Tetradic Palatini Action
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The
Einstein–Hilbert action The Einstein–Hilbert action (also referred to as Hilbert action) in general relativity is the action that yields the Einstein field equations through the stationary-action principle. With the metric signature, the gravitational part of the ac ...
for
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 ...
was first formulated purely in terms of the space-time metric. To take the metric and
affine connection In differential geometry, an affine connection is a geometric object on a smooth manifold which ''connects'' nearby tangent spaces, so it permits tangent vector fields to be differentiated as if they were functions on the manifold with values i ...
as independent variables in the action principle was first considered by Palatini. It is called a first order formulation as the variables to vary over involve only up to first derivatives in the action and so doesn't overcomplicate the Euler–Lagrange equations with higher derivative terms. The tetradic Palatini action is another first-order formulation of the Einstein–Hilbert action in terms of a different pair of independent variables, known as frame fields and the
spin connection In differential geometry and mathematical physics, a spin connection is a connection on a spinor bundle. It is induced, in a canonical manner, from the affine connection. It can also be regarded as the gauge field generated by local Lorentz tr ...
. The use of frame fields and spin connections are essential in the formulation of a generally covariant fermionic action (see the article
spin connection In differential geometry and mathematical physics, a spin connection is a connection on a spinor bundle. It is induced, in a canonical manner, from the affine connection. It can also be regarded as the gauge field generated by local Lorentz tr ...
for more discussion of this) which couples fermions to gravity when added to the tetradic Palatini action. Not only is this needed to couple fermions to gravity and makes the tetradic action somehow more fundamental to the metric version, the Palatini action is also a stepping stone to more interesting actions like the
self-dual Palatini action Ashtekar variables, which were a new canonical formalism of general relativity, raised new hopes for the canonical quantization of general relativity and eventually led to loop quantum gravity. Smolin and others independently discovered that the ...
which can be seen as the Lagrangian basis for Ashtekar's formulation of canonical gravity (see
Ashtekar's variables In the ADM formulation of general relativity, spacetime is split into spatial slices and a time axis. The basic variables are taken to be the induced metric q_ (x) on the spatial slice and the metric's conjugate momentum K^ (x), which is related ...
) or the
Holst action In the field of theoretical physics, the Holst action is an equivalent formulation of the Palatini action for General Relativity (GR) in terms of vierbeins (4D space-time frame field) by adding a part of a topological term (Nieh-Yan) which does n ...
which is the basis of the real variables version of Ashtekar's theory. Another important action is the
Plebanski action General relativity and supergravity in all dimensions meet each other at a common assumption: :''Any configuration space can be coordinatized by gauge fields A^i_a, where the index i is a Lie algebra index and a is a spatial manifold index.'' ...
(see the entry on the
Barrett–Crane model The Barrett–Crane model is a model in quantum gravity, first published in 1998, which was defined using the Plebanski action. The B field in the action is supposed to be a so(3, 1)-valued 2-form, i.e. taking values in the Lie algebra of a s ...
), and proving that it gives general relativity under certain conditions involves showing it reduces to the Palatini action under these conditions. Here we present definitions and calculate Einstein's equations from the Palatini action in detail. These calculations can be easily modified for the self-dual Palatini action and the Holst action.


