Jump to content

World manifold

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

In gravitation theory, a world manifold endowed with some Lorentzian pseudo-Riemannian metric and an associated space-time structure is a space-time. Gravitation theory is formulated as classical field theory on natural bundles over a world manifold.

Topology

A world manifold is a four-dimensional orientable real smooth manifold. It is assumed to be a Hausdorff and second countable topological space. Consequently, it is a locally compact space which is a union of a countable number of compact subsets, a separable space, a paracompact and completely regular space. Being paracompact, a world manifold admits a partition of unity by smooth functions. Paracompactness is an essential characteristic of a world manifold. It is necessary and sufficient in order that a world manifold admits a Riemannian metric and necessary for the existence of a pseudo-Riemannian metric. A world manifold is assumed to be connected and, consequently, it is arcwise connected.

Riemannian structure

The tangent bundle of a world manifold and the associated principal frame bundle of linear tangent frames in possess a general linear group structure group . A world manifold is said to be parallelizable if the tangent bundle and, accordingly, the frame bundle are trivial, i.e., there exists a global section (a frame field) of . It is essential that the tangent and associated bundles over a world manifold admit a bundle atlas of finite number of trivialization charts.

Tangent and frame bundles over a world manifold are natural bundles characterized by general covariant transformations. These transformations are gauge symmetries of gravitation theory on a world manifold.

By virtue of the well-known theorem on structure group reduction, a structure group of a frame bundle over a world manifold is always reducible to its maximal compact subgroup . The corresponding global section of the quotient bundle is a Riemannian metric on . Thus, a world manifold always admits a Riemannian metric which makes a metric topological space.

Lorentzian structure

In accordance with the geometric Equivalence Principle, a world manifold possesses a Lorentzian structure, i.e., a structure group of a frame bundle must be reduced to a Lorentz group . The corresponding global section of the quotient bundle is a pseudo-Riemannian metric of signature on . It is treated as a gravitational field in General Relativity and as a classical Higgs field in gauge gravitation theory.

A Lorentzian structure need not exist. Therefore, a world manifold is assumed to satisfy a certain topological condition. It is either a noncompact topological space or a compact space with a zero Euler characteristic. Usually, one also requires that a world manifold admits a spinor structure in order to describe Dirac fermion fields in gravitation theory. There is the additional topological obstruction to the existence of this structure. In particular, a noncompact world manifold must be parallelizable.

Space-time structure

If a structure group of a frame bundle is reducible to a Lorentz group, the latter is always reducible to its maximal compact subgroup . Thus, there is the commutative diagram

of the reduction of structure groups of a frame bundle in gravitation theory. This reduction diagram results in the following.

(i) In gravitation theory on a world manifold , one can always choose an atlas of a frame bundle (characterized by local frame fields ) with -valued transition functions. These transition functions preserve a time-like component of local frame fields which, therefore, is globally defined. It is a nowhere vanishing vector field on . Accordingly, the dual time-like covector field also is globally defined, and it yields a spatial distribution on such that . Then the tangent bundle of a world manifold admits a space-time decomposition , where is a one-dimensional fibre bundle spanned by a time-like vector field . This decomposition, is called the -compatible space-time structure. It makes a world manifold the space-time.

(ii) Given the above-mentioned diagram of reduction of structure groups, let and be the corresponding pseudo-Riemannian and Riemannian metrics on . They form a triple obeying the relation

.

Conversely, let a world manifold admit a nowhere vanishing one-form (or, equivalently, a nowhere vanishing vector field). Then any Riemannian metric on yields the pseudo-Riemannian metric

.

It follows that a world manifold admits a pseudo-Riemannian metric if and only if there exists a nowhere vanishing vector (or covector) field on .

Let us note that a -compatible Riemannian metric in a triple defines a -compatible distance function on a world manifold . Such a function brings into a metric space whose locally Euclidean topology is equivalent to a manifold topology on . Given a gravitational field , the -compatible Riemannian metrics and the corresponding distance functions are different for different spatial distributions and . It follows that physical observers associated with these different spatial distributions perceive a world manifold as different Riemannian spaces. The well-known relativistic changes of sizes of moving bodies exemplify this phenomenon.

However, one attempts to derive a world topology directly from a space-time structure (a path topology, an Alexandrov topology). If a space-time satisfies the strong causality condition, such topologies coincide with a familiar manifold topology of a world manifold. In a general case, they however are rather extraordinary.

Causality conditions

A space-time structure is called integrable if a spatial distribution is involutive. In this case, its integral manifolds constitute a spatial foliation of a world manifold whose leaves are spatial three-dimensional subspaces. A spatial foliation is called causal if no curve transversal to its leaves intersects each leave more than once. This condition is equivalent to the stable causality of Stephen Hawking. A space-time foliation is causal if and only if it is a foliation of level surfaces of some smooth real function on whose differential nowhere vanishes. Such a foliation is a fibred manifold . However, this is not the case of a compact world manifold which can not be a fibred manifold over .

The stable causality does not provide the simplest causal structure. If a fibred manifold is a fibre bundle, it is trivial, i.e., a world manifold is a globally hyperbolic manifold . Since any oriented three-dimensional manifold is parallelizable, a globally hyperbolic world manifold is parallelizable.

See also

References

  • S.W. Hawking, G.F.R. Ellis, The Large Scale Structure of Space-Time (Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1973) ISBN 0-521-20016-4
  • C.T.G. Dodson, Categories, Bundles, and Spacetime Topology (Shiva Publ. Ltd., Orpington, UK, 1980) ISBN 0-906812-01-1