1. Introduction
In this paper, a Schwarzschild spacetime, or a spherically symmetric spacetime, is a smooth 4-dimensional manifold X endowed with a left action of the special orthogonal group SO(3) and a non-singular, symmetric -tensor field g, satisfying the following two conditions:
- (1)
g is SO(3)-invariant.
- (2)
g solves the Einstein vacuum equations.
where g is a Schwarzschild metric on X.
Standard topological properties are required: X is Hausdorff, second countable, and connected. As g can be understood as an extremal of an integral variational functional, the Hilbert variational functional, no a priori restrictions of the signature of g are imposed.
In this paper, we revisit and extend several constructions of classical general relativity theory, especially the theory of spherically symmetric spacetimes (Einstein 1915 [
1], Hilbert 1915 [
2], Schwarzschild 1916 [
3]). Since Schwarzschild, spherically symmetric models became a principal application of the theory, stimulating extensive research on the basis of classical differential geometry on Riemannian spaces (see Hawking, Ellis 1973 [
4] and, for a more comprehensive contemporary discussion De Felice, Clarke 1990 [
5], and Kriele 1999 [
6]). Less is known, however, on the effort focused on a deeper understanding of what is going on from the topological point of view. For first steps in this direction, we refer to Clarke 1987 [
7], and Siegl 1990 [
8], 1992 [
9]; different approaches can be found in the book Sachs, Wu 1977 [
10], and the papers Szenthe 2000 [
11], 2004 [
12], and Tupper, Keane, Carot 2012 [
13].
We do not consider in this paper physical aspects and physical motivation of the theory.
Our main objective is the existence and uniqueness of the Schwarzschild metrics on two topologically non-equivalent product manifolds, and . We wish to give an independent and more complete exposition of basic theorems and their proofs.
To study globally defined
-tensor fields, we need smooth structures on
and
explicitly, in terms of some smooth atlases. In
Section 2, a spherical atlas on
consisting of two charts is introduced; we follow the choice of Krupka [
14] and Tanaka, Krupka [
15] with minor modifications only.
Section 3 includes basic information on the special orthogonal group SO(3). Clearly, SO(3) acts as a transformation group on the second factor of
; its elements are the
rotations. The translations and the reflection of the real line
induce the
time translations and the
time reflection of
. In
Section 4, we derive chart formulas for
-tensor fields on
,
invariant with respect to rotations, time translations and the time reflection.
Section 5 briefly summarizes the basic notation, terminology and conventions related to the Einstein equations.
In
Section 6, Einstein equations for a
-tensor field
g on
are considered. We search for solutions,
invariant with respect to rotations, time translations, and the time reflection. On the contrary to familiar approaches, no assumption on the signature of
g, and no arguments outside mathematics, are applied (cf. De Felice, Clarke [
5], Oas [
16]). Our basic results are summarized in two theorems:
- (a)
First, a family of solutions, the Schwarzschild metrics, is obtained in terms of specific charts, close to the spherical charts. The family is parametrized by a strictly monotonic function , where r is the radial spherical coordinate, and by two real parameters, C and , appearing as integration constants. A notable fact is that the family labelled by q, C and , represents all solutions of the Einstein equations on the underlying chart neighborhood.
- (b)
Second, we show that the solutions defined in chart neighborhoods can be globalized; in other words, for any fixed q, the integration constants C and can be chosen in such a way that the solutions on the chart neighborhoods coincide on their intersection. Thus, as in the charts, we have a family of (global) solutions, parametrized by q, C, and .
For any Schwarzschild metric, one of the parameters, C, determines a submanifold of , where the metric is not defined, the Schwarzschild sphere. It should be pointed out, however, that the family of solutions admits a metric whose Schwarzschild sphere is empty.