Some definitions

We first need to introduce the notion of tetrads. A tetrad is an orthonormal vector basis in terms of which the space-time metric looks locally flat, :g_ = e_\alpha^I e_\beta^J \eta_ where \eta_ = \text(-1,1,1,1) is the Minkowski metric. The tetrads encode the information about the space-time metric and will be taken as one of the independent variables in the action principle. Now if one is going to operate on objects that have internal indices one needs to introduce an appropriate derivative (covariant derivative). We introduce an arbitrary covariant derivative via :\mathcal_\alpha V_I = \partial_\alpha V_I + ^J V_J. Where ^J is a spin (Lorentz) connection one-form (the derivative annihilates the Minkowski metric \eta_). We define a curvature via :^J V_J = (\mathcal_\alpha \mathcal_\beta - \mathcal_\beta\mathcal_\alpha) V_I We obtain :^ = 2 \partial_ ^ + 2^ ^J. We introduce the covariant derivative which annihilates the tetrad, :\nabla_\alpha e_\beta^I = 0. The connection is completely determined by the tetrad. The action of this on the generalized tensor V_\beta^I is given by :\nabla_\alpha V_\beta^I = \partial_\alpha V_\beta^I - \Gamma_^\gamma V_\gamma^I + ^I V_\beta^J. We define a curvature ^ by :^J V_J = (\nabla_\alpha \nabla_\beta - \nabla_\beta \nabla_\alpha) V_I. This is easily related to the usual curvature defined by :^ V_\delta = (\nabla_\alpha \nabla_\beta - \nabla_\beta \nabla_\alpha) V_\gamma via substituting V_\gamma = V_I e^I_\gamma into this expression (see below for details). One obtains, :^ = e_\gamma^I ^J e_J^\delta, \quad R_ = ^J e^I_\beta e^\gamma_J, R = ^ e_I^\alpha e_J^\beta for the
Riemann tensor In the mathematical field of differential geometry, the Riemann curvature tensor or Riemann–Christoffel tensor (after Bernhard Riemann and Elwin Bruno Christoffel) is the most common way used to express the curvature of Riemannian manifolds. ...
,
Ricci 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 measur ...
and
Ricci scalar In the mathematical field of Riemannian geometry, the scalar curvature (or the Ricci scalar) is a measure of the curvature of a Riemannian manifold. To each point on a Riemannian manifold, it assigns a single real number determined by the geometr ...
respectively.


The tetradic Palatini action

The
Ricci scalar In the mathematical field of Riemannian geometry, the scalar curvature (or the Ricci scalar) is a measure of the curvature of a Riemannian manifold. To each point on a Riemannian manifold, it assigns a single real number determined by the geometr ...
of this curvature can be expressed as e^\alpha_I e^\beta_J ^. The action can be written :S_ = \int d^4 x \; e \; e^\alpha_I e^\beta_J ^ where e = \sqrt but now g is a function of the frame field. We will derive the Einstein equations by varying this action with respect to the tetrad and spin connection as independent quantities. As a shortcut to performing the calculation we introduce a connection compatible with the tetrad, \nabla_\alpha e^I_\beta = 0. The connection associated with this covariant derivative is completely determined by the tetrad. The difference between the two connections we have introduced is a field ^J defined by :^J V_J = \left (D_\alpha - \nabla_\alpha \right ) V_I. We can compute the difference between the curvatures of these two covariant derivatives (see below for details), :^-^ =\nabla_ ^ + ^ ^J The reason for this intermediate calculation is that it is easier to compute the variation by reexpressing the action in terms of \nabla and ^ and noting that the variation with respect to ^ is the same as the variation with respect to ^ (when keeping the tetrad fixed). The action becomes :S_ = \int d^4x \; e \; e^\alpha_I e^\beta_J \left (^ + \nabla_ ^ + ^ ^J \right ) We first vary with respect to ^. The first term does not depend on ^ so it does not contribute. The second term is a total derivative. The last term yields :e^_M e^_N \delta^M_ \delta^K_ ^N = 0. We show below that this implies that ^ = 0 as the prefactor e^_M e^_N \delta^M_ \delta^K_ is non-degenerate. This tells us that \nabla coincides with D when acting on objects with only internal indices. Thus the connection D is completely determined by the tetrad and \Omega coincides with R. To compute the variation with respect to the tetrad we need the variation of e = \det e_\alpha^I. From the standard formula :\delta \det (a) = \det (a) \left (a^ \right )_ \delta a_ we have \delta e = e e_I^\alpha \delta e_\alpha^I. Or upon using \delta \left (e_\alpha^I e_I^\alpha \right ) = 0, this becomes \delta e = -e e_\alpha^I \delta e_I^\alpha. We compute the second equation by varying with respect to the tetrad, :\begin \delta S_ &= \int d^4 x \; e \left ( \left (\delta e^\alpha_I \right ) e^\beta_J ^ + e^\alpha_I \left (\delta e^\beta_J \right ) ^ - e_\gamma^K \left ( \delta e_K^\gamma \right ) e^\alpha_I e^\beta_J ^ \right ) \\ &= 2 \int d^4 x \; e \left ( e^\beta_J ^ - e_M^\gamma e_N^\delta e_\alpha^I ^ \right ) \left (\delta e_I^\alpha \right ) \end One gets, after substituting ^ for ^ as given by the previous equation of motion, :e_J^\gamma ^ - ^ e_M^\gamma e_N^\delta e_\alpha^I = 0 which, after multiplication by e_ just tells us that the
Einstein tensor In differential geometry, the Einstein tensor (named after Albert Einstein; also known as the trace-reversed Ricci tensor) is used to express the curvature of a pseudo-Riemannian manifold. In general relativity, it occurs in the Einstein field ...
R_-\tfrac R g_ of the metric defined by the tetrads vanishes. We have therefore proved that the Palatini variation of the action in tetradic form yields the usual
Einstein equations In the general theory of relativity, the Einstein field equations (EFE; also known as Einstein's equations) relate the geometry of spacetime to the distribution of matter within it. The equations were published by Einstein in 1915 in the form ...
.


