Schwarzschild Vacuum
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Einstein Albert Einstein ( ; ; 14 March 1879 – 18 April 1955) was a German-born theoretical physicist, widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest and most influential physicists of all time. Einstein is best known for developing the theory ...
's theory of general relativity, the Schwarzschild metric (also known as the Schwarzschild solution) is an exact solution to the Einstein field equations that describes the
gravitational field In physics, a gravitational field is a model used to explain the influences that a massive body extends into the space around itself, producing a force on another massive body. Thus, a gravitational field is used to explain gravitational phenome ...
outside a spherical mass, on the assumption that the electric charge of the mass, angular momentum of the mass, and universal cosmological constant are all zero. The solution is a useful approximation for describing slowly rotating astronomical objects such as many
star A star is an astronomical object comprising a luminous spheroid of plasma (physics), plasma held together by its gravity. The List of nearest stars and brown dwarfs, nearest star to Earth is the Sun. Many other stars are visible to the naked ...
s and planets, including Earth and the Sun. It was found by Karl Schwarzschild in 1916, and around the same time independently by
Johannes Droste Johannes Droste (28 May 1886 – 16 September 1963) was a Dutch mathematician and the second person, after Karl Schwarzschild, to have solved Einstein's field equation In the general theory of relativity, the Einstein field equations (EFE; ...
, who published his more complete and modern-looking discussion four months after Schwarzschild. According to Birkhoff's theorem, the Schwarzschild metric is the most general
spherically symmetric In geometry, circular symmetry is a type of continuous symmetry for a planar object that can be rotated by any arbitrary angle and map onto itself. Rotational circular symmetry is isomorphic with the circle group in the complex plane, or the ...
vacuum solution of the Einstein field equations. A Schwarzschild black hole or static black hole is a
black hole A black hole is a region of spacetime where gravitation, gravity is so strong that nothing, including light or other Electromagnetic radiation, electromagnetic waves, has enough energy to escape it. The theory of general relativity predicts t ...
that has neither electric charge nor angular momentum. A Schwarzschild black hole is described by the Schwarzschild metric, and cannot be distinguished from any other Schwarzschild black hole except by its mass. The Schwarzschild black hole is characterized by a surrounding spherical boundary, called the event horizon, which is situated at the Schwarzschild radius, often called the radius of a black hole. The boundary is not a physical surface, and a person who fell through the event horizon (before being torn apart by tidal forces), would not notice any physical surface at that position; it is a mathematical surface which is significant in determining the black hole's properties. Any non-rotating and non-charged mass that is smaller than its Schwarzschild radius forms a black hole. The solution of the Einstein field equations is valid for any mass , so in principle (according to general relativity theory) a Schwarzschild black hole of any mass could exist if conditions became sufficiently favorable to allow for its formation. In the vicinity of a Schwarschild black hole, space curves so much that even light rays are deflected, and very nearby light can be deflected so much that it travels several times around the black hole.


