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Cool then I am struggling a bit on how the coordinates in FLRW taken ( as you would have already seen, particularly my comments on the answer there by Umaxo)
@J.Murray Maybe you can tell me the correct thing. Being quite confused there, I think it would be better if I raise questions after hearing you out.
The constraints on our spacetime are that it is spatially homogeneous and isotropic. Loosely speaking, homogeneous means that on every time slice, every point in space looks like every other point. Isotropic means that on every time slice, every direction looks like every other direction.
Now, if we think carefully, those loose definitions don't make any sense.
The reason is that different observers would have different time slices, and so defining our symmetries by what should be observed on any particular time slice is doomed to fail.
A spacetime is spatially homogeneous if there exists a one-parameter family of spacelike hypersurfaces $\Sigma_t$ which foliate the spacetime such that for each $t$ and for any two points $p,q\in\Sigma_t$, there exists an isometry of the metric which maps $p$ to $q$.
What troubles me is that why is this slice “GLOBAL”. An inertial frame is local. Key question - So a space like hypersurface should be LOCAL because a Lorentz frame has just a local existence. The space like surface surface of simultaneity exists locally ( and on top that what you say - every other observer will draw his own time slice/ space like hypersurface ) which should have a local existence and t should be time on that local surface ....
Okayama I see now...yes now there is no question of simultaneity because t is not time ....okay just an arbitrary coordinate.....I will come back to this later
Well, not quite any function, but the category is broad
I don't know what you mean by that. You just need a one-parameter family of curves which completely covers $\mathbb R^2$, and where no two curves ever intersect.
And can it be foliated by more than one “curve” or “line” simultaneously. It looks pretty hard that all point in $R^2$ will need to lie on just a single line
Alright. Now, for curve we can look at the tangent vectors at each point. In our example, all of the tangent vectors are the same everywhere; they are simply multiples of the vector $\mathbf v = (1, 11)$
and $\Sigma_11$ is the the set of all points in the manifold which lie on the line y=11x+ 11...in that way all point on the manifold can be covered by changing “t” the arbitrary parameter
The tangent vectors to these curves change across the manifold. At some arbitrary point $(a,b)\in \mathbb R^2$, the tangent space consists of all vectors parallel to $(1,2x)$
sorry
parallel to $(1, 2b)$
The point of all of this is that I can now say something like "Consider a family of curves $\Sigma_t$ which foliates the space in such a way that the tangent vectors all have a certain property"
If the space is equipped with a Lorentzian metric, I could say "Consider a family of curves $\Sigma_t$ which foliates the space in such a way that the tangent vectors to $\Sigma_t$ are all spacelike, i.e. $g(v,v) >0$"
where I'm assuming metric signature $(-+++)$
Each $\Sigma_t$ is then called a spacelike hypersurface
So we're now looking for such a foliation which additionally has the following property:
Given each hypersurface and any two points $p,q\in\Sigma_t$, there must exist some transformation which maps $p$ to $q$ and leaves the distances between any two points unchanged.
You said the metric won’t depend on position. There would be 3 position coordinates. So if the metric is independent of all 3, then there would be 3 killing vectors corresponding to these 3 “space” coordinates
On a sphere, such as $S^2$, translations don't make any sense but we can still apply rotations
which are isometries of the normal metric on $S^2$
Okay, so let's recap. We foliated the space by a one-parameter family of spacelike hypersurfaces $\Sigma_t$. We also demanded that for any two points $p,q\in\mathbb R^2$, there must be some isometry of the metric which maps $p$ to $q$.
Now, $t$ does not yet have a physical meaning. However, we can clearly choose it as one of the 4 coordinates for our spacetime, while choosing the other three to coordinates $\Sigma_t$.
That is, every point in spacetime can be labeled by $t$ (which tells you which hypersurface it's on) and three other coordinates which tell us where the point is on that particular hypersurface.
The definition for this is somewhat technical so I'll just give you the idea. What we'll do is consider a family of timelike curves which fills the whole spacetime.
So this is a bit like a foliation, except a foliation a bunch of surfaces indexed by one parameter
and now we're talking about a bunch of curves indexed by 3 parameters
Let's be more explicit. Let's consider a very simply case - $\mathbb R^3$. We can define a very simple foliation:
$\Sigma_t := \{(x,y,z)\in \mathbb R^3 \ | \ z=t$
Just the surfaces of constant $t$
sorry
surfaces of constant $z$
That's a foliation. But now consider a congruence of curves $\gamma_{ab}$, where $\gamma_{ab}:= \{(x,y,z)\in \mathbb R^3 \ | \ x=a\text{ and }y=b\}$
These curves are simply straight vertical lines (in the $z$ direction)
But to specify these curves, I need two parameters $a$ and $b$
So in a 1+2 dimensional spacetime, I need a 1 parameter family of 2D surfaces to define a foliation, and a 2 parameter family of 1D curves to define a congruence.
So the point about isotropy is that there can be no special direction in space. What this means for us is that the curves must all be orthogonal to the hypersurfaces that they poke through.
To see this, imagine a curve poking through a hypersurface in a way that was not orthogonal, and simply observe that you could project its tangent vector down onto the hypersurface.
