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
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 ...
comprising a pair of identical twin, nonflat, three-dimensional regions joined at a two-sphere, the 'throat' of the wormhole. As seen in the image shown, two-dimensional equatorial cross sections of the wormhole are
catenoidal 'collars' that are asymptotically flat far from the throat. There being no gravity in force, an
inertial observer (
test particle) can sit forever at rest at any point in space, but if set in motion by some disturbance will follow a
geodesic
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. ...
of an equatorial cross section at constant speed, as would also a photon. This phenomenon shows that in space-time the curvature of space has nothing to do with gravity (the 'curvature of time’, one could say).
As a special case of the
Ellis drainhole, itself a 'traversable wormhole', the Ellis wormhole dates back to the drainhole's discovery in 1969 (date of first submission) by H. G. Ellis,
[
]
and independently at about the same time by K. A. Bronnikov.
Ellis and Bronnikov derived the original traversable wormhole as a solution of the Einstein
vacuum field equations
In the general theory of relativity, the Einstein field equations (EFE; also known as Einstein's equations) relate the geometry of spacetime to the distribution of matter within it.
The equations were published by Einstein in 1915 in the form ...
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).
Some years later M. S. Morris and
K. S. Thorne manufactured a duplicate of the Ellis wormhole to use as a tool for teaching general relativity,
asserting that existence of such a wormhole required the presence of 'negative energy', a viewpoint Ellis had considered and explicitly refused to accept, on the grounds that arguments for it were unpersuasive.
The wormhole solution
The wormhole metric has the proper-time form
:
where
:
and
is the drainhole parameter that survives after the parameter
of the Ellis drainhole solution is set to 0 to stop the ether flow and thereby eliminate gravity. If one goes further and sets
to 0, the metric becomes that of
Minkowski space-time, the flat space-time of the
special theory of relativity
In physics, the special theory of relativity, or special relativity for short, is a scientific theory regarding the relationship between space and time. In Albert Einstein's original treatment, the theory is based on two postulates:
# The laws o ...
.
In Minkowski space-time every timelike and every lightlike (null) geodesic is a straight 'world line' that projects onto a straight-line geodesic of an equatorial cross section of a time slice of constant
as, for example, the one on which
and
, the metric of which is that of euclidean two-space in polar coordinates