Formulation

The Schwarzschild metric is a spherically symmetric Lorentzian metric (here, with signature convention ,) defined on (a subset of) \mathbb\times \left(E^3 - O\right) \cong \mathbb \times (0,\infty) \times S^2 where E^3 is 3 dimensional Euclidean space, and S^2 \subset E^3 is the two sphere. The rotation group SO(3) = SO(E^3) acts on the E^3 - O or S^2 factor as rotations around the center O, while leaving the first \mathbb factor unchanged. The Schwarzschild metric is a solution of Einstein's field equations in empty space, meaning that it is valid only ''outside'' the gravitating body. That is, for a spherical body of radius R the solution is valid for r > R. To describe the gravitational field both inside and outside the gravitating body the Schwarzschild solution must be matched with some suitable interior solution at r = R, such as the
interior Schwarzschild metric In Einstein's theory of general relativity, the interior Schwarzschild metric (also interior Schwarzschild solution or Schwarzschild fluid solution) is an exact solution for the gravitational field in the interior of a non-rotating spherical body ...
. In Schwarzschild coordinates (t, r, \theta, \phi) the Schwarzschild metric (or equivalently, the line element for proper time) has the form g = -c^2 \,^ = -\left(1 - \frac \right) c^2 \,dt^2 + \left(1-\frac\right)^ \,dr^2 + r^2 g_\Omega, where g_\Omega is the metric on the two sphere, i.e. g_\Omega = \left(d\theta^2 + \sin^2\theta \, d\phi^2\right). Furthermore, * d\tau^2 is positive for timelike curves, in which case \tau is the proper time (time measured by a clock moving along the same world line with a test particle), * c is the speed of light, * t is, for r > r_s, the time coordinate (measured by a clock located infinitely far from the massive body and stationary with respect to it), * r is, for r > r_s, the radial coordinate (measured as the circumference, divided by 2, of a sphere centered around the massive body), * \Omega is a point on the two sphere S^2, * \theta is the
colatitude In a spherical coordinate system, a colatitude is the complementary angle of a given latitude, i.e. the difference between a right angle and the latitude. Here Southern latitudes are defined to be negative, and as a result the colatitude is a non- ...
of \Omega (angle from north, in units of radians) defined after arbitrarily choosing a ''z''-axis, * \phi is the longitude of \Omega (also in radians) around the chosen ''z''-axis, and * r_s is the Schwarzschild radius of the massive body, a scale factor which is related to its mass M by r_s = \frac, where G is the
gravitational constant The gravitational constant (also known as the universal gravitational constant, the Newtonian constant of gravitation, or the Cavendish gravitational constant), denoted by the capital letter , is an empirical physical constant involved in ...
.. The Schwarzschild metric has a singularity for r = 0 which is an intrinsic curvature singularity. It also seems to have a singularity on the event horizon r = r_s. Depending on the point of view, the metric is therefore defined only on the exterior region r > r_s, only on the interior region r < r_s or their disjoint union. However, the metric is actually non-singular across the event horizon, as one sees in suitable coordinates (see below). For r \gg r_s , the Schwarzschild metric is asymptotic to the standard Lorentz metric on Minkowski space. For almost all astrophysical objects, the ratio \frac is extremely small. For example, the Schwarzschild radius r_s^ of the Earth is roughly , while the Sun, which is times as massive has a Schwarzschild radius r_s^ of approximately 3.0 km. The ratio becomes large only in close proximity to
black hole A black hole is a region of spacetime where gravitation, gravity is so strong that nothing, including light or other Electromagnetic radiation, electromagnetic waves, has enough energy to escape it. The theory of general relativity predicts t ...
s and other ultra-dense objects such as neutron stars. The radial coordinate turns out to have physical significance as the "proper distance between two events that occur simultaneously relative to the radially moving geodesic clocks, the two events lying on the same radial coordinate line". The Schwarzschild solution is analogous to a classical Newtonian theory of gravity that corresponds to the gravitational field around a point particle. Even at the surface of the Earth, the corrections to Newtonian gravity are only one part in a billion.