Finally, in
Section 7, we search for spherically symmetric solutions of the Einstein equations on
. A specific method is implied. A winding mapping
of the real line
onto the circle
is introduced, inducing a surjection
of
onto
, and for any
-tensor fields on
, the pull-back
on
. The chart expression of
h can be determined by means of a standard atlas on the circle
and the spherical atlas on
. Given a Schwarzshild metric
g on
, these construction allows us to consider condition
as an equation for
h. Our basic results can now be expressed parallelly to
Section 6:
- (a)
For any Schwarzschild metric g on there exists exactly one Schwarzschild metric h on a chart neighborhood in such that the pull-back coincides with g, that is, . Explicit expression of h in charts is given.
- (b)
For any Schwarzschild metric g on , there exists exactly one Schwarzschild metric h on such that .
2. Spherical Atlas
In this Section, we define an atlas on the open subset in the Euclidean space . This atlas consists of two charts employing spherical charts on . First, we describe spherical charts on . For this purpose, we use real-valued function arccos, which is defined as the inverse of the function cos with domain of definition .
Let us denote by
open subsets of
determined as
and by
the mapping, defined by equations
Since the determinant of the Jacobi matrix of
is
, the map
is a local diffeomorphism. The inverse diffeomorphism
,
, is given by equations
Analogously, denoting by
the mapping, defined by equations
its inverse
,
, is given by
Lemma 1. The set , represents a smooth atlas on .
Proof. The union
covers
. The coordinate transformation
, where
, is a diffeomorphism as a composition of two diffeomorphisms, given by equations
□
This atlas is called the spherical atlas on ; the charts , are called the first and the second spherical charts on .
Remark 1. The charts , on are related through the rotation ν of , in canonical coordinates expressed by the equations More exactly, , and . Because ν is an involution, , and also hold.
It is well-known that the manifold
is diffeomorphic with the manifold
. The two-dimensional submanifold
of
is defined by setting
. If we denote
the pairs
and
are charts on
defining an atlas on
; we will call them the
first and the
second charts on. Coordinate transformation
between the charts can be obtained from (
1), and reads
Let us denote by s the canonical coordinate on , and consider the product with the product smooth manifold structure. The coordinate expressions of the mapping , and of the mapping , are identities on the domain , so is a diffeomorphism.
Now consider with the atlas formed by two charts , , where , , and t is the canonical coordinate on .
In this paper, we call this atlas the spherical atlas on X; the charts , are called the first and second spherical charts on X.
3. The Special Orthogonal Group
The special orthogonal group SO(3) of
consists of orthogonal matrices with determinant +1 representing rotations of
around a point
. Such rotations are generated by the set of rotations around the axis
of the canonical frame in
. In a positive-oriented frame, the equations of rotations about the
x-axis, the
y-axis and the
z-axis are
respectively, where
,
and
are the corresponding rotation parameters—angles (measured counter-clockwise from the point of view of positive orientation of the corresponding axis). The matrices of these rotations are
The generators of rotations around the coordinate axes
z,
x, and
y are expressed in canonical coordinates by
For these vector fields,
. In the first spherical coordinates,
and in the second spherical coordinates,
4. Invariance: SO(3), Time Translations, Time Reflection
Consider a -tensor field g on an n-dimensional manifold X. If such tensor field is everywhere non-degenerate and symmetric, it is called a metric tensor on X, or a metric of X.
A
-tensor field
g on a manifold
X is said to be
invariant with respect to a diffeomorphism
, if its pullback
satisfies
In such a case, we also say that is an invariance transformation of g.
This definition can be naturally transformed to vector fields by means of the local one-parameter groups of diffeomorphisms. It is also applicable to an action of a Lie group on a manifold X, where vector fields on X become the generators of the corresponding group action on X.
Let
be a vector field on
X. We say that
is the
generator of invariance transformations of a metric field
g if one-parameter group of
consists of the invariance transformations of
g. This condition for
is equivalent to the
Killing equation
where
denotes the Lie derivative by a vector field
. If
g and
are expressed in a chart
,
, on
X, by
then
If a tensor field
g on
X is required to be invariant with respect to the one-parameter group of transformations, generated by given
, Equation (
4) can be understood as a condition for
g.
