The optical metric was defined by German theoretical physicist
Walter Gordon in 1923 to study the
geometrical optics in
curved space-time
General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity and Einstein's theory of gravity, is the differential geometry, geometric scientific theory, theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current descr ...
filled with moving dielectric materials.
Let be the normalized (covariant)
4-velocity of the arbitrarily-moving dielectric medium filling the space-time, and assume that the fluid’s electromagnetic properties are linear, isotropic, transparent, nondispersive, and can be summarized by two scalar functions: a
dielectric permittivity and a
magnetic permeability
In electromagnetism, permeability is the measure of magnetization that a material obtains in response to an applied magnetic field. Permeability is typically represented by the (italicized) Greek letter ''μ''. The term was coined by William ...
.
Then the optical metric tensor is defined as
:
where
is the physical
metric tensor
In the mathematical field of differential geometry, a metric tensor (or simply metric) is an additional structure on a manifold (such as a surface) that allows defining distances and angles, just as the inner product on a Euclidean space allows ...
. The sign of
is determined by the
metric signature convention used:
is replaced with a plus sign (+) for a
metric signature (-,+,+,+), while a minus sign (-) is chosen for (+,-,-,-).
The inverse (contravariant) optical metric tensor is
:
where is the contravariant 4-velocity of the moving fluid.
Note that the traditional
refractive index is defined as .
Properties
An important fact about Gordon's optical metric is that in curved space-time filled with dielectric material, electromagnetic waves (under geometrical optics approximation) follows geodesics of the optical metric instead of the physical metric.
Consequently, the study of geometric optics in curved space-time with dielectric material can sometimes be simplified by using optical metric (note that the dynamics of the physical system is still described by the physical metric).
For example, optical metric can be used to study the
radiative transfer in stellar atmospheres around compact astrophysical objects such as neutron stars and white dwarfs, and in accretion disks around black holes.
In cosmology, optical metric can be used to study the distance-redshift relation in cosmological models in which the intergalactic or interstellar medium have a non-vanishing refraction index.
History
After the original introduction of the concept of optical metric by Gordon in 1923, the mathematical formalism of optical metric was further investigated by
Jürgen Ehlers in 1967 including a detailed discussion of the geometrical optical approximation in curved space-time and the
optical scalars In general relativity, optical scalars refer to a set of three scalar functions \ describing the propagation of a geodesic null congruence.Eric Poisson. ''A Relativist's Toolkit: The Mathematics of Black-Hole Mechanics''. Cambridge: Cambridge Unive ...
transport equation.
Gordon's optical metric was extended by Bin Chen and
Ronald Kantowski
Ronald Kantowski (18 December 1939) is a theoretical cosmologist, well known in the field of general relativity as the author, together with Rainer K. Sachs, of the Kantowski–Sachs dust solutions to the Einstein field equation. These are a widel ...
to include light absorption.
The original ''real'' optical metric was consequently extended into a ''complex'' one. The optical metric was further generalized by Robert Thompson
from simple isotropic media described only by scalar-valued and to bianisotropic, magnetoelectrically coupled media residing in curved background space-times.
Applications
The first application of Gordon's optical metric theory to cosmology was also made by Bin Chen and Ronald Kantowski.
The absorption corrected distance-redshift relation in the homogeneous and isotropic Friedman-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker
(FLRW) universe is called Gordon-Chen-Kantowski formalism and can be used to study the absorption of intergalactic medium (or cosmic opacity) in the Universe.
For example, the physical metric for a Robertson-Walker spacetime can be written (using the metric signature (-,+,+,+))
:
where
for a closed, flat, or open universe, and
is the
scale factor.
On the other hand, the optical metric for Robertson-Walker Universe filled with rest homogeneous refraction material is
:
where
the cosmic-time dependent refraction index.
The
luminosity distance-
redshift
In physics, a redshift is an increase in the wavelength, and corresponding decrease in the frequency and photon energy, of electromagnetic radiation (such as light). The opposite change, a decrease in wavelength and simultaneous increase in f ...
relation in a Flat FLRW universe with dark absorption can be written
:
where is the cosmological redshift, is the light speed, the
Hubble Constant, is the optical depth caused by absorption (or the so-called cosmic opacity), and is the dimensionless Hubble curve.
A non-zero cosmic opacity will render the standard candles such as Type Ia supernovae appear dimmer than expected from a transparent Universe.
This can be used as an alternative explanation of the observed apparent acceleration of the cosmic expansion.
Analogue gravity
In
analog models of gravity, the "Gordon form" expresses the metric for a curved spacetime as the sum of a flat (Minkowski) metric and a 4-velocity field u:
:
where n is the refractive index. This is analogous to Kerr-Schild form, which uses a null vector field in place of timelike. An open question is which spacetimes can be expressed in this way. The challenge is to pick coordinate systems for which the above relationship holds.
Schwarzschild spacetime
Schwarzschild () is a German surnameIt is likely to be misspelled and/or mispronounced by native English speakers, particularly involving failure to grasp that
* German ''sch'' (at the beginning of ''each'' of the two syllables) is pronounced as E ...
, which describes a non-rotating black hole, can be expressed this way. There has been progress for
Kerr spacetime which describes a rotating black hole, but this case remains elusive.
Electrodynamics in media residing in curved space-times
The dielectric permittivity and magnetic permeability are usually understood within the 3-vector representation of electrodynamics via the relations
and
where
and
are, respectively, the
electric field
An electric field (sometimes E-field) is the physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles and exerts force on all other charged particles in the field, either attracting or repelling them. It also refers to the physical field fo ...