Generalizations of the Palatini action

We change the action by adding a term :- e e_I^\alpha e_J^\beta ^
omega Omega (; capital: Ω, lowercase: ω; Ancient Greek ὦ, later ὦ μέγα, Modern Greek ωμέγα) is the twenty-fourth and final letter in the Greek alphabet. In the Greek numeric system/ isopsephy ( gematria), it has a value of 800. The ...
_ This modifies the Palatini action to :S = \int d^4 x \; e \; e^\alpha_I e^\beta_J _ ^ where :_ = \delta_M^ \delta_N^ - _. This action given above is the Holst action, introduced by Holst and \gamma is the Barbero-Immirzi parameter whose role was recognized by Barbero and Immirizi. The self dual formulation corresponds to the choice \gamma = -i. It is easy to show these actions give the same equations. However, the case corresponding to \gamma = \pm i must be done separately (see article
self-dual Palatini action Ashtekar variables, which were a new canonical formalism of general relativity, raised new hopes for the canonical quantization of general relativity and eventually led to loop quantum gravity. Smolin and others independently discovered that the ...
). Assume \gamma \not= \pm i, then _ has an inverse given by :^ = \frac \left ( \delta_I^ \delta_J^ + \frac ^ \right). (note this diverges for \gamma = \pm i). As this inverse exists the generalization of the prefactor e^_M e^_N \delta^M_ \delta^K_ will also be non-degenerate and as such equivalent conditions are obtained from variation with respect to the connection. We again obtain ^ = 0. While variation with respect to the tetrad yields Einstein's equation plus an additional term. However, this extra term vanishes by symmetries of the Riemann tensor.


Details of calculation


Relating usual curvature to the mixed index curvature

The usual Riemann curvature tensor ^ is defined by :^ V_\delta = \left (\nabla_\alpha \nabla_\beta - \nabla_\beta \nabla_\alpha \right ) V_\gamma. To find the relation to the mixed index curvature tensor let us substitute V_\gamma = e_\gamma^I V_I :\begin ^ V_\delta &= \left (\nabla_\alpha \nabla_\beta - \nabla_\beta \nabla_\alpha \right ) V_\gamma \\ &= \left (\nabla_\alpha \nabla_\beta - \nabla_\beta \nabla_\alpha \right ) \left (e_\gamma^I V_I \right ) \\ &= e_\gamma^I \left (\nabla_\alpha \nabla_\beta - \nabla_\beta \nabla_\alpha \right ) V_I \\ &= e_\gamma^I ^J e_J^\delta V_\delta \end where we have used \nabla_\alpha e_\beta^I = 0. Since this is true for all V_\delta we obtain :^ = e_\gamma^I ^J e_J^\delta. Using this expression we find :R_ = ^ = ^J e_\beta^I e_J^\gamma. Contracting over \alpha and \beta allows us write the Ricci scalar :R = ^ e_I^\alpha e_J^\beta.


Difference between curvatures

The derivative defined by D_\alpha V_I only knows how to act on internal indices. However, we find it convenient to consider a torsion-free extension to spacetime indices. All calculations will be independent of this choice of extension. Applying \mathcal_a twice on V_I, :\mathcal_\alpha \mathcal_\beta V_I = \mathcal_\alpha (\nabla_\beta V_I + ^J V_J) = \nabla_\alpha \left (\nabla_\beta V_I + ^J V_J \right ) + ^K \left (\nabla_b V_K + ^J V_J \right ) + \overline_^\gamma \left (\nabla_\gamma V_I + ^J V_J \right ) where \overline_^\gamma is unimportant, we need only note that it is symmetric in \alpha and \beta as it is torsion-free. Then :\begin ^J V_J &= \left (\mathcal_\alpha \mathcal_\beta - \mathcal_\beta \mathcal_\alpha \right ) V_I \\ &= \left (\nabla_\alpha \nabla_\beta - \nabla_\beta \nabla_\alpha \right ) V_I + \nabla_\alpha \left (^J V_J \right ) - \nabla_\beta \left (^J V_J \right ) +^K \nabla_\beta V_K - ^K \nabla_\alpha V_K + ^K ^J V_J - ^K ^J V_J \\ &= ^J V_J + \left (\nabla_\alpha ^J - \nabla_\beta ^J + ^K ^J - ^K ^J \right ) V_J \end Hence: :^ - ^ = 2 \nabla_ ^ + 2^ ^J


