Reissner–Nordström metric

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In physics and astronomy, the Reissner–Nordström metric is a static solution to the Einstein–Maxwell field equations, which corresponds to the gravitational field of a charged, non-rotating, spherically symmetric body of mass M. The analogous solution for a charged, rotating body is given by the Kerr–Newman metric.

The metric was discovered between 1916 and 1921 by Hans Reissner,[1] Hermann Weyl,[2] Gunnar Nordström[3] and George Barker Jeffery[4] independently.[5]

Metric

In spherical coordinates Template:Tmath, the Reissner–Nordström metric (i.e. the line element) is

ds2 =c2dτ2 =(1rsr+rQ2r2)c2dt2 (1rsr+rQ2r2)1dr2 r2dθ2 r2sin2θdφ2,

where

  • c is the speed of light
  • τ is the proper time
  • t is the time coordinate (measured by a stationary clock at infinity).
  • r is the radial coordinate
  • (θ,φ) are the spherical angles
  • rs is the Schwarzschild radius of the body given by rs=2GMc2
  • rQ is a characteristic length scale given by rQ2=Q2G4πε0c4
  • ε0 is the electric constant.

The total mass of the central body and its irreducible mass are related by[6][7]

Mirr=c2Gr+22  M=Q216πε0GMirr+Mirr.

The difference between M and Mirr is due to the equivalence of mass and energy, which makes the electric field energy also contribute to the total mass.

In the limit that the charge Q (or equivalently, the length scale Template:Tmath) goes to zero, one recovers the Schwarzschild metric. The classical Newtonian theory of gravity may then be recovered in the limit as the ratio rs/r goes to zero. In the limit that both rQ/r and rs/r go to zero, the metric becomes the Minkowski metric for special relativity.

In practice, the ratio rs/r is often extremely small. For example, the Schwarzschild radius of the Earth is roughly Template:Val (3/8 inch), whereas a satellite in a geosynchronous orbit has an orbital radius r that is roughly four billion times larger, at Template:Val (Template:Val). Even at the surface of the Earth, the corrections to Newtonian gravity are only one part in a billion. The ratio only becomes large close to black holes and other ultra-dense objects such as neutron stars.

Charged black holes

Although charged black holes with rQ ≪ rs are similar to the Schwarzschild black hole, they have two horizons: the event horizon and an internal Cauchy horizon.[8] As with the Schwarzschild metric, the event horizons for the spacetime are located where the metric component grr diverges; that is, where 1rsr+rQ2r2=1grr=0.

This equation has two solutions: r±=12(rs±rs24rQ2).

These concentric event horizons become degenerate for 2rQ = rs, which corresponds to an extremal black hole. Black holes with 2rQ > rs cannot exist in nature because if the charge is greater than the mass there can be no physical event horizon (the term under the square root becomes negative).[9] Objects with a charge greater than their mass can exist in nature, but they can not collapse down to a black hole, and if they could, they would display a naked singularity.[10] Theories with supersymmetry usually guarantee that such "superextremal" black holes cannot exist.

The electromagnetic potential is Aα=(Q/r,0,0,0).

If magnetic monopoles are included in the theory, then a generalization to include magnetic charge P is obtained by replacing Q2 by Q2 + P2 in the metric and including the term P cos θ  in the electromagnetic potential.Template:Clarify

Gravitational time dilation

The gravitational time dilation in the vicinity of the central body is given by γ=|gtt|=r2Q2+(r2M)r, which relates to the local radial escape velocity of a neutral particle vesc=γ21γ.

Christoffel symbols

The Christoffel symbols Γijk=s=03 gis2(gjsxk+gskxjgjkxs) with the indices {0, 1, 2, 3}{t, r, θ, φ} give the nonvanishing expressions Γttr=MrQ2r(Q2+r22Mr)Γrtt=(MrQ2)(r22Mr+Q2)r5Γrrr=Q2Mrr(Q22Mr+r2)Γrθθ=r22Mr+Q2rΓrφφ=sin2θ(r22Mr+Q2)rΓθθr=1rΓθφφ=sinθcosθΓφφr=1rΓφφθ=cotθ

Given the Christoffel symbols, one can compute the geodesics of a test-particle.[11][12]

