g})_{, \nu} + 0 + g^{\mu \alpha} \Gamma^{\beta}_{\alpha \beta} \sqrt {-g} -  g^{\mu \alpha} \Gamma^{\beta}_{\beta \alpha} \sqrt {-g} \!

Thus, we get that an alternative way of expressing the harmonic coordinate condition is:

0 = (g^{\mu \nu} \sqrt {-g})_{, \nu} \!.

Effect on the wave equation

For example, consider the wave equation applied to the electromagnetic vector potential:

0 = A_{\alpha ; \beta ; \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma}.\!

Let us evaluate the right hand side:

A_{\alpha ; \beta ; \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma} = A_{\alpha ; \beta , \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma} - A_{\sigma ; \beta} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\alpha \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma} - A_{\alpha ; \sigma} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\beta \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma}.

Using the harmonic coordinate condition we can eliminate the right-most term and then continue evaluation as follows:

A_{\alpha ; \beta ; \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma} = A_{\alpha ; \beta , \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma} - A_{\sigma ; \beta} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\alpha \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma}
 = A_{\alpha , \beta , \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma} - A_{\rho , \gamma} \Gamma^{\rho}_{\alpha \beta}  g^{\beta \gamma} - A_{\rho} \Gamma^{\rho}_{\alpha \beta , \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma}
- A_{\sigma , \beta} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\alpha \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma} 
- A_{\rho} \Gamma^{\rho}_{\sigma \beta} \Gamma^{\sigma}_{\alpha \gamma} g^{\beta \gamma}

See also

References

  1. ^ [John Stewart (1991), "Advanced General Relativity", Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-44946-4 ]
  • P.A.M.Dirac (1975), General Theory of Relativity, Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-01146-X, chapter 22

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Coordinate conditions — In general relativity, the laws of physics can be expressed in a generally covariant form. In other words, the real world does not care about our coordinate systems. However, it is often useful to fix upon a particular coordinate system, in order …   Wikipedia

  • harmonic function — ▪ mathematics       mathematical function of two variables having the property that its value at any point is equal to the average of its values along any circle around that point, provided the function is defined within the circle. An infinite… …   Universalium

  • Surface second harmonic generation — is a method for probing interfaces in atomic and molecular systems. In second harmonic generation (SHG), the light frequency is doubled, essentially converting two photons of the original beam of energy E into a single photon of energy 2 E as it… …   Wikipedia

  • Quantum harmonic oscillator — The quantum harmonic oscillator is the quantum mechanical analogue of the classical harmonic oscillator. It is one of the most important model systems in quantum mechanics because an arbitrary potential can be approximated as a harmonic potential …   Wikipedia

  • General covariance — In theoretical physics, general covariance (also known as diffeomorphism covariance or general invariance) is the invariance of the form of physical laws under arbitrary differentiable coordinate transformations. The essential idea is that… …   Wikipedia

  • General relativity — For a generally accessible and less technical introduction to the topic, see Introduction to general relativity. General relativity Introduction Mathematical formulation Resources …   Wikipedia

  • mechanics — /meuh kan iks/, n. 1. (used with a sing. v.) the branch of physics that deals with the action of forces on bodies and with motion, comprised of kinetics, statics, and kinematics. 2. (used with a sing. v.) the theoretical and practical application …   Universalium

  • Molecular Hamiltonian — In atomic, molecular, and optical physics as well as in quantum chemistry, molecular Hamiltonian is the name given to the Hamiltonian representing the energy of the electrons and nuclei in a molecule. This Hermitian operator and the associated… …   Wikipedia

  • mathematics — /math euh mat iks/, n. 1. (used with a sing. v.) the systematic treatment of magnitude, relationships between figures and forms, and relations between quantities expressed symbolically. 2. (used with a sing. or pl. v.) mathematical procedures,… …   Universalium

  • Continuum mechanics — Continuum mechanics …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”