World manifold
In gravitation theory, a world manifold endowed with some Lorentzian pseudo-Riemannian metric and an associated space-time structure is a space-time. Gravitation theory is formulated as classical field theory on natural bundles over a world manifold.
Topology
A world manifold is a four-dimensional orientable real smooth manifold. It is assumed to be a Hausdorff and second countable topological space. Consequently, it is a locally compact space which is a union of a countable number of compact subsets, a separable space, a paracompact and completely regular space. Being paracompact, a world manifold admits a partition of unity by smooth functions. It should be emphasized that paracompactness is an essential characteristic of a world manifold. It is necessary and sufficient in order that a world manifold admits a Riemannian metric and necessary for the existence of a pseudo-Riemannian metric. A world manifold is assumed to be connected and, consequently, it is arcwise connected.
Riemannian structure
The tangent bundle of a world manifold
and the associated principal frame bundle
of linear tangent frames in
possess a general linear group structure group
. A world manifold
is said to be parallelizable if the tangent bundle
and, accordingly, the frame bundle
are trivial, i.e., there exists a global section (a frame field) of
. It is essential that the tangent and associated bundles over a world manifold admit a bundle atlas of finite number of trivialization charts.
Tangent and frame bundles over a world manifold are natural bundles characterized by general covariant transformations. These transformations are gauge symmetries of gravitation theory on a world manifold.
By virtue of the well-known theorem on structure group reduction, a structure group of a frame bundle
over a world manifold
is always reducible to its maximal compact subgroup
. The corresponding global section of the quotient bundle
is a Riemannian metric
on
. Thus, a world manifold always admits a Riemannian metric which makes
a metric topological space.
Lorentzian structure
In accordance with the geometric Equivalence Principle, a world manifold possesses a Lorentzian structure, i.e., a structure group of a frame bundle must be reduced to a Lorentz group
. The corresponding global section of the quotient bundle
is a pseudo-Riemannian metric
of signature
on
. It is treated as a gravitational field in General Relativity and as a classical Higgs field in gauge gravitation theory.
A Lorentzian structure need not exist. Therefore a world manifold is assumed to satisfy a certain topological condition. It is either a noncompact topological space or a compact space with a zero Euler characteristic. Usually, one also requires that a world manifold admits a spinor structure in order to describe Dirac fermion fields in gravitation theory. There is the additional topological obstruction to the existence of this structure. In particular, a noncompact world manifold must be parallelizable.
Space-time structure
If a structure group of a frame bundle is reducible to a Lorentz group, the latter is always reducible to its maximal compact subgroup
. Thus, there is the commutative diagram
of the reduction of structure groups of a frame bundle in
gravitation theory. This reduction diagram results in the following.
(i) In gravitation theory on a world manifold , one can always choose an atlas of a frame bundle
(characterized by local frame fields
) with
-valued transition functions. These transition functions preserve a time-like component
of local frame fields which, therefore, is globally defined. It is a nowhere vanishing vector field on
. Accordingly, the dual time-like covector field
also is globally defined, and it yields a spatial distribution
on
such that
. Then the tangent bundle
of a world manifold
admits a space-time decomposition
, where
is a one-dimensional fibre bundle spanned by a time-like vector field
. This decomposition, is called the
-compatible space-time structure. It makes a world manifold the space-time.
(ii) Given the above mentioned diagram of reduction of structure groups, let and
be the corresponding
pseudo-Riemannian and Riemannian metrics on
. They form a triple
obeying the relation
-
.
Conversely, let a world manifold admit a nowhere vanishing
one-form
(or, equivalently, a nowhere vanishing vector
field). Then any Riemannian metric
on
yields the
pseudo-Riemannian metric
-
.
It follows that a world manifold admits a pseudo-Riemannian
metric if and only if there exists a nowhere vanishing vector (or covector) field on
.
Let us note that a -compatible Riemannian metric
in a triple
defines a
-compatible distance function on a world manifold
. Such a function brings
into a metric space whose locally Euclidean topology is equivalent to a manifold topology on
. Given a gravitational field
, the
-compatible Riemannian metrics and the corresponding distance
functions are different for different spatial distributions
and
. It follows that physical observers associated with
these different spatial distributions perceive a world manifold
as different Riemannian spaces. The well-known relativistic changes of sizes of moving bodies exemplify this phenomenon.
However, one attempts to derive a world topology directly from a space-time structure (a path topology, an Alexandrov topology). If a space-time satisfies the strong causality condition, such topologies coincide with a familiar manifold topology of a world manifold. In a general case, they however are rather extraordinary.
Causality conditions
A space-time structure is called integrable if a spatial distribution is involutive. In this case, its integral manifolds constitute a spatial foliation of a world manifold whose leaves are spatial three-dimensional subspaces. A spatial foliation is called causal if no curve transversal to its leaves intersects each leave more than once. This condition is equivalent to the stable causality of Stephen Hawking. A space-time foliation is causal if and only if it is a foliation of level surfaces of some smooth real function on
whose differential nowhere vanishes. Such a foliation is a fibred manifold
.
However, this is not the case of a compact world manifold which can not be
a fibred manifold over
.
The stable causality does not provide the simplest causal structure. If a fibred manifold is a fibre bundle, it is trivial, i.e., a world manifold
is a globally hyperbolic manifold
. Since any oriented three-dimensional manifold is parallelizable, a globally
hyperbolic world manifold is parallelizable.
See also
References
- S.W. Hawking, G.F.R. Ellis, The Large Scale Structure of Space-Time (Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1973) ISBN 0-521-20016-4
- C.T.G. Dodson, Categories, Bundles, and Spacetime Topology (Shiva Publ. Ltd., Orpington, UK, 1980) ISBN 0-906812-01-1
External links
- G. Sardanashvily, Classical gauge gravitation theory, Int. J. Geom. Methods Mod. Phys. 8 (2011) 1869; arXiv: 1110.1176