History

The Schwarzschild solution is named in honour of Karl Schwarzschild, who found the exact solution in 1915 and published it in January 1916, For a translation, see a little more than a month after the publication of Einstein's theory of general relativity. It was the first exact solution of the Einstein field equations other than the trivial flat space solution. Schwarzschild died shortly after his paper was published, as a result of a disease he developed while serving in the
German army The German Army (, "army") is the land component of the armed forces of Germany. The present-day German Army was founded in 1955 as part of the newly formed West German ''Bundeswehr'' together with the ''Marine'' (German Navy) and the ''Luftwaf ...
during World War I. Johannes Droste in 1916 independently produced the same solution as Schwarzschild, using a simpler, more direct derivation. In the early years of general relativity there was a lot of confusion about the nature of the singularities found in the Schwarzschild and other solutions of the Einstein field equations. In Schwarzschild's original paper, he put what we now call the event horizon at the origin of his coordinate system. In this paper he also introduced what is now known as the Schwarzschild radial coordinate ( in the equations above), as an auxiliary variable. In his equations, Schwarzschild was using a different radial coordinate that was zero at the Schwarzschild radius. A more complete analysis of the singularity structure was given by
David Hilbert David Hilbert (; ; 23 January 1862 – 14 February 1943) was a German mathematician, one of the most influential mathematicians of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Hilbert discovered and developed a broad range of fundamental ideas in many a ...
in the following year, identifying the singularities both at and . Although there was general consensus that the singularity at was a 'genuine' physical singularity, the nature of the singularity at remained unclear. In 1921
Paul Painlevé Paul Painlevé (; 5 December 1863 – 29 October 1933) was a French mathematician and statesman. He served twice as Prime Minister of the Third Republic: 12 September – 13 November 1917 and 17 April – 22 November 1925. His entry into politic ...
and in 1922
Allvar Gullstrand Allvar Gullstrand (5 June 1862 – 28 July 1930) was a Swedish ophthalmologist and optician. Life Born at Landskrona, Sweden, Gullstrand was professor (1894–1927) successively of eye therapy and of optics at the University of Uppsala. He ap ...
independently produced a metric, a spherically symmetric solution of Einstein's equations, which we now know is coordinate transformation of the Schwarzschild metric,
Gullstrand–Painlevé coordinates Gullstrand–Painlevé coordinates are a particular set of coordinates for the Schwarzschild metric – a solution to the Einstein field equations which describes a black hole. The ingoing coordinates are such that the time coordinate follows the ...
, in which there was no singularity at . They, however, did not recognize that their solutions were just coordinate transforms, and in fact used their solution to argue that Einstein's theory was wrong. In 1924
Arthur Eddington Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington (28 December 1882 – 22 November 1944) was an English astronomer, physicist, and mathematician. He was also a philosopher of science and a populariser of science. The Eddington limit, the natural limit to the lumin ...
produced the first coordinate transformation (
Eddington–Finkelstein coordinates In general relativity, Eddington–Finkelstein coordinates are a pair of coordinate systems for a Schwarzschild geometry (e.g. a spherically symmetric black hole) which are adapted to radial null geodesics. Null geodesics are the worldlines of p ...
) that showed that the singularity at was a coordinate artifact, although he also seems to have been unaware of the significance of this discovery. Later, in 1932, Georges Lemaître gave a different coordinate transformation (
Lemaître coordinates Lemaître coordinates are a particular set of coordinates for the Schwarzschild metric—a spherically symmetric solution to the Einstein field equations in vacuum—introduced by Georges Lemaître in 1932. English translation: See also: & ...
) to the same effect and was the first to recognize that this implied that the singularity at was not physical. In 1939 Howard Robertson showed that a free falling observer descending in the Schwarzschild metric would cross the singularity in a finite amount of proper time even though this would take an infinite amount of time in terms of coordinate time . In 1950, John Synge produced a paper that showed the maximal analytic extension of the Schwarzschild metric, again showing that the singularity at was a coordinate artifact and that it represented two horizons. A similar result was later rediscovered by George Szekeres, and independently Martin Kruskal. The new coordinates nowadays known as Kruskal-Szekeres coordinates were much simpler than Synge's but both provided a single set of coordinates that covered the entire spacetime. However, perhaps due to the obscurity of the journals in which the papers of Lemaître and Synge were published their conclusions went unnoticed, with many of the major players in the field including Einstein believing that the singularity at the Schwarzschild radius was physical. Real progress was made in the 1960s when the more exact tools of
differential geometry Differential geometry is a mathematical discipline that studies the geometry of smooth shapes and smooth spaces, otherwise known as smooth manifolds. It uses the techniques of differential calculus, integral calculus, linear algebra and multili ...
entered the field of general relativity, allowing more exact definitions of what it means for a Lorentzian manifold to be singular. This led to definitive identification of the singularity in the Schwarzschild metric as an event horizon (a hypersurface in spacetime that can be crossed in only one direction).


