Ellis wormhole
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The Ellis wormhole is the special case of the Ellis drainhole in which the 'ether' is not flowing and there is no gravity. What remains is a pure
traversable wormhole A wormhole ( Einstein-Rosen bridge) is a hypothetical structure connecting disparate points in spacetime, and is based on a special solution of the Einstein field equations. A wormhole can be visualized as a tunnel with two ends at separate p ...
comprising a pair of identical twin, nonflat, three-dimensional regions joined at a two-sphere, the 'throat' of the wormhole. As seen in the image shown, two-dimensional equatorial cross sections of the wormhole are
catenoid In geometry, a catenoid is a type of surface, arising by rotating a catenary curve about an axis (a surface of revolution). It is a minimal surface, meaning that it occupies the least area when bounded by a closed space. It was formally descri ...
al 'collars' that are asymptotically flat far from the throat. There being no gravity in force, an
inertial observer In classical physics and special relativity, an inertial frame of reference (also called inertial reference frame, inertial frame, inertial space, or Galilean reference frame) is a frame of reference that is not undergoing any acceleratio ...
(
test particle In physical theories, a test particle, or test charge, is an idealized model of an object whose physical properties (usually mass, charge, or size) are assumed to be negligible except for the property being studied, which is considered to be insuf ...
) can sit forever at rest at any point in space, but if set in motion by some disturbance will follow a geodesic of an equatorial cross section at constant speed, as would also a photon. This phenomenon shows that in space-time the curvature of space has nothing to do with gravity (the 'curvature of time’, one could say). As a special case of the Ellis drainhole, itself a 'traversable wormhole', the Ellis wormhole dates back to the drainhole's discovery in 1969 (date of first submission) by H. G. Ellis, and independently at about the same time by K. A. Bronnikov. Ellis and Bronnikov derived the original traversable wormhole as a solution of the Einstein vacuum field equations augmented by inclusion of a scalar field \phi minimally coupled to the geometry of space-time with coupling polarity opposite to the orthodox polarity (negative instead of positive). Some years later M. S. Morris and K. S. Thorne manufactured a duplicate of the Ellis wormhole to use as a tool for teaching general relativity, asserting that existence of such a wormhole required the presence of 'negative energy', a viewpoint Ellis had considered and explicitly refused to accept, on the grounds that arguments for it were unpersuasive.


The wormhole solution

The wormhole metric has the proper-time form : c^2 d\tau^2 = c^2 dt^2 - d\sigma^2 \, , where : \begin d\sigma^2 &= d\rho^2 + r^2(\rho) \, d\Omega^2 \\ &= d\rho^2 + \left(\rho^2 + n^2\right) \, d\Omega^2 \\ &= d\rho^2 + \left(\rho^2 + n^2\right) \, \left \vartheta^2 + (\sin \vartheta)^2 \, d\varphi^2\right\;\; \end and n is the drainhole parameter that survives after the parameter m of the Ellis drainhole solution is set to 0 to stop the ether flow and thereby eliminate gravity. If one goes further and sets n to 0, the metric becomes that of
Minkowski space-time In mathematical physics, Minkowski space (or Minkowski spacetime) () is a combination of three-dimensional Euclidean space and time into a four-dimensional manifold where the spacetime interval between any two events is independent of the inert ...
, the flat space-time of the
special theory of relativity In physics, the special theory of relativity, or special relativity for short, is a scientific theory regarding the relationship between space and time. In Albert Einstein's original treatment, the theory is based on two postulates: # The laws o ...
. In Minkowski space-time every timelike and every lightlike (null) geodesic is a straight 'world line' that projects onto a straight-line geodesic of an equatorial cross section of a time slice of constant t, as, for example, the one on which t = 0 and \vartheta = \pi/2, the metric of which is that of euclidean two-space in polar coordinates rho,\varphi/math>, namely, :ds^2 = d\rho^2 + \rho^2 \, d\varphi^2 \, . Every test particle or photon is seen to follow such an equatorial geodesic at a fixed coordinate speed, which could be 0, there being no gravitational field built into Minkowski space-time. These properties of Minkowski space-time all have their counterparts in the Ellis wormhole, modified, however, by the fact that the metric and therefore the geodesics of equatorial cross sections of the wormhole are not straight lines, rather are the 'straightest possible' paths in the cross sections. It is of interest, therefore, to see what these equatorial geodesics look like.


