![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: effect, foster, geodesic, nightingale, text |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
Can anybody help me understand the calculation of the geodesic effect as
presented in Section 4.7 of the Foster & Nightingale text "A Short Course in General Relativity"? I can reproduce all of the calculations in the section and obtain a facile understanding, but have trouble with interpretation and details that are rather finessed by the authors. In the opening paragraph they state: "The orthogonality condition simply means that lamba^mu has no temporal component in an instantaneous rest frame of an observer traveling along the geodesic." But later we see that lambda^0 is a constant times lambda^3, which is not zero. So is the above statement only true in flat spacetime, or is the frame that the lambda vector is expressed in not the instantaneous rest frame of the observer traveling along the geodesic? Also, when I try to calculate the length of the lamda vector using the Schwarzschild metric I do not obtain a constant value. Sould I calculate -ds^2 with a nonzero lambda^0 component or should I simply calculate the spatial part using lamda^1 to lamda^3? In either case the length is not constant. David Park http://home.earthlink.net/~djmp/ |
| Ads |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
David Park wrote:
Can anybody help me understand the calculation of the geodesic effect as presented in Section 4.7 of the Foster & Nightingale text "A Short Course in General Relativity"? I don't have that book, and you're unlikely to get a useful response around here without providing enough detail so someone doesn't need the book. I can reproduce all of the calculations in the section and obtain a facile understanding, but have trouble with interpretation and details that are rather finessed by the authors. In the opening paragraph they state: "The orthogonality condition simply means that lamba^mu has no temporal component in an instantaneous rest frame of an observer traveling along the geodesic." I am unable to guess what "lamba^mu" is. As it has no temporal component in that frame I'm tempted to guess it is the components of the 4-acceleration projected onto that observer's coordinates; but as the path is a geodesic the 4-acceleration is identically 0 and this would have been phrased differently, and it's inconsistent with your next paragraph. How do Foster & Nightingale define lamba^mu? But later we see that lambda^0 is a constant times lambda^3, which is not zero. So is the above statement only true in flat spacetime, or is the frame that the lambda vector is expressed in not the instantaneous rest frame of the observer traveling along the geodesic? Also, when I try to calculate the length of the lamda vector using the Schwarzschild metric I do not obtain a constant value. Sould I calculate -ds^2 with a nonzero lambda^0 component or should I simply calculate the spatial part using lamda^1 to lamda^3? In either case the length is not constant. That's incomprehensible to me without knowing what lambda^mu represents. Note: in your earlier paragraph, lambda^mu appears to be path-related, but in this last paragraph it does not. Which is it? Tom Roberts |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
David Park wrote:
I was somewhat hoping I might get a response from someone who had worked with the Foster & Nightingale book, a pretty good introductory text. I don't think I will try to reproduce the detailed equations in a posting. Lamda is a vector (such as the axis of a gryoscope?) that is parallelly transported around a circular orbit in the Schwarzschild metric. Basically, in the calculation they calculate the phase change in one orbit, but also take into account that the local frame is rotating. One has a period in proper time and the other in coordinate time and it is by taking account of this difference that the geodesic effect arises. The vector is slightly rotated after one orbit. But I was trying to visualize the lambda vector and see that it was constant length, and also what they meant by saying it had no temporal component (since the solution they gave seems to have all four components.) When I tried to calculate the length, using the metric, it did not seem to be constant. Certainly the spin axis of a (pointlike) gyroscope is spacelike in its instantaneously-comoving inertial frame. So if I represent its spin 4-vector by S and the tangent vector to its path (aka 4-velocity) by U, then U.S=0 everywhere on its path. Note that S has a time component of 0 ONLY in its instantaneously-comoving inertial frame. In particular, wrt Schw. coordinates its time component will be nonzero. Just think of a Lorentz boost in a small region near its location at some specific time, boosting from its rest frame to the local Schw. frame -- that boost will give a nonzero time component to a vector that is purely spatial in the moving frame. Remember that in GR you can indeed do this for a SMALL REGION (the gyroscope is in freefall, but the Schwarzschild coordinates are not, so for them you must consider a small enough spatial region so the curvature is negligible, and a short enough time so a freefalling frame that starts at rest wrt the Schw. coords. has not enough time to move significantly -- now we're comparing two freefalling local frames, and SR applies to them). [I discuss this qualitatively only, as doing this numerically is algebraically difficult and prone to error.] So I'll guess that you or they intermixed coordinates -- the "no temporal component" applies in the instantaneously-comoving inertial frame, but the computation seems to have been carried out in Schw. coordinates (where the temporal component is nonzero). S certainly must have a constant norm (just consider how it behaves in the succession of instantaneously-comoving inertial frames -- it rotates but does not change length, as the gyroscope never spins down). But as the computation was performed in Schw. coordinates, don't forget to use the Schw. metric components when computing its norm. Tom Roberts |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
David Park wrote: Tom, I was somewhat hoping I might get a response from someone who had worked with the Foster & Nightingale book, a pretty good introductory text. I don't think I will try to reproduce the detailed equations in a posting. Why not? You're quoting someone else and asking the responders to lookup the quote. That's not very polite, to say the least. John Anderson |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Double Slit & Aharonov Bohm Effect | zhayne | Physics - General Discussion | 16 | May 23rd 05 03:04 AM |
| Geodesic Effect in Foster & Nightingale Text | David Park | Current Physics Research (Moderated) | 0 | May 25th 04 08:29 AM |
| Blackett Effect, Strings & Cosmology | Jack Sarfatti | Physics - General Discussion | 0 | November 18th 03 08:50 PM |
| Blackett Effect, Strings & Cosmology | Jack Sarfatti | The Theory of Relativity | 0 | November 18th 03 08:50 PM |
| Good Senior Undergrad E&M Text, Self-Study | Timo Nieminen | Physics - General Discussion | 0 | July 28th 03 04:51 AM |