Now we apply (
4) to find a tensor field
g invariant with respect to the standard action of the special orthogonal group SO(3) on
,
Consider a
-tensor field
g on the manifold
. In the first spherical chart,
We wish to find the solution
of the Killing equations
where
Theorem 1. If -tensor field g on is invariant with respect to the action (
5)
of SO(3)
, then in the first spherical coordinates, it is of the formwhere P and Q are functions, depending on r only. Proof. The result follows from the solution of the Killing Equation (
6); see also [
14]. □
An analogous result can be obtained in the second spherical chart on . We now formally describe the globalization of our local result to the whole manifold , considering with atlas , .
Theorem 2. Letbe an SO(3)
-invariant -tensor field on U, and letbe an SO(3)
-invariant -tensor field on . Then on if and only iffor all . Proof. Since on the intersection
,
the assertion is obvious. □
Condition (
8) means that the function
P can be naturally extended to the set
; when no misunderstanding may possibly arise, we denote the extended function by the same symbol,
P. A similar convention is applied to
Q. This construction leads to globally defined functions
on
. Thus Theorem 2 constitutes a one-to-one correspondence between SO(3)-invariant
-tensor fields on
and the pairs of functions
, defined on
.
Conversely, any two functions and define an SO(3)-invariant -tensor field on by Theorem 2.
Analogously, if condition (
8) is satisfied, then the formula
defines a SO(3)-invariant
-tensor field on
.
Now our aim is to determine all
-tensor fields
g on
invariant with respect to the left action of the group SO(3) on
X defined by
induced by canonical left action (
5) of SO(3) on
. We consider the atlas on
X formed by the first and the second spherical charts,
, and
, respectively (
Section 2).
Theorem 3. If -tensor field g on X is invariant with respect to the action (
9)
of SO(3)
, then in the first spherical coordinates, it is of the formwhere J, K, P and Q are arbitrary functions of t and r on . Proof. Consider a
-tensor field
g on the manifold
X. In the first spherical chart on
X,
The solution
of the Killing equations
,
,
for vector fields
given by (
2), is
□
The similar result we analogously obtain can analogously be obtained can analogously be obtained in the second spherical chart on
X for vector fields
given by (
3).
The following is an analogue of Theorem 2.
Theorem 4. Letbe an SO(3)
-invariant -tensor field on U, and letbe an SO(3)
-invariant -tensor field on . Then on if and only ifon . Proof. The assertion follows from the transformation equations between the first and the second spherical charts, and is analogous to the proof of Theorem 2. □
By the
time translation in
we mean any transformation of the form
Clearly, time translations define a left action of the additive group of real numbers
on
X. The generator of the translations is the vector field
The
time reflection in
X is a transformation
of
X,
We wish to determine all
-tensor fields
g on
X invariant with respect to the action (
9), the time translations (
10), and the time reflection (
11).
Theorem 5. Each -tensor field g on X invariant with respect to the action (
9)
of SO(3)
, with respect to the translations (
10)
, and to the transformation (
11)
, is in the first spherical chart expressed bywhere J, P, and Q are arbitrary functions on , of the variable r. Proof. In the first spherical chart, a
-tensor field
g on
X invariant with respect to the action (
9) is given by (
7),
where
are arbitrary functions on
, depending on
t and
r only. Equation
implies that
do not depend on
t. Finally, invariance of
g with respect to the transformation (
11) yields
. □
The same consideration can be made in the second spherical chart, and we obtain the following result.
Theorem 6. Letbe an -tensor field on , invariant with respect to the action (
9)
, the time translations (
10)
, and the time reflection (
11)
, and letbe an -tensor field on , invariant with respect to the action (
9)
, the time translations (
10)
, and the time reflection (
11)
. Then on if and only ifon . Remark 2. Theorem 6 does not imply that the tensor field g is regular, or of a certain signature. Such assumptions should be applied independently.
