The Ellis drainhole is the earliest-known complete mathematical model of a
traversable wormhole
A wormhole (Einstein-Rosen bridge) is a hypothetical structure connecting disparate points in spacetime, and is based on a special solution of the Einstein field equations.
A wormhole can be visualized as a tunnel with two ends at separate po ...
. It is a static,
spherically symmetric
In geometry, circular symmetry is a type of continuous symmetry for a planar object that can be rotated by any arbitrary angle and map onto itself.
Rotational circular symmetry is isomorphic with the circle group in the complex plane, or the ...
solution of the Einstein vacuum field equations augmented by inclusion of a scalar field
minimally coupled to the geometry of space-time with coupling polarity opposite to the orthodox polarity (negative instead of positive):
Overview
The solution was found in 1969 (date of first submission) by Homer G. Ellis,
[
] and independently around the same time by Kirill A. Bronnikov.
[
]
Bronnikov pointed out that a two-dimensional analog of the topology of the solution is a hyperboloid of one sheet, and that only use of the antiorthodox coupling polarity would allow a solution with such a topology. Ellis, whose motivation was to find a nonsingular replacement for the
Schwarzschild model of an elementary gravitating particle, showed that only the antiorthodox polarity would do, but found all the solutions for either polarity, as did Bronnikov. He studied the geometry of the solution manifold for the antiorthodox polarity in considerable depth and found it to be
* composed of two
asymptotically flat three-dimensional regions joined at a two-sphere (the 'drainhole'),
*
singularity-free,
* devoid of one-way
event horizons,
*
geodesically complete
* gravitationally attractive on one side of the drainhole and more strongly repulsive on the other,
* equipped with a timelike vector field he interpreted as the velocity field of an 'ether' flowing from
rest at infinity on the attractive side, down into the drainhole and out to infinity on the repulsive
side, 'creating' (or responding to) gravity by accelerating all the way, and
* traversable through the drainhole in either direction by
photon
A photon () is an elementary particle that is a quantum of the electromagnetic field, including electromagnetic radiation such as light and radio waves, and the force carrier for the electromagnetic force. Photons are Massless particle, massless ...
s and
test particle In physical theories, a test particle, or test charge, is an idealized model of an object whose physical properties (usually mass, charge, or size) are assumed to be negligible except for the property being studied, which is considered to be insu ...
s.
A paper by Chetouani and Clément gave the name "Ellis geometry" to the special case of a drainhole in which the ether is not flowing and there is no gravity, as did also a letter to an editor by Clément.
This special case is often referred to as the "
Ellis wormhole
The Ellis wormhole is the special case of the Ellis drainhole in which the 'ether' is not flowing and there is no gravity. What remains is a pure traversable wormhole comprising a pair of identical twin, nonflat, three-dimensional regions joined ...
". When the full-blown drainhole is considered in its role as the prototypical traversable wormhole, the name of Bronnikov is attached to it alongside that of Ellis.
The drainhole solution
Imagine two euclidean planes, one above the other. Pick two circles of the same radius, one above the other, and remove their interiors. Now
glue the exteriors together at the circles, bending the exteriors smoothly so that there is no sharp edge at the gluing. If done with care the result will be the
catenoid pictured at right, or something similar. Next, picture the whole connected upper and lower space filled with a fluid flowing with no swirling into the hole from above and out the lower side, gaining speed all the way and bending the lower region into a more conical shape than is seen in
If you imagine stepping this movie up from flat screen to 3D, replacing the planes by euclidean three-spaces and the circles by spheres, and think of the fluid as flowing from all directions into the hole from above, and out below with directions unchanged, you will have a pretty good idea of what a 'drainhole' is. The technical description of a drainhole as a space-time manifold is provided by the space-time metric published in 1973.
The drainhole metric solution as presented by Ellis in 1973 has the proper-time forms (with the presence of
made explicit)
where
and
The solution depends on two parameters,
and
, satisfying the inequalities
but otherwise unconstrained. In terms of these the functions
and
are given by
and
in which
The coordinate ranges are
(To facilitate comparison with the
Schwarzschild solution
In Einstein's theory of general relativity, the Schwarzschild metric (also known as the Schwarzschild solution) is an
exact solution to the Einstein field equations that describes the gravitational field outside a spherical mass, on the assumpt ...
,
of the original solution has been replaced by
)
Asymptotically, as
,
These show, upon comparison of the drainhole metric to the Schwarzschild metric
where, in partially (
)
geometrized units,
that the parameter
is the analog for the drainhole of the Schwarzschild mass parameter
.