,
magnetic flux density,
electric displacement
In physics, the electric displacement field (denoted by D) or electric induction is a vector field that appears in Maxwell's equations. It accounts for the effects of free and bound charge within materials. "D" stands for "displacement", as in ...
, and
magnetic field intensity, and where and could be matrices. On the other hand, general relativity is formulated in the language of 4-dimensional tensors. To obtain the tensorial optical metric, medium properties such as permittivity, permeability, and
magnetoelectric couplings must first be promoted to 4-dimensional covariant tensors, and the electrodynamics of light propagation through such media residing within a background space-time must also be expressed in a compatible 4-dimensional way. Here, electrodynamic fields will be described in terms of
differential form
In mathematics, differential forms provide a unified approach to define integrands over curves, surfaces, solids, and higher-dimensional manifolds. The modern notion of differential forms was pioneered by Élie Cartan. It has many applications, ...
s,
exterior algebra, and the
exterior derivative
On a differentiable manifold, the exterior derivative extends the concept of the differential of a function to differential forms of higher degree. The exterior derivative was first described in its current form by Élie Cartan in 1899. The res ...
. Similar to the way that 3-vectors are denoted with an arrow, as in
4-dimensional tensors will be denoted by bold symbols, for example
The
musical isomorphism
In mathematics—more specifically, in differential geometry—the musical isomorphism (or canonical isomorphism) is an isomorphism between the tangent bundle \mathrmM and the cotangent bundle \mathrm^* M of a pseudo-Riemannian manifold induced by ...
s will be used to indicate raising and lowering of indices with the metric, and a dot notation is used to denote contraction on adjacent indices, e.g.
The speed of light is set to
and the vacuum permeability and permittivity are likewise set to 1.
The fundamental quantity of electrodynamics is the potential 1-form
from which the field strength tensor is the 2-form
From the nilpotency of the exterior derivative one immediately has the homogeneous Maxwell equations
while a variation of the Yang-Mills action
with respect to
provides the inhomogeneous Maxwell equations
where
is the charge-current 3-form. Within dielectric media there exist charges bound up in otherwise neutral atoms. These charges are not free to move around very much, but distortions to the distribution of charge within the atom can allow dipole (or more generally multipole) moments to form, with which is associated a dipole field. Separating bound and free charges in the charge-current three form
the bound source is associated with a particular solution called the polarization field
satisfying
One may then write
with the
constitutive equation In linear media, the dipole moment is induced by the incident free field in such a way that the polarization field is linearly proportional to the free field,
(in indices this is
). Then the constitutive equation can be written
The
tensor
is antisymmetric in each pair of indices, and the vacuum is seen to be a trivial dielectric such that
This means that the distribution of dielectric material within the curved background space-time can be completely described functionally by giving
and smooth transitions from vacuum into media can be described.
The electric and magnetic fields
and
as they are commonly understood in the 3-vector representation, have no independent existence. They are merely different parts of the 2-forms
and
as measured relative to a chosen observer. Let
be the contravariant velocity 4-vector of the observer. Then one may define the covariant 1-forms
The corresponding 3-vectors are obtained in Minkowski space-time by taking the purely spatial (relative to the observer) parts of the contravariant versions of these 1-forms. These 1-form field definitions can be used to re-express the 2-form constitutive equation to a set of two 1-form equations
where the
tensors
and
are
Note that each of these tensors is orthogonal, or transverse, to
meaning that
for each
, which can be seen from the antisymmetry of
on each pair of indices. Since each of the 1-form fields defined above is also transverse to
we may conclude that each
is an automorphism of a subspace of the cotangent space defined by orthogonality with respect to the observer. In other words, everything operates in the observer's purely spatial 3-dimensional space. In terms of these parameters,
is found to be
Although the set of 1-form constitutive equations shown above are the ones that follow most naturally from the covariant 2-form constitutive equation
, they are not the only possibility. Indeed, the traditional 3-vector formulation of the constitutive equations usually relates
and
by
. Therefore, it could be desirable to rearrange the preceding set of relations into
where
are related to
by
The 4-dimensional inverse of these tensors does not exist, but the bar notation
denotes an inverse defined with respect to the subspace orthogonal to
which exists and is a valid operation since it was noted above that
is an automorphism of this subspace. In Minkowski space-time, the space-space part (relative to observer
) of each of these tensors is equivalent to the traditional
constitutive matrices of 3-vector electrodynamics. In terms of this alternative set of constitutive tensors,
is found to be
Here,
is a projection operator that annihilates any tensor components parallel to
Since
then
also serves as the
Kronecker delta on the subspace orthogonal to
In the vacuum,
Geometric optics and the optical metric
For light propagating through linear dielectric media, Maxewell's inhomogeneous equation in the absence of free sources represents a wave equation for
in the
Lorenz gauge
In electromagnetism, the Lorenz gauge condition or Lorenz gauge, for Ludvig Lorenz, is a partial gauge fixing of the electromagnetic vector potential by requiring \partial_\mu A^\mu = 0. The name is frequently confused with Hendrik Lorentz, who ha ...
,
(here
is the
codifferential
In mathematics, the Hodge star operator or Hodge star is a linear map defined on the exterior algebra of a finite-dimensional oriented vector space endowed with a nondegenerate symmetric bilinear form. Applying the operator to an element of the al ...
), given by
A JWKB type approximation of plane wave solutions is assumed such that
where the amplitude
is assumed to be slowly varying compared to the phase function
Plugging this approximate solution into the wave equation, and retaining only the leading order terms in the limit
leads to
where
The existence of a solution to this equation requires
In fact, this determinant condition is satisfied identically because the antisymmetry in the second pair of indices