Optical Scalars
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general relativity General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity and Einstein's theory of gravity, is the geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current description of gravitation in modern physics ...
, optical scalars refer to a set of three
scalar Scalar may refer to: *Scalar (mathematics), an element of a field, which is used to define a vector space, usually the field of real numbers * Scalar (physics), a physical quantity that can be described by a single element of a number field such ...
functions \ describing the propagation of a geodesic null
congruence Congruence may refer to: Mathematics * Congruence (geometry), being the same size and shape * Congruence or congruence relation, in abstract algebra, an equivalence relation on an algebraic structure that is compatible with the structure * In mod ...
.Eric Poisson. ''A Relativist's Toolkit: The Mathematics of Black-Hole Mechanics''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Chapter 2.Hans Stephani, Dietrich Kramer, Malcolm MacCallum, Cornelius Hoenselaers, Eduard Herlt. ''Exact Solutions of Einstein's Field Equations''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Chapter 6.Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar. ''The Mathematical Theory of Black Holes''. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998. Section 9.(a).Jeremy Bransom Griffiths, Jiri Podolsky. ''Exact Space-Times in Einstein's General Relativity''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. Section 2.1.3.P Schneider, J Ehlers, E E Falco. ''Gravitational Lenses''. Berlin: Springer, 1999. Section 3.4.2.
In fact, these three scalars \ can be defined for both timelike and null geodesic congruences in an identical spirit, but they are called "optical scalars" only for the null case. Also, it is their tensorial predecessors \ that are adopted in tensorial equations, while the scalars \ mainly show up in equations written in the language of
Newman–Penrose formalism The Newman–Penrose (NP) formalism The original paper by Newman and Penrose, which introduces the formalism, and uses it to derive example results.Ezra T Newman, Roger Penrose. ''Errata: An Approach to Gravitational Radiation by a Method of Sp ...
.


Definitions: expansion, shear and twist


For geodesic timelike congruences

Denote the tangent vector field of an observer's worldline (in a ''timelike'' congruence) as Z^a, and then one could construct induced "spatial metrics" that
(1)\quad h^=g^+Z^a Z^b\;,\quad h_=g_+Z_a Z_b\;,\quad h^a_=\delta^a_+Z^a Z_b\;,
where h^a_ works as a spatially projecting operator. Use h^a_ to project the coordinate covariant derivative \nabla_b Z_a and one obtains the "spatial" auxiliary tensor B_,
(2)\quad B_=h^c_\, h^d_\, \nabla_d Z_c = \nabla_b Z_a +A_a Z_b\;,
where A_a represents the four-acceleration, and B_ is purely spatial in the sense that B_Z^a=B_Z^b=0. Specifically for an observer with a geodesic timelike worldline, we have
(3)\quad A_a=0\;,\quad\Rightarrow\quad B_= \nabla_b Z_a\;.
Now decompose B_ into its symmetric and antisymmetric parts \theta_ and \omega_,
(4)\quad \theta_=B_\;,\quad \omega_=B_\;.
\omega_=B_ is trace-free (g^\omega_=0) while \theta_ has nonzero trace, g^\theta_=\theta. Thus, the symmetric part \theta_ can be further rewritten into its trace and trace-free part,
(5)\quad \theta_=\frac\theta h_ +\sigma_\;.
Hence, all in all we have
(6)\quad B_=\frac\theta h_ +\sigma_+\omega_\;,\quad \theta=g^\theta_=g^B_\;,\quad \sigma_=\theta_-\frac\theta h_\;,\quad \omega_=B_\;.


For geodesic null congruences

Now, consider a geodesic ''null'' congruence with tangent vector field k^a. Similar to the timelike situation, we also define
(7)\quad \hat_:= \nabla_b k_a\;,
which can be decomposed into
(8)\quad \hat B_=\hat\theta_+\hat\omega_=\frac\hat\theta \hat h_+\hat\sigma_+\hat\omega_\;,
where
(9)\quad \hat\theta_=\hat B_\;,\quad \hat\theta=\hat h^ \hat B_\;,\quad \hat\sigma_=\hat B_-\frac\hat\theta \hat h_\;,\quad \hat\omega_=\hat B_\;.
Here, "hatted" quantities are utilized to stress that these quantities for null congruences are two-dimensional as opposed to the three-dimensional timelike case. However, if we only discuss null congruences in a paper, the hats can be omitted for simplicity.


