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Techniques of Differential Topology in Relativity (CBMS-NSF...

Techniques of Differential Topology in Relativity (CBMS-NSF Regional Conference Series in Applied Mathematics)

Roger Penrose
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First published in 1972, it is remarkable that this book is still in print, and this fact attests to the current interest in singularity theorems in general relativity. The author of course is well-known for his contributions in this area, and he has written these series of lectures primarily for the mathematician whose speciality is differential topology, and who is curious about its applications to general relativity. The author thinks in pictures in this book, and so it is well-suited for the physicist reader also. Detailed proofs are omitted for the singularity theorems, but references are given. Much work and discussion has taken place since this book was published, but it can still serve as an introduction to modern developments.

Section 1 sets the mathematical definitions and conventions used in the later sections. Spacetime is defined as a real, four-dimensional connected smooth Hausdorff manifold on which is defined a global smooth nondegenerate Lorentzian metric. In addition, it is assumed that spacetime is time-orientable, which is not too big a restriction since as the author remarks, one can always find a time-orientable twofold covering of spacetime. Jacobi fields are introduced also, with the goal of eventually using them to study maximal geodesics. Known to physicists as the equation of geodesic deviation, the author derives the Jacobi equation, the solutions of which form an 8-dimensional vector space of Jacobi fields.

In section 2, the author gives definitions that allow one to discuss causality and time ordering for curves on spacetime. Special types of non-smooth curves, called trips, which (piecewise) are future-oriented timelike geodesics, are used to define a chronological ordering of points on spacetime. Causal trips are more restrictive, in that the curves are causal geodesics. The chronological ordering is shown to imply causal ordering, and both orderings are shown to be transitive. This allows the partitioning of spacetime into chronologi

Année:
1987
Edition:
1ST
Editeur::
Society for Industrial Mathematics
Langue:
english
Pages:
82
ISBN 10:
0898710057
ISBN 13:
9780898710052
Collection:
CBMS-NSF Regional Conference Series in Applied Mathematics
Fichier:
PDF, 6.09 MB
IPFS:
CID , CID Blake2b
english, 1987
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