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General Relativity as a Local Gauge Theory of T4



 
 
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Old November 7th 05 posted to sci.math,sci.physics.relativity,sci.philosophy.tech,sci.physics.particle,sci.astro
Jack Sarfatti
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Default General Relativity as a Local Gauge Theory of T4

Another look at Maxwell's Electromagnetic Field theory as a gauge theory.

The global internal symmetry group U(1)em acting on a source field like
the Dirac electron is locally gauged. This demands a compensating 1-form
field "potential" A to keep the dynamical action invariant under the
U(1) group with an arbitrary variable phase function conjugate to the
single charge operator in the Lie algebra of U(1).

The "field" is the 2-form

F = dF

Maxwell's field equations are

dF = d^2A = 0

d*F = *J 3-form eq.

equivalent to

*d*F = J 1-form eq.

d^2*F = d*J = 0 is local electric current density conservation

Total charge Q is a constant of the motion.

Next 1915 General Relativity:

1905 Special Relativity has the global translation space-time symmetry
group T4 that guarantees conservation of total energy and total linear
momentum for every system with a dynamical action invariant under T4
(Noether's theorem).

Locally gauge T4 to Diff(4), the compensating potential 1-form is B.

The total tetrad 1-form field is

e = 1 + B

When B = 0 we have Special Relativity without any gravity and inertia,
i.e. when B = 0 all rest masses must be zero in order to obey Einstein's
Equivalence Principle.

We impose the constraint (zero torsion)

De = D(1 + B) = 0

Where we need a second 1-form W the "spin connection" i.e.

D = d + W/\

Since d1 = 0

De = dB + W/\(1 + B) = 0

i.e.

dB = - W/\(1 + B)

A formal solution is the 1-form spin-connection

- dB/\(1 + B)^-1 = *W 3-form equation

Where the inverse operation reduces the rank of the form on the LHS.

(1 + B)^-1 = 1 - B + B/\B + B/\B/\B + ...

However, now we need the tangent space indices raised and lowered with
the flat Minkowski metric

Both 1 & B have only 1 index and we must have the result be a 1-form.

Therefore, it follows that

(1 + B)^-1 = 1 - B

Therefore, we get the 1-form solution

-*[dB/\(1 - B)] = W

i.e. with tangent indices

-*dB^a/\(1 - B)b = W^ab

The curvature 2-form is

R = DW = dW + W/\W

Since W is a 1-form with 2 indices

(W/\W)^b means W^ac/\W^cb with summation convention

The Bianchi identity is

DR = D^2W = 0

Einstein's field equation with sources is

D*W = *J a 2-form equation

Note that the electric currents are 1-forms, but the stress-energy
currents are 2-forms.

Now this really is like EM when you realize it is B that is like A in EM
not W!

That is

W = -*[dB/\(1 - B)]

dB/\(1 - B) is a 3-form and its Hodge dual is the 1-form.

But W has a dB factor that is analogous to dA = F as in

d*F = d*dA = *J(electric current)

Hence, it is natural that

D*W = *J(momentum-energy source)

is the Cartan form version of

Guv = kTuv

With

D*J(momentum-energy translation source) = 0

as local stress-energy current density conservation.

On Nov 6, 2005, at 2:45 PM, Jack Sarfatti wrote:

Yes, Gennady I simply made a typo saying "R" when I should have said "W"
that I did not see until you pointed out the objection of the 3rd
derivative. Thanks! The basic idea I had is still correct, but here is
how I should have said it

Locally gauge T4 to get Diff(4) with B as the compensating 1-form field.

e = 1 + B

De = 0

implies

dB + W/\(1 + B) = 0

R = DW is the curvature 2-form

DR = 0 is Bianchi identity

D*W = *J(source)

is Einstein's eq.

D*J(source) = 0

is local conservation of current.

OK I will rewrite it all to fix that.

:-)






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