Singularities and black holes

The Schwarzschild solution appears to have singularities at and ; some of the metric components "blow up" (entail division by zero or multiplication by infinity) at these radii. Since the Schwarzschild metric is expected to be valid only for those radii larger than the radius of the gravitating body, there is no problem as long as . For ordinary stars and planets this is always the case. For example, the radius of the Sun is approximately , while its Schwarzschild radius is only . The singularity at divides the Schwarzschild coordinates in two disconnected patches. The ''exterior Schwarzschild solution'' with is the one that is related to the gravitational fields of stars and planets. The ''interior Schwarzschild solution'' with , which contains the singularity at , is completely separated from the outer patch by the singularity at . The Schwarzschild coordinates therefore give no physical connection between the two patches, which may be viewed as separate solutions. The singularity at is an illusion however; it is an instance of what is called a ''
coordinate singularity A coordinate singularity occurs when an apparent singularity or discontinuity occurs in one coordinate frame that can be removed by choosing a different frame. An example is the apparent (longitudinal) singularity at the 90 degree latitude in sph ...
''. As the name implies, the singularity arises from a bad choice of coordinates or coordinate conditions. When changing to a different coordinate system (for example Lemaitre coordinates,
Eddington–Finkelstein coordinates In general relativity, Eddington–Finkelstein coordinates are a pair of coordinate systems for a Schwarzschild geometry (e.g. a spherically symmetric black hole) which are adapted to radial null geodesics. Null geodesics are the worldlines of p ...
,
Kruskal–Szekeres coordinates In general relativity, Kruskal–Szekeres coordinates, named after Martin Kruskal and George Szekeres, are a coordinate system for the Schwarzschild geometry for a black hole. These coordinates have the advantage that they cover the entire spacetim ...
, Novikov coordinates, or
Gullstrand–Painlevé coordinates Gullstrand–Painlevé coordinates are a particular set of coordinates for the Schwarzschild metric – a solution to the Einstein field equations which describes a black hole. The ingoing coordinates are such that the time coordinate follows the ...
) the metric becomes regular at and can extend the external patch to values of smaller than . Using a different coordinate transformation one can then relate the extended external patch to the inner patch. The case is different, however. If one asks that the solution be valid for all one runs into a true physical singularity, or '' gravitational singularity'', at the origin. To see that this is a true singularity one must look at quantities that are independent of the choice of coordinates. One such important quantity is the
Kretschmann invariant In the theory of pseudo-Riemannian manifold, Lorentzian manifolds, particularly in the context of applications to general relativity, the Kretschmann scalar is a quadratic curvature invariant (general relativity), scalar invariant. It was introduce ...
, which is given by :R^ R_ = \frac = \frac \,. At the curvature becomes infinite, indicating the presence of a singularity. At this point the metric cannot be extended in a smooth manner (the Kretschmann invariant involves second derivatives of the metric), spacetime itself is then no longer well-defined. Furthermore, Sbierski showed the metric cannot be extended even in a continuous manner. For a long time it was thought that such a solution was non-physical. However, a greater understanding of general relativity led to the realization that such singularities were a generic feature of the theory and not just an exotic special case. The Schwarzschild solution, taken to be valid for all , is called a Schwarzschild black hole. It is a perfectly valid solution of the Einstein field equations, although (like other black holes) it has rather bizarre properties. For the Schwarzschild radial coordinate becomes timelike and the time coordinate becomes spacelike. A curve at constant is no longer a possible
worldline The world line (or worldline) of an object is the path that an object traces in 4-dimensional spacetime. It is an important concept in modern physics, and particularly theoretical physics. The concept of a "world line" is distinguished from con ...
of a particle or observer, not even if a force is exerted to try to keep it there; this occurs because spacetime has been curved so much that the direction of cause and effect (the particle's future light cone) points into the singularity. The surface demarcates what is called the '' event horizon'' of the black hole. It represents the point past which light can no longer escape the gravitational field. Any physical object whose radius becomes less than or equal to the Schwarzschild radius has undergone
gravitational collapse Gravitational collapse is the contraction of an astronomical object due to the influence of its own gravity, which tends to draw matter inward toward the center of gravity. Gravitational collapse is a fundamental mechanism for structure formatio ...
and become a black hole.


Alternative coordinates

The Schwarzschild solution can be expressed in a range of different choices of coordinates besides the Schwarzschild coordinates used above. Different choices tend to highlight different features of the solution. The table below shows some popular choices. In table above, some shorthand has been introduced for brevity. The speed of light has been set to one. The notation : g_\Omega= d\theta^2+\sin^2\theta \,d\varphi^2 is used for the metric of a unit radius 2-dimensional sphere. Moreover, in each entry R and T denote alternative choices of radial and time coordinate for the particular coordinates. Note, the R and/or T may vary from entry to entry. The Kruskal–Szekeres coordinates have the form to which the
Belinski–Zakharov transform The Belinski–Zakharov (inverse) transform is a nonlinear transformation that generates new exact solutions of the vacuum Einstein's field equation. It was developed by Vladimir Belinski and Vladimir Zakharov in 1978. The Belinski–Zakharov trans ...
can be applied. This implies that the Schwarzschild black hole is a form of
gravitational soliton A gravitational soliton is a soliton solution of the Einstein field equation. It can be separated into two kinds, a soliton of the vacuum Einstein field equation generated by the Belinski–Zakharov transform, and a soliton of the Einstein–Maxwe ...
.