Definitions: optical scalars for null congruences

The optical scalars \ come straightforwardly from "scalarization" of the tensors \ in Eq(9).
The expansion of a geodesic null congruence is defined by (where for clearance we will adopt another standard symbol ";" to denote the covariant derivative \nabla_a)
(10)\quad \hat\theta = \frac\, k^a_ \;. Comparison with the "expansion rates of a null congruence": As shown in the article " Expansion rate of a null congruence", the outgoing and ingoing expansion rates, denoted by \theta_ and \theta_ respectively, are defined by
(A.1)\quad \theta_:=h^\nabla_a l_b\;,
(A.2)\quad \theta_:=h^\nabla_a n_b\;,
where h^=g^+l^a n^b+n^a l^b represents the induced metric. Also, \theta_ and \theta_ can be calculated via
(A.3)\quad \theta_=g^\nabla_a l_b -\kappa_\;,
(A.4)\quad \theta_=g^\nabla_a n_b -\kappa_\;,
where \kappa_ and \kappa_ are respectively the outgoing and ingoing non-affinity coefficients defined by
(A.5)\quad l^a\nabla_a l_b=\kappa_l_b\;,
(A.6)\quad n^a\nabla_a n_b=\kappa_n_b\;.
Moreover, in the language of
Newman–Penrose formalism The Newman–Penrose (NP) formalism The original paper by Newman and Penrose, which introduces the formalism, and uses it to derive example results.Ezra T Newman, Roger Penrose. ''Errata: An Approach to Gravitational Radiation by a Method of Sp ...
with the convention \, we have
(A.7)\quad \theta_=-(\rho+\bar\rho)=-2\text(\rho)\,,\quad \theta_=\mu+\bar\mu=2\text(\mu)\,,
As we can see, for a geodesic null congruence, the optical scalar \theta plays the same role with the expansion rates \theta_ and \theta_. Hence, for a geodesic null congruence, \theta will be equal to either \theta_ or \theta_.
The shear of a geodesic null congruence is defined by
(11)\quad ^2=\hat\sigma_\hat^ =\frac\,g^\,g^\,k_\,k_ - \Big(\frac\, k^a_ \Big)^2 = \,g^\,g^\frac\,k_\,k_ - ^2\;.
The twist of a geodesic null congruence is defined by
(12)\quad ^2 =\frac\,k_\,k^ =g^\,g^\,k_\,k_\;.
In practice, a geodesic null congruence is usually defined by either its outgoing (k^a=l^a) or ingoing (k^a=n^a) tangent vector field (which are also its null normals). Thus, we obtain two sets of optical scalars \ and \, which are defined with respect to l^a and n^a, respectively.


Applications in decomposing the propagation equations


For a geodesic timelike congruence

The propagation (or evolution) of B_ for a geodesic timelike congruence along Z^c respects the following equation,
(13)\quad Z^c\nabla_c B_=-B^c_B_+R_ Z^c Z^d\;.
Take the trace of Eq(13) by contracting it with g^, and Eq(13) becomes
(14)\quad Z^c\nabla_c \theta=\theta_=-\frac\theta^2 -\sigma_\sigma^+\omega_\omega^-R_Z^a Z^b
in terms of the quantities in Eq(6). Moreover, the trace-free, symmetric part of Eq(13) is
(15)\quad Z^c\nabla_c \sigma_=-\frac\theta\sigma_-\sigma_\sigma^c_-\omega_\omega^c_+\frach_\,(\sigma_\sigma^-\omega_\omega^)+C_Z^c Z^d+\frac\tilde_\,.
Finally, the antisymmetric component of Eq(13) yields
(16)\quad Z^c\nabla_c \omega_=-\frac\theta\omega_-2\sigma^c_\omega_\;.