Tetrad form

Instead of working in the holonomic basis, one can perform efficient calculations with a tetrad.[13] Let 𝐞I=eμI be a set of one-forms with internal Minkowski index Template:Tmath, such that Template:Tmath. The Reissner metric can be described by the tetrad

𝐞0=G1/2dt
𝐞1=G1/2dr
𝐞2=rdθ
𝐞3=rsinθdφ

where Template:Tmath. The parallel transport of the tetrad is captured by the connection one-forms Template:Tmath. These have only 24 independent components compared to the 40 components of Template:Tmath. The connections can be solved for by inspection from Cartan's equation Template:Tmath, where the left hand side is the exterior derivative of the tetrad, and the right hand side is a wedge product.

ω10=12rGdt
ω20=ω30=0
ω21=G1/2dθ
ω31=sinθG1/2dφ
ω32=cosθdφ

The Riemann tensor 𝐑IJ=RμνIJ can be constructed as a collection of two-forms by the second Cartan equation 𝐑IJ=dωIJ+ωIKωKJ, which again makes use of the exterior derivative and wedge product. This approach is significantly faster than the traditional computation with Template:Tmath; note that there are only four nonzero ωIJ compared with nine nonzero components of Template:Tmath.

Equations of motion

[14]

Because of the spherical symmetry of the metric, the coordinate system can always be aligned in a way that the motion of a test-particle is confined to a plane, so for brevity and without restriction of generality we use θ instead of φ. In dimensionless natural units of G = M = c = K = 1 the motion of an electrically charged particle with the charge q is given by x¨i=j=03 k=03 Γjki x˙j x˙k+q Fik x˙k which yields t¨= 2(Q2Mr)r(r22Mr+Q2)r˙t˙+qQ(r22mr+Q2) r˙ r¨=(r22Mr+Q2)(Q2Mr) t˙2r5+(MrQ2)r˙2r(r22Mr+Q2)+(r22Mr+Q2) θ˙2r+qQ(r22mr+Q2)r4 t˙ θ¨=2 θ˙ r˙r.

All total derivatives are with respect to proper time Template:Tmath.

Constants of the motion are provided by solutions S(t,t˙,r,r˙,θ,θ˙,φ,φ˙) to the partial differential equation[15] 0=t˙St+r˙Sr+θ˙Sθ+t¨St˙+r¨Sr˙+θ¨Sθ˙ after substitution of the second derivatives given above. The metric itself is a solution when written as a differential equation S1=1=(1rsr+rQ2r2)c2t˙2(1rsr+rQ2r2)1r˙2r2θ˙2.

The separable equation Sr2rθ˙Sθ˙=0 immediately yields the constant relativistic specific angular momentum S2=L=r2θ˙; a third constant obtained from Sr2(MrQ2)r(r22Mr+Q2)t˙St˙=0 is the specific energy (energy per unit rest mass)[16] S3=E=t˙(r22Mr+Q2)r2+qQr.

Substituting S2 and S3 into S1 yields the radial equation cdτ=r2drr4(E1)+2Mr3(Q2+L2)r2+2ML2rQ2L2.

Multiplying under the integral sign by S2 yields the orbital equation cLr2dθ=Ldrr4(E1)+2Mr3(Q2+L2)r2+2ML2rQ2L2.

The total time dilation between the test-particle and an observer at infinity is γ=q Q r3+E r4r2 (r22r+Q2).

The first derivatives x˙i and the contravariant components of the local 3-velocity vi are related by x˙i=vi(1v2) |gii|, which gives the initial conditions r˙=vr22M+Q2r(1v2) θ˙=vr(1v2).

The specific orbital energy E=Q22rM+r2r1v2+qQr and the specific relative angular momentum L=v r1v2 of the test-particle are conserved quantities of motion. v and v are the radial and transverse components of the local velocity-vector. The local velocity is therefore v=v2+v2=(E21)r2Q2r2+2rME2r2.

Alternative formulation of metric

The metric can be expressed in Kerr–Schild form like this: gμν=ημν+fkμkνf=Gr2[2MrQ2]𝐤=(kx,ky,kz)=(xr,yr,zr)k0=1.

Notice that k is a unit vector. Here M is the constant mass of the object, Q is the constant charge of the object, and η is the Minkowski tensor.

See also

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

Template:Black holes Template:Relativity