arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1108.5099 [math.DG]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Spacetimes with Singularities

Ovidiu Cristinel Stoica

Published 2011-08-25, updated 2013-01-21Version 4

We report on some advances made in the problem of singularities in general relativity. First is introduced the singular semi-Riemannian geometry for metrics which can change their signature (in particular be degenerate). The standard operations like covariant contraction, covariant derivative, and constructions like the Riemann curvature are usually prohibited by the fact that the metric is not invertible. The things become even worse at the points where the signature changes. We show that we can still do many of these operations, in a different framework which we propose. This allows the writing of an equivalent form of Einstein's equation, which works for degenerate metric too. Once we make the singularities manageable from mathematical viewpoint, we can extend analytically the black hole solutions and then choose from the maximal extensions globally hyperbolic regions. Then we find space-like foliations for these regions, with the implication that the initial data can be preserved in reasonable situations. We propose qualitative models of non-primordial and/or evaporating black holes. We supplement the material with a brief note reporting on progress made since this talk was given, which shows that we can analytically extend the Schwarzschild and Reissner-Nordstrom metrics at and beyond the singularities, and the singularities can be made degenerate and handled with the mathematical apparatus we developed.

Comments: 24 pages, 14 figures
Journal: An. St. Univ. Ovidius Constanta (2012) vol. 20(2), 213-238
Categories: math.DG, gr-qc, math-ph, math.MP
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1604.02009 [math.DG] (Published 2016-04-07)
Magnetic geodesics on surfaces with singularities
arXiv:2411.04829 [math.DG] (Published 2024-11-07)
An exploration of connections and curvature in the presence of singularities
arXiv:1210.6007 [math.DG] (Published 2012-10-22)
Mean curvature flow without singularities