Equatorial geodesics of the wormhole

The equatorial cross section of the wormhole defined by t = 0 and \vartheta = \pi/2 (representative of all such cross sections) bears the metric :ds^2 = d\rho^2 + \left(\rho^2 + n^2\right) \, d\varphi^2 \, . When the cross section with this metric is embedded in euclidean three-space the image is the catenoid \mathcal C shown above, with \rho measuring the distance from the central circle at the throat, of radius n, along a curve on which \varphi is fixed (one such being shown). In
cylindrical coordinates A cylindrical coordinate system is a three-dimensional coordinate system that specifies point positions by the distance from a chosen reference axis ''(axis L in the image opposite)'', the direction from the axis relative to a chosen reference d ...
,\varphi,z/math> the equation r = n \cosh(z/n) has \mathcal C as its graph. After some integrations and substitutions the equations for a geodesic of \mathcal C parametrized by s reduce to : \frac = \frac and : \left(\frac\right)^2 + \frac \, = 1, where h is a constant. If d\rho/ds \equiv 0 \, , then h^2 = \rho^2 + n^2 \geq n^2 \, , \textstyle d\varphi/ds = 1/h, and \textstyle \rho = \pm \sqrt \, , and vice versa. Thus every 'circle of latitude' (\rho = constant) is a geodesic. If on the other hand d\rho/ds is not identically 0, then its zeroes are isolated and the reduced equations can be combined to yield the orbital equation :\left(\frac\right)^2 = \frac \, . There are three cases to be considered: * h^2 > n^2, which implies that \rho^2 \geq h^2 - n^2 > 0, thus that the geodesic is confined to one side of the wormhole or the other and has a turning point at \textstyle \rho = \sqrt or \textstyle \rho = -\sqrt \, ; * h^2 = n^2, which entails that \rho^2 > 0, so that the geodesic does not cross the throat at \rho = 0, but spirals onto it from one side or the other; * h^2 < n^2, which allows the geodesic to traverse the wormhole from either side to the other. The figures exhibit examples of the three types. If s is allowed to vary from -\infty to \infty, the number of orbital revolutions possible for each type, latitudes included, is unlimited. For the first and third types the number rises to infinity as h^2 \to n^2; for the spiral type and the latitudes the number is already infinite. That these geodesics can bend around the wormhole makes clear that the curvature of space alone, without the aid of gravity, can cause test particles and photons to follow paths that deviate significantly from straight lines and can create lensing effects.


Dynamic Ellis wormhole

There is a dynamic version of the Ellis wormhole that is a solution of the same field equations that the static Ellis wormhole is a solution of. Its metric is : c^2 d\tau^2 = c^2 dt^2 - d\sigma^2 \, , where : d\sigma^2 = d\rho^2 + \left left(1 + a^2\right) \rho^2 + a^2 c^2 t^2 \, \right\, d\Omega^2 \, , a being a positive constant. There is a 'point singularity' at t = \rho = 0, but everywhere else the metric is regular and curvatures are finite. Geodesics that do not encounter the point singularity are complete; those that do can be extended beyond it by proceeding along any of the geodesics that encounter the singularity from the opposite time direction and have compatible tangents (similarly to geodesics of the graph of z = (xy)^3 that encounter the singularity at the origin). For a fixed nonzero value of t the equatorial cross section on which \vartheta = \pi/2 has the metric : \begin ds^2 &= d\rho^2 + r^2(t,\rho) \, d\varphi^2 \\ &= d\rho^2 + \left left(1 + a^2\right) \rho^2 + a^2 c^2 t^2 \, \right\, d\varphi^2 \, . \end This metric describes a 'hypercatenoid' similar to the equatorial catenoid of the static wormhole, with the radius n of the throat (where \rho = 0) now replaced by a c , t, , and in general each circle of latitude of geodesic radius \rho having circumferential radius \textstyle r(t,\rho) = \sqrt. For t = 0 the metric of the \vartheta = \pi/2 equatorial cross section is : ds^2 = d\rho^2 + \left(1 + a^2\right)\rho^2 \, d\varphi^2 \, , which describes a 'hypercone' with its vertex at the singular point, its latitude circles of geodesic radius \rho having circumferences \textstyle 2 \pi r(0,\rho) = 2 \pi \sqrt \rho \, . Unlike the catenoid, neither the hypercatenoid nor the hypercone is fully representable as a surface in euclidean three-space; only the portions where \textstyle , dr(t,\rho)/d\rho, = (1 + a^2) , \rho, \big/\sqrt \leq 1 (thus where \textstyle , \rho, \leq c , t, \big/\sqrt or equivalently \textstyle r(t,\rho) \leq \sqrt c , t, ) can be embedded in that way. Dynamically, as t advances from -\infty to \infty the equatorial cross sections shrink from hypercatenoids of infinite radius to hypercones (hypercatenoids of zero radius) at t = 0, then expand back to hypercatenoids of infinite radius. Examination of the curvature tensor reveals that the full dynamic Ellis wormhole space-time manifold is asymptotically flat in all directions - timelike, lightlike, and spacelike.


Applications

* Scattering by an Ellis wormhole *
Gravitational lensing A gravitational lens is a distribution of matter (such as a cluster of galaxies) between a distant light source and an observer that is capable of bending the light from the source as the light travels toward the observer. This effect is known ...
in the Ellis wormhole **Microlensing by the Ellis wormhole **Wave effect in lensing by the Ellis wormhole **Image centroid displacements due to microlensing by the Ellis wormhole **Exact lens equation for the Ellis wormhole **Lensing by wormholes


References

{{reflist Wormhole theory Exact solutions in general relativity