5. Einstein Equations
We shall briefly recall basic definitions and conventions. Let
X be a smooth manifold of dimension
n. By a
metric on
X, we mean a symmetric, regular
-tensor field
g on
X. Note that in this definition, the signature of
g is not specified. Let us have a metric
g on an
n-dimensional manifold
X, expressed in a chart
,
, on
X by
The symmetry requirement is in this chart expression represented by the condition
for all
; regularity means that
everywhere. The functions
where
are functions defined by
, are the
Christoffel symbols, the components of the
Levi–Civita connection associated with the metric g, in a chart
. The
curvature tensor of the Levi–Civita connection is a
-tensor field on
X, expressed by
where
The
Ricci tensor is a
-tensor field on
X, expressed by
where the components
are defined by a
-contraction of the curvature tensor,
Contracting the
-tensor field
, we obtain a function
R on
X, the
scalar curvature of
g, or the
Ricci scalar. In coordinates,
Extremals of the Hilbert variational functional, in which the scalar curvature stands for the Lagrangian, are determined by the
Einstein equations:
The Einstein equations represent a system of second-order partial differential equations for the components of a metric g; the problem is to find solutions of the Einstein equations defined on X.
6. The Schwarzschild Solution:
Let us consider invariant metric
g, in the chart
, on
,
as introduced by Theorem 5. From (
12), we can determine the left sides of the Einstein equations explicitly. Non-trivial equations yield
Since
only three equations of the system are independent. Writing these equations for the class of metrics (
12), we obtain the following system:
where
denotes the derivative with respect to
r. (
13) represents the system of three ordinary differential equations for unknown functions
of the variable
r.
Since, from the regularity condition, the functions
are non-zero at every point of their domain, the system (
13) is equivalent to the system
Remark 3. The system (
14)
is equivalent to the Einstein equations on the considered coordinate neighborhood. It should be pointed out, however, that the system (
14)
was derived without any assumption on the signature of an unknown metric. A standard approach following Schwarzschild [
3]
is based on a priori fixing of the signature—the Lorentz type signature (see [
5,
16]
). From the first equation of (
14), for the function
of the variable
r, we have that
for every
r from the domain; otherwise, we obtain
, which is in contradiction to the assumption
. According to the inverse function theorem, for any
r, there exist connected neighborhoods
of
r, and
of
such that there exists a smooth map
, i.e.,
Q is invertible on the corresponding domain.
Due to the assumption
, for every
r and smoothness of
Q, we have that
, or
for every
r. First, let us suppose
for every
r. It enables us to denote
, and to replace the coordinates
, on
, by
. Setting
a metric
g (
12) can be rewritten in the form
If for all r, then we denote , and proceed as above.
Now, we give an assertion on the solution of the Einstein equations on the open set
for the metrics determined by (
15). The unknown
g is expressed in the form (
15).
Theorem 7.(Schwarzschild solution) For any constants , where , formulasdefine a solution of the Einstein equations. The domain of definition of this solution is an open set of defined by . Proof Consider the metric
g on
expressed by (
15). Then, non-zero metric components of
g on
are
which implies
and
for each pair of mutually different indices
. Let us denote
and
the first and the second derivatives by
q of the functions
, respectively.
The system (
14) for unknown functions
of one variable
q, representing the Einstein equations, is then rewritten in the form
A direct integration of the first equation of (
17)
gives
for any real constant
C. Note that
p is not defined on
S, where
S a subset of
defined by
. Then
is a submanifold of
, consisting of two connected components determined by
, and
, respectively.
Substituting (
18) to the second equation of (
17), we obtain
Its solution is
where
is a non-zero constant.
The solution
fulfils the third equation of (
17). This ends the proof. □
Remark 4. Due to the invertibility of as mentioned above, we are able to express the solution in the first spherical chart.
The same assertion can be proved for the chart
. We obtain the solution
on
for constants
, where
, and
. Now we are in a position to globalize our results to the whole manifold
.
Theorem 8. Letbe the solution of the Einstein equations in the chart , and letbe the solution of the Einstein equations in the chart . Ifthen, - (a)
is a submanifold of , given by equations ,
- (b)
Formuladefines a metric on the complement of in .