Varying the action with respect to the field ^

We would expect \nabla_a to also annihilate the Minkowski metric \eta_ = e_ e^\beta_J. If we also assume that the covariant derivative \mathcal_\alpha annihilates the Minkowski metric (then said to be torsion-free) we have, :0 = (\mathcal_\alpha - \nabla_\alpha) \eta_= ^K \eta_ + ^K \eta_ = C_ + C_. Implying :C_ = C_. From the last term of the action we have from varying with respect to ^J, \begin \delta S_ &= \delta \int d^4 x \; e \; e_M^\gamma e_N^\beta ^ ^N \\ &= \delta \int d^4 x \; e \; e_M^ e_N^ ^ ^N \\ &= \delta \int d^4 x \; e \; e^ e^_N ^K ^N \\ &= \int d^4 x \; e e^ e^_N \left ( \delta_\gamma^\alpha \delta^I_M \delta^K_J ^N + ^K \delta^\alpha_\beta \delta^I_K \delta^N_J \right ) \delta ^J \\ &= \int d^4 x \; e \left (e^ e^_N ^N + e^ e^_J ^I \right ) \delta ^J \end or :e_I^ e^_K ^K + e^ e^_J C_ = 0 or :^K e^_K e^_J + ^K e^_I e^_K = 0. where we have used C_ = - C_. This can be written more compactly as :e^_M e^_N \delta^M_ \delta^K_ ^N = 0.


Vanishing of ^

We will show following the reference "Geometrodynamics vs. Connection Dynamics" that :^K e^_K e^_J + ^K e^_I e^_K = 0 \quad Eq. 1 implies ^J = 0. First we define the spacetime tensor field by :S_ := C_ e^I_\beta e^J_\gamma. Then the condition C_ = C_ is equivalent to S_ = S_. Contracting Eq. 1 with e_\alpha^I e_\gamma^J one calculates that :^I e_\gamma^J e_I^\beta = 0. As ^ = ^J e_\beta^I e_J^\gamma, we have ^ = 0. We write it as :(^J e_J^\beta) e_\gamma^I = 0, and as e_\alpha^I are invertible this implies :^J e_J^\beta = 0. Thus the terms ^K e^\beta_K e^\alpha_J, and ^K e^\alpha_I e^\beta_K of Eq. 1 both vanish and Eq. 1 reduces to :^K e^\alpha_K e^\beta_J - ^K e^\beta_I e^\alpha_K = 0. If we now contract this with e^I_\gamma e^J_\delta, we get :\begin 0 &= \left ( ^K e^\alpha_K e^\beta_J - ^K e^\beta_I e^\alpha_K \right ) e^I_\gamma e^J_\delta \\ &= ^K e^\alpha_K e^I_\gamma \delta_\delta^\beta - ^K \delta_\gamma^\beta e^\alpha_K e^J_\delta \\ &= ^K e^I_\gamma e^\alpha_K - ^K e^J_\delta e^\alpha_K \end or :^ = ^. Since we have S_ = S_ and S_ = S_, we can successively interchange the first two and then last two indices with appropriate sign change each time to obtain, :S_ = S_ = -S_ = -S_ = S_ = S_ = -S_ Implying :S_ = 0, or :C_ e_\beta^I e_\gamma^J = 0, and since the e_\alpha^I are invertible, we get C_ = 0. This is the desired result.


See also

* Lanczos tensor *
Weyl tensor In differential geometry, the Weyl curvature tensor, named after Hermann Weyl, is a measure of the curvature of spacetime or, more generally, a pseudo-Riemannian manifold. Like the Riemann curvature tensor, the Weyl tensor expresses the tidal f ...


References

{{Reflist General relativity