For a geodesic null congruence

A (generic) geodesic null congruence obeys the following propagation equation,
(16)\quad k^c\nabla_c \hat B_=-\hat B^c_\hat B_+\widehat\;.
With the definitions summarized in Eq(9), Eq(14) could be rewritten into the following componential equations,
(17)\quad k^c\nabla_c \hat\theta=\hat\theta_=-\frac\hat\theta^2 -\hat\sigma_\hat\sigma^+\hat\omega_\hat\omega^-\widehat\;,
(18)\quad k^c\nabla_c \hat\sigma_=-\hat\theta\hat\sigma_+\widehat\;,
(19)\quad k^c\nabla_c \hat\omega_=-\hat\theta\hat\omega_\;.


For a restricted geodesic null congruence

For a geodesic null congruence restricted on a null hypersurface, we have
(20)\quad k^c\nabla_c \theta=\hat\theta_=-\frac\hat\theta^2 -\hat\sigma_\hat\sigma^-\widehat+\kappa_\hat\theta\;,
(21)\quad k^c\nabla_c \hat\sigma_=-\hat\theta\hat\sigma_+\widehat+\kappa_\hat\sigma_\;,
(22)\quad k^c\nabla_c \hat\omega_=0\;.


Spin coefficients, Raychaudhuri's equation and optical scalars

For a better understanding of the previous section, we will briefly review the meanings of relevant NP spin coefficients in depicting null congruences. The
tensor In mathematics, a tensor is an algebraic object that describes a multilinear relationship between sets of algebraic objects related to a vector space. Tensors may map between different objects such as vectors, scalars, and even other tenso ...
form of
Raychaudhuri's equation In general relativity, the Raychaudhuri equation, or Landau–Raychaudhuri equation, is a fundamental result describing the motion of nearby bits of matter. The equation is important as a fundamental lemma for the Penrose–Hawking singularity the ...
Sayan Kar, Soumitra SenGupta. ''The Raychaudhuri equations: a brief review''. Pramana, 2007, 69(1): 49-76. rxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0611123v1 gr-qc/0611123/ref> governing null flows reads
(23)\quad \mathcal_\theta_=-\frac\theta_^2+\tilde_\theta_-\sigma_\sigma^+\tilde_\tilde^-R_l^a l^b\,,
where \tilde_ is defined such that \tilde_l^b:= l^a \nabla_a l^b. The quantities in Raychaudhuri's equation are related with the spin coefficients via
(24)\quad \theta_=-(\rho+\bar\rho)=-2\text(\rho)\,,\quad \theta_=\mu+\bar\mu=2\text(\mu)\,,
(25)\quad \sigma_=-\sigma \bar m_a \bar m_b-\bar\sigma m_a m_b\,,
(26)\quad \tilde_=\frac\,\Big(\rho-\bar\rho \Big)\,\Big(m_a \bar m_b-\bar m_a m_b \Big)=\text(\rho)\cdot\Big(m_a \bar m_b-\bar m_a m_b \Big)\,,
where Eq(24) follows directly from \hat^=\hat^=m^b\bar m^a+\bar m^b m^a and
(27)\quad \theta_=\hat^\nabla_a l_b=m^b\bar m^a\nabla_a l_b+\bar m^b m^a\nabla_a l_b =m^b\bar \delta l_b+\bar m^b \delta l_b=-(\rho+\bar\rho)\,,
(28)\quad \theta_=\hat^\nabla_a n_b=\bar m^b m^a\nabla_a n_b+m^b\bar m^a\nabla_a n_b=\bar m^b \delta n_b+m^b\bar \delta n_b=\mu+\bar\mu\,.


See also

* Raychaudhari equation *
Congruence (general relativity) In general relativity, a congruence (more properly, a congruence of curves) is the set of integral curves of a (nowhere vanishing) vector field in a four-dimensional Lorentzian manifold which is interpreted physically as a model of spacetime. Ofte ...


References

{{Reflist General relativity