Proof. Conditions (
21) imply that on the intersection
the set
is defined by equation
. Also, expressions (
19) and (
20) satisfy assumptions of Theorem 6. □
We call the submanifold the Schwarzschild sphere of the Schwarzschild radius. For simplicity, we denote the Schwarzschild sphere just by S, and the Schwarzschild radius just by C.
Remark 5. We can take in Theorem 8 for q the radial coordinate r. Note that in this case, Theorem 8 admits the value . However, condition has no sense, which means that the Schwarzschild sphere S is empty. In other words, the corresponding solution g is defined globally on .
For any fixed q, Theorem 8 defines a metric g on . We obtain a family parametrized by the constants C and . Any element of this family is called a Schwarzschild metric. The manifold endowed with a Schwarzschild metric g is a Schwarzschild spacetime.
Remark 6. Considering , , and , we obtain the classical Schwarzschild metric
, as known from the literature (e.g., [
5]
). 7. Extension: Spherical Symmetry on
In this section, we consider the canonical product manifold structure on the topological space
. On the second factor
, we use the atlas introduced in
Section 2. It will be convenient to consider
with the atlas defined by parallel projections along coordinate axes. Next, we introduce a
winding mapping from
to
, assigning to a point
the point
belonging to
. Indeed,
can be canonically extended to the projection mapping
from
to
. Our objective will be to consider the pull-back of metric fields
h by
; we shall search for
h such that
is the Schwarzschild metric.
Consider the circle
defined by
, and its subsets
Define mappings
,
,
,
, by
Then the set
is a smooth atlas on
. Indeed, the union
covers
,
and the coordinate transformations
are obviously smooth mappings on the corresponding domains. The circle
will be always considered with the smooth structure defined by the atlas
.
Setting
we obtain a family of open intervals in
, indexed by the integers
. The sets
cover
. Obviously,
for each pair of different indices
. The intersection
is non-empty if and only if
, or
. The following assertion introduces a mapping
as a periodic mapping with the period
.
Lemma 2. There exists a smooth mapping whose coordinate expressions satisfy Proof. Straightforward. □
The mapping
induces the mapping
In what follows, we denote for simplicity
Next, consider the spherical charts
,
, and
,
, on
(
Section 2). The manifold
can be covered by eight sets
The corresponding coordinates on the sets of (
23) are
where the coordinates
r,
can be replaced, in the sense of
Section 6, by
q,
, respectively.
Our aim is to find a metric
h on
corresponding through the mapping
with the Schwarzschild metric
g (
22), on
X. We construct
h by means of charts. However, the chart expressions of
h in different charts of our atlas turn out to be quite analogous. For this reason, we restrict the formulation of the following theorem to a fixed chart on
Y.
Theorem 9. Let g be a Schwarzschild metric (
22)
on . There exists a unique metric h on such that . In the coordinates , h is expressed by This expression is defined on an open subset of , determined by , and satisfies the Einstein equations.
Proof. The coordinate expression of
h is obtained by comparing the pull-back by
of a
-tensor field
h, in the coordinate chart
, on
Y, expressed by
and the expression of the Schwarzshild metric
g (
19) in the coordinate chart
. Then, computing the Christoffel symbols from the components of
h, we obtain that the components of corresponding Ricci tensor vanish. □
For globalization, we need coordinate expressions of
h in all charts of our atlas on
Y (
23). According to Theorem 9, we obtain
Theorem 10. Let g be a Schwarzschild metric (
22)
determined by , defined on the open subset of , where . Then, h (
24)
is the metric on an open subset of , determined by . h satisfies the Einstein equations. Proof. Since the constants
are the same in all charts the corresponding components of
h transform as the components of a metric according to
On each of the charts on Y, computing the Christoffel symbols from the components of the metric h, we obtain that the components of corresponding Ricci tensor vanish, which means that the metric h fulfils the Einstein equations on Y. □
Remark 7. The product manifold has the structure of a fibered manifold over ; its base is compact. An analogous assertion is not true for the fibered manifold over .