Bel–Robinson tensor: Difference between revisions

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Citation bot
Add: s2cid, issue. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Abductive | Category:Differential geometry stubs | #UCB_Category 78/122
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 10:14, 19 April 2022

In general relativity and differential geometry, the Bel–Robinson tensor is a tensor defined in the abstract index notation by:

Tabcd=CaecfCbedf+14ϵaehiϵbejkChicfCjkdf

Alternatively,

Tabcd=CaecfCbedf32ga[bCjk]cfCjkdf

where Cabcd is the Weyl tensor. It was introduced by Lluís Bel in 1959.[1][2] The Bel–Robinson tensor is constructed from the Weyl tensor in a manner analogous to the way the electromagnetic stress–energy tensor is built from the electromagnetic tensor. Like the electromagnetic stress–energy tensor, the Bel–Robinson tensor is totally symmetric and traceless:

Tabcd=T(abcd)Taacd=0

In general relativity, there is no unique definition of the local energy of the gravitational field. The Bel–Robinson tensor is a possible definition for local energy, since it can be shown that whenever the Ricci tensor vanishes (i.e. in vacuum), the Bel–Robinson tensor is divergence-free:

aTabcd=0

References


Template:Relativity-stub Template:Differential-geometry-stub