On the other side, as
,
The graph of
below exhibits these asymptotics, as well as the fact that, corresponding to
(where the Schwarzschild metric has its notorious one-way event horizon separating the exterior, where
, from the black hole interior, where
),
attains at
a positive minimum value at which the 'upper' region (where
) opens out into a more spacious 'lower' region (where
).
The ether flow
The vector field
generates radial geodesics parametrized by proper time
, which agrees with coordinate time
along the geodesics.
As may be inferred from the graph of
, a test particle following one of these geodesics starts from rest at
falls downward toward the drainhole gaining speed all the way, passes through the drainhole and out into the lower region still gaining speed in the downward direction, and arrives at
with
The vector field in question is taken to be the velocity field of a more or less substantial 'ether' pervading all of space-time. This ether is in general "more than a mere inert medium for the propagation of electromagnetic waves; it is a restless, flowing continuum whose internal, relative motions manifest themselves to us as gravity. Mass particles appear as sources or sinks of this flowing ether."
For timelike geodesics in general the radial equation of motion is
One sees from this that
* it is the 'stretching' of the ether flow as measured by the term
that produces the downward pull of gravity,
* every test particle whose orbit dips as low as
will fall through the drainhole,
* there are test particles with enough angular speed
to balance the downward pull that their orbits (circular ones in particular) are confined to the part of the upper region where
,
* the downward pull produces in the upper region acceleration toward the drainhole, thus attractive gravity, but in the lower region acceleration away from the drainhole, thus repulsive gravity,
* the downward pull reaches its maximum where
is a minimum, namely, at the 'throat' of the drainhole where
, and
* if
a test particle can sit at rest (with
) anywhere in space. (This is the special case of the nongravitating drainhole known as the
Ellis wormhole
The Ellis wormhole is the special case of the Ellis drainhole in which the 'ether' is not flowing and there is no gravity. What remains is a pure traversable wormhole comprising a pair of identical twin, nonflat, three-dimensional regions joined ...
.)
Traversability
It is clear from the radial equation of motion that test particles starting from any point in the upper region with no radial velocity
(
) will, without sufficient angular velocity
, fall down through the drainhole and into the lower region. Not so clear but nonetheless true is that a test particle starting from a point in the lower region can with sufficient upward velocity pass through the drainhole and into the upper region. Thus the drainhole is 'traversable' by test particles in both directions. The same holds for photons.
A complete catalog of geodesics of the drainhole can be found in the Ellis paper.
Absence of horizons and singularities; geodesical completeness
For a metric of the general form of the drainhole metric, with
as the velocity field of a flowing ether, the coordinate velocities
of radial null
geodesics
In geometry, a geodesic () is a curve representing in some sense the shortest path ( arc) between two points in a surface, or more generally in a Riemannian manifold. The term also has meaning in any differentiable manifold with a connection. ...
are found to be
for light waves traveling against the ether flow, and
for light waves traveling with the flow. Wherever
, so that
, light waves struggling against the ether flow can gain ground. On the other hand, at places where
upstream light waves can at best hold their own (if
), or otherwise be swept downstream to wherever the ether is going (if
). (This situation is described in jest by: "People in light canoes should avoid ethereal rapids."
)
The latter situation is seen in the Schwarzschild metric, where
, which is
at the Schwarzschild event horizon where
, and less than
inside the horizon where
.
By contrast, in the drainhole
and
, for every value of
, so nowhere is there a horizon on one side of which light waves struggling against the ether flow cannot gain ground.
Because
*
and
are defined on the whole real line, and
*
is bounded away from
by
), and
*
is bounded away from
(by
),
the drainhole metric encompasses neither a 'coordinate singularity' where
nor a 'geometric singularity' where
, not even asymptotic ones. For the same reasons, every geodesic with an unbound orbit, and with some additional argument every geodesic with a bound orbit, has an affine parametrization whose parameter extends from
to
. The drainhole manifold is, therefore,
geodesically complete.
Strength of repulsion
As seen earlier, stretching of the ether flow produces in the upper region a downward acceleration
of test particles that, along with
as
, identifies
as the attractive gravitational mass of the nonlocalized drainhole particle. In the lower region the downward acceleration is formally the same, but because
is asymptotic to
rather than to
as
, one cannot infer that the repulsive gravitational mass of the drainhole particle is
.
To learn the repulsive mass of the drainhole requires finding an
isometry
In mathematics, an isometry (or congruence, or congruent transformation) is a distance-preserving transformation between metric spaces, usually assumed to be bijective. The word isometry is derived from the Ancient Greek: ἴσος ''isos'' mea ...
of the drainhole manifold that exchanges the upper and lower regions. Such an isometry can be described as follows: Let
denote the drainhole manifold whose parameters are
and
, and
denote the drainhole manifold whose parameters are
and
, where
and
The isometry identifies the point of
having coordinates