Flamm's paraboloid

The spatial curvature of the Schwarzschild solution for can be visualized as the graphic shows. Consider a constant time equatorial slice through the Schwarzschild solution (, = constant) and let the position of a particle moving in this plane be described with the remaining Schwarzschild coordinates . Imagine now that there is an additional Euclidean dimension , which has no physical reality (it is not part of spacetime). Then replace the plane with a surface dimpled in the direction according to the equation (''Flamm's paraboloid'') :w = 2 \sqrt. This surface has the property that distances measured within it match distances in the Schwarzschild metric, because with the definition of ''w'' above, :dw^2 + dr^2 + r^2\, d\varphi^2 = -c^2 \,d\tau^2 = \frac + r^2\, d\varphi^2 Thus, Flamm's paraboloid is useful for visualizing the spatial curvature of the Schwarzschild metric. It should not, however, be confused with a gravity well. No ordinary (massive or massless) particle can have a worldline lying on the paraboloid, since all distances on it are spacelike (this is a cross-section at one moment of time, so any particle moving on it would have an infinite velocity). A tachyon could have a spacelike worldline that lies entirely on a single paraboloid. However, even in that case its
geodesic In geometry, a geodesic () is a curve representing in some sense the shortest path ( arc) between two points in a surface, or more generally in a Riemannian manifold. The term also has meaning in any differentiable manifold with a connection. ...
path is not the trajectory one gets through a "rubber sheet" analogy of gravitational well: in particular, if the dimple is drawn pointing upward rather than downward, the tachyon's geodesic path still curves toward the central mass, not away. See the gravity well article for more information. Flamm's paraboloid may be derived as follows. The Euclidean metric in the cylindrical coordinates is written :ds^2 = dw^2 + dr^2 + r^2 \,d\varphi^2 \,. Letting the surface be described by the function , the Euclidean metric can be written as :ds^2 = \left( 1 + \left(\frac\right)^2 \right) \,dr^2 + r^2\,d\varphi^2 \,, Comparing this with the Schwarzschild metric in the equatorial plane () at a fixed time ( = constant, ) :ds^2 = \left(1-\frac \right)^ \,dr^2 + r^2\,d\varphi^2 \,, yields an integral expression for : :w(r) = \int \frac = 2 r_\mathrm \sqrt + \mbox whose solution is Flamm's paraboloid.


Orbital motion

A particle orbiting in the Schwarzschild metric can have a stable circular orbit with . Circular orbits with between and are unstable, and no circular orbits exist for . The circular orbit of minimum radius corresponds to an orbital velocity approaching the speed of light. It is possible for a particle to have a constant value of between and , but only if some force acts to keep it there. Noncircular orbits, such as
Mercury Mercury commonly refers to: * Mercury (planet), the nearest planet to the Sun * Mercury (element), a metallic chemical element with the symbol Hg * Mercury (mythology), a Roman god Mercury or The Mercury may also refer to: Companies * Merc ...
's, dwell longer at small radii than would be expected in
Newtonian gravity Newton's law of universal gravitation is usually stated as that every particle attracts every other particle in the universe with a force that is proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distanc ...
. This can be seen as a less extreme version of the more dramatic case in which a particle passes through the event horizon and dwells inside it forever. Intermediate between the case of Mercury and the case of an object falling past the event horizon, there are exotic possibilities such as knife-edge orbits, in which the satellite can be made to execute an arbitrarily large number of nearly circular orbits, after which it flies back outward.


Symmetries

The group of isometries of the Schwarzschild metric is the subgroup of the ten-dimensional Poincaré group which takes the time axis (trajectory of the star) to itself. It omits the spatial translations (three dimensions) and boosts (three dimensions). It retains the time translations (one dimension) and rotations (three dimensions). Thus it has four dimensions. Like the Poincaré group, it has four connected components: the component of the identity; the time reversed component; the spatial inversion component; and the component which is both time reversed and spatially inverted.