The last thing that we will do is note that these curves are all timelike (because we chose them to be so), which means we can parameterize them by the proper time $\tau$ along them
Looking at the form of the metric, that simply equates to absorbing the $b(t)$ factor into the $t$ coordinate: $b(t) dt^2 \mapsto d\tau^2$
and so finally our metric takes the form $ds^2 = d\tau^2 + a(\tau) d\Sigma^2$ where $d\Sigma^2$ is the spatial metric of a space of constant curvature (it must be constant - that is, the same at every point - because of the homogeneity requirement we imposed earlier)
So to put this in physical terms, we have a family of spacelike hypersurfaces and a family of timelike curves (i.e. observers). Select any hypersurface you like as your initial surface. Now every point in spacetime can be labeled by 4 coordinates: 3 spatial coordinates to tell you which curve you're on, and one time coordinate which is the proper time along that curve.
1) follow up - way back up you said we could index hypersurfaces by say t=2 0r t= 1000. And in your 1st comment you said “ different observers will have different time slices”...at this point too did “t” have no physical significance and was just a parameter. Like observer A chooses t=2 hypersurface and t= 1000 hypersurface is chosen by observer B....is that consistent
I will ask the doubt after your comment to this , coupling it with your ,last comment
In the last diagram you drew. Pick up the t1 hypersurface.
till now t was just a parameter indexing a hypersurface. So no issue or problem of simultaneity. Perfect.
in the end you state “ spacetime can be labeled by 4 coordinates: 3 spatial coordinates to tell you which curve you're on, and one time coordinate which is the proper time along that curve.“
Consider two curves. Imagine one to be drawn on one end of your drawn space like hypersurface and one to be on the other end
Will $\ tau$ be the same at both points on the hyoersurface
Will $\tau$ take on the same value at both points on the hypersurface
if it will take the same value, aren’t we back on the problem of simultaneity. Two very far away points have the same tau. But this shouldn’t have been because simultaneity should be a local concept here. So where am going wrong here...
The point I was making was that we argued that if we impose the requirements of homogeneity and isotropy, then we can fill all of spacetime with these special curves.
For observers traveling along those curves, the universe will appear to be homogeneous and isotropic.
So the thing we have to look for is how the distance ( read proper time ) elapses along those special curves and NOT along a curve drawn on the hypersurface ( or just not along the hysoersurface)
This is right - So the thing we have to look for is how the distance ( read proper time ) elapses along those special curves and NOT along a curve drawn on the hypersurface ( or just not along the hysoersurface
So the physics of time ( what ever that means; I guess you can understand what I mean) like
* lies along those special curves ( proper distances along those special curves) ....except perhaps distance measures ( like maybe luminosity distance etc)
I'm not totally sure I understand that last point, but I think you have the right idea, yes.
So in summary
I wanted to give you an idea of how symmetry requirements allow us to assert the existence of special coordinates
usually by constructing them explicitly in terms of the worldlines of special observers for whom the universe appears to obey the requirements in question
Like in Cartesian coordinates, the P^0 is the energy measured locally by an observer. In a totally arbitrarily coordinate ( may using all time like coordinates ), the P^0 won’t be the energy, right
So the metric components $ds^2 = -(1- r_s/r)^{-1/2}dt^2 +(1-r_s/r)dr^2 + r^2(d\theta^2+\sin^2(\theta)d\phi^2)$ are given in terms of coordinates $(t,r,\theta,\phi)$ called Swarzschild coordinates
Yeah true maybe you can tell me what will be the quantity “ $m_0(1-2GM/r)^{-1/2}$ “. Will it be energy measured by some observer in the sense of E= -p.U
In general relativity, Schwarzschild geodesics describe the motion of particles of infinitesimal mass in the gravitational field of a central fixed mass
M
{\textstyle M}
. Schwarzschild geodesics have been pivotal in the validation of Einstein's theory of general relativity. For example, they provide accurate predictions of the anomalous precession of the planets in the Solar System, and of the deflection of light by gravity.
Schwarzschild geodesics pertain only to the motion of particles of infinitesimal mass
m...
Well if the particle isn't moving, then $U= (1,0,0,0)$, so $P\cdot U$ is just $P_0$.
If the particle isn’t moving then $U= (U^0, 0,0) where U^0 is not equal to 1 but is determined by the metric’s 0th component.....which is (1-2GM/r) here
Well the point I was trying to say was that P^0 doesn’t have any physical significance...right...it’s as simple as that....when the coordinates don’t have any physical significance there is no point that their derivative (wrt a scalar) will be having any physical significance...right..to get a physical sense go to an LIF.
So then yes - the quantity $m_0 \sqrt{1-\frac{r_s}{r}}$ is the total energy of a stationary particle at $r$ as observed by an observer at spatial infinity
Well, yeah. If you just tell me $P^0 = 17$ but you don't tell me what coordinates you're using to calculate it, then that doesn't tell me much
The quantity $m_0 \sqrt{1-r_s/r}$ has meaning because I know I'm working in Swarzschild coordinates.
But I need to know the coordinates in order to interpret what physical significance the expression has
And this energy measured by observer at infinity ( of a particle at rest) won’t be the same as that measured by an observer next to the particle using a LIF....right
I don't want to get into a super long discussion of this, but again this is running into what it means to measure something
How do you measure the energy of a particle at rest?
I suppose you could watch it decay into two photons traveling in opposite directions and ask what their energies are, and in that context yes, the answer would be different.
@J.Murray yes I was exactly thinking something like that
the rest energy :)
but never mind. Many thanks for the wonderful discussion. I wish my university professors had time and patience to discuss a lot...so many thanks again
Well I have to go for now, I hope this discussion has been helpful. I would suggest re-reading the answer to your question given by Umaxo in light of this conversation.