Birkhoff's theorem (relativity)
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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 ...
, Birkhoff's theorem states that any spherically symmetric solution of the vacuum field equations must be
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and asymptotically flat. This means that the exterior solution (i.e. the spacetime outside of a spherical, nonrotating, gravitating body) must be given by the Schwarzschild metric. The converse of the theorem is true and is called Israel's theorem. The converse is not true in Newtonian gravity. The theorem was proven in 1923 by George David Birkhoff (author of another famous '' Birkhoff theorem'', the ''pointwise ergodic theorem'' which lies at the foundation of ergodic theory). However, Nils Voje Johansen, Finn Ravndal, Stanley Deser recently pointed out that it was published two years earlier by a little-known Norwegian physicist, Jørg Tofte Jebsen.J.T. Jebsen, ''Uber die allgemeinen kugelsymmetrischen Lösungen der Einsteinschen Gravitationsgleichungen im Vakuum'', Arkiv för matematik, astronomi och fysik, 15 (18), 1 - 9 (1921).J.T. Jebsen, ''On the general symmetric solutions of Einstein's gravitational equations in vacuo'', General Relativity and Cosmology 37 (12), 2253 - 2259 (2005).


Intuitive rationale

The intuitive idea of Birkhoff's theorem is that a spherically symmetric gravitational field should be produced by some massive object at the origin; if there were another concentration of mass-energy somewhere else, this would disturb the spherical symmetry, so we can expect the solution to represent an ''isolated'' object. That is, the field should vanish at large distances, which is (partly) what we mean by saying the solution is asymptotically flat. Thus, this part of the theorem is just what we would expect from the fact that general relativity reduces to Newtonian gravitation in the Newtonian limit.


Implications

The conclusion that the exterior field must also be ''stationary'' is more surprising, and has an interesting consequence. Suppose we have a spherically symmetric star of fixed mass which is experiencing spherical pulsations. Then Birkhoff's theorem says that the exterior geometry must be Schwarzschild; the only effect of the pulsation is to change the location of the stellar surface. This means that a spherically pulsating star cannot emit
gravitational waves Gravitational waves are waves of the intensity of gravity generated by the accelerated masses of an orbital binary system that propagate as waves outward from their source at the speed of light. They were first proposed by Oliver Heaviside in 1 ...
.


Generalizations

Birkhoff's theorem can be generalized: any spherically symmetric and asymptotically flat solution of the Einstein/Maxwell field equations, without \Lambda, must be static, so the exterior geometry of a spherically symmetric charged star must be given by the Reissner–Nordström electrovacuum. Note that in the Einstein-Maxwell theory, there exist spherically symmetric but not asymptotically flat solutions, such as the Bertotti-Robinson universe.


See also

* Newman–Janis algorithm, a
complexification In mathematics, the complexification of a vector space over the field of real numbers (a "real vector space") yields a vector space over the complex number field, obtained by formally extending the scaling of vectors by real numbers to include ...
technique for finding exact solutions to the
Einstein field 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 ...
* Shell theorem in Newtonian gravity * Quadrupole formula


References

* * See ''section 14.6'' for a proof of the Birkhoff theorem, and see ''section 18.1'' for the generalized Birkhoff theorem. * *{{cite journal , author=Jebsen, J. T. , title=Über die allgemeinen kugelsymmetrischen Lösungen der Einsteinschen Gravitationsgleichungen im Vakuum (On the General Spherically Symmetric Solutions of Einstein's Gravitational Equations in Vacuo) , journal=Arkiv för Matematik, Astronomi och Fysik , year=1921 , volume=15 , pages=1–9


External links


''Birkhoff's Theorem''
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'' Theorems in general relativity