Curvatures

The Ricci curvature scalar and the
Ricci curvature tensor In differential geometry, the Ricci curvature tensor, named after Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro, is a geometric object which is determined by a choice of Riemannian or pseudo-Riemannian metric on a manifold. It can be considered, broadly, as a measure ...
are both zero. Non-zero components of the Riemann curvature tensor areMisner, Charles W., Thorne, Kip S., Wheeler, John Archibald, "Gravitation", W.H. Freeman and Company, New York, :R^_=2R^_=2R^_=\frac, :2R^_=2R^_=R^_=\frac, :2R^_=2R^_=-R^_=\frac, :R^_=-2R^_=-2R^_= c^2 \frac Components which are obtainable by the symmetries of the Riemann tensor are not displayed. To understand the physical meaning of these quantities, it is useful to express the curvature tensor in an orthonormal basis. In an orthonormal basis of an observer the non-zero components in
geometric units A geometrized unit system, geometric unit system or geometrodynamic unit system is a system of natural units in which the base unit of measurement, physical units are chosen so that the speed of light in vacuum, ''c'', and the gravitational constan ...
are :R^_= -R^_ = -\frac, :R^_= R^_ = -R^_ = -R^_ = \frac. Again, components which are obtainable by the symmetries of the Riemann tensor are not displayed. These results are invariant to any Lorentz boost, thus the components do not change for non-static observers. The geodesic deviation equation shows that the tidal acceleration between two observers separated by \xi^ is D^2 \xi^/D\tau^2 = -R^_ \xi^, so a body of length L is stretched in the radial direction by an apparent acceleration (r_s/r^3)c^2 L and squeezed in the perpendicular directions by -(r_s/(2r^3)) c^2 L.


See also

*
Derivation of the Schwarzschild solution The Schwarzschild solution describes spacetime under the influence of a massive, non-rotating, spherically symmetric object. It is considered by some to be one of the simplest and most useful solutions to the Einstein field equations . Assumpti ...
* Reissner–Nordström metric (charged, non-rotating solution) * Kerr metric (uncharged, rotating solution) * Kerr–Newman metric (charged, rotating solution) *
Black hole A black hole is a region of spacetime where gravitation, gravity is so strong that nothing, including light or other Electromagnetic radiation, electromagnetic waves, has enough energy to escape it. The theory of general relativity predicts t ...
, a general review * Schwarzschild coordinates *
Kruskal–Szekeres coordinates In general relativity, Kruskal–Szekeres coordinates, named after Martin Kruskal and George Szekeres, are a coordinate system for the Schwarzschild geometry for a black hole. These coordinates have the advantage that they cover the entire spacetim ...
*
Eddington–Finkelstein coordinates In general relativity, Eddington–Finkelstein coordinates are a pair of coordinate systems for a Schwarzschild geometry (e.g. a spherically symmetric black hole) which are adapted to radial null geodesics. Null geodesics are the worldlines of p ...
*
Gullstrand–Painlevé coordinates Gullstrand–Painlevé coordinates are a particular set of coordinates for the Schwarzschild metric – a solution to the Einstein field equations which describes a black hole. The ingoing coordinates are such that the time coordinate follows the ...
* Lemaitre coordinates (Schwarzschild solution in
synchronous coordinates A synchronous frame is a reference frame in which the time coordinate defines proper time for all co-moving observers. It is built by choosing some constant time hypersurface as an origin, such that has in every point a normal along the time line ...
) *
Frame fields in general relativity A frame field in general relativity (also called a tetrad or vierbein) is a set of four pointwise-orthonormal vector fields, one timelike and three spacelike, defined on a Lorentzian manifold that is physically interpreted as a model of spacetime ...
(Lemaître observers in the Schwarzschild vacuum) *
Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff equation In astrophysics, the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff (TOV) equation constrains the structure of a spherically symmetric body of isotropic material which is in static gravitational equilibrium, as modelled by general relativity. The equation is ...
(metric and pressure equations of a static and spherically symmetric body of isotropic material) * Planck length


Notes


References

* :
Text of the original paper, in Wikisource
:* Translation: :* A commentary on the paper, giving a simpler derivation: * :
Text of the original paper, in Wikisource
:* Translation: * * * * * * * {{Relativity Exact solutions in general relativity Black holes 1916 in science