scholarly journals Gauge-invariant non-spherical metric perturbations of Schwarzschild black-hole spacetimes

2006 ◽  
Vol 23 (12) ◽  
pp. 4297-4297 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Nagar ◽  
L Rezzolla
Author(s):  
Steffen Aksteiner ◽  
Lars Andersson ◽  
Thomas Bäckdahl ◽  
Igor Khavkine ◽  
Bernard Whiting

AbstractThe set of local gauge invariant quantities for linearized gravity on the Kerr spacetime presented by two of the authors (Aksteiner and Bäckdahl in Phys Rev Lett 121:051104, 2018) is shown to be complete. In particular, any gauge invariant quantity for linearized gravity on Kerr that is local and of finite order in derivatives can be expressed in terms of these gauge invariants and derivatives thereof. The proof is carried out by constructing a complete compatibility complex for the Killing operator, and demonstrating the equivalence of the gauge invariants from Aksteiner and Bäckdahl (Phys Rev Lett 121:051104, 2018) with the first compatibility operator from that complex.


2002 ◽  
Vol 17 (15n17) ◽  
pp. 923-942 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. PADMANABHAN

The notions of temperature, entropy and 'evaporation', usually associated with spacetimes with horizons, are analyzed using general approach and the following results, applicable to different spacetimes, are obtained at one go. (i) The concept of temperature associated with the horizon is derived in a unified manner and is shown to arise from purely kinematic considerations. (ii) QFT near any horizon is mapped to a conformal field theory without introducing concepts from string theory. (iii) For spherically symmetric spacetimes (in D = 1 + 3) with a horizon at r = l, the partition function has the generic form Z ∝ exp [S - βE], where S = (1/4)4πl2 and |E| = (l/2). This analysis reproduces the conventional result for the black hole spacetimes and provides a simple and consistent interpretation of entropy and energy E = - (1/2)H-1 for deSitter spacetime. The classical Einstein's equations for this spacetime can be expressed as a thermodynamic identity, TdS - dE = PdV with the same variables. (iv) For the Rindler spacetime the entropy per unit transverse area turns out to be (1/4) while the energy is zero. (v) In the case of a Schwarzschild black hole there exist quantum states (like Unruh vacuum) which are not invariant under time reversal and can describe black hole evaporation. There also exist quantum states (like Hartle-Hawking vacuum) in which temperature is well-defined but there is no flow of radiation to infinity. In the case of deSitter universe or Rindler patch in flat spacetime, one usually uses quantum states analogous to Hartle-Hawking vacuum and obtains a temperature without the corresponding notion of evaporation. It is, however, possible to construct the analogues of Unruh vacuum state in the other cases as well. The implications are briefly discussed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 94 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
C.-H. Chen ◽  
H. T. Cho ◽  
A. S. Cornell ◽  
G. Harmsen

Author(s):  
Nathalie Deruelle ◽  
Jean-Philippe Uzan

This chapter discusses the Schwarzschild black hole. It demonstrates how, by a judicious change of coordinates, it is possible to eliminate the singularity of the Schwarzschild metric and reveal a spacetime that is much larger, like that of a black hole. At the end of its thermonuclear evolution, a star collapses and, if it is sufficiently massive, does not become stabilized in a new equilibrium configuration. The Schwarzschild geometry must therefore represent the gravitational field of such an object up to r = 0. This being said, the Schwarzschild metric in its original form is singular, not only at r = 0 where the curvature diverges, but also at r = 2m, a surface which is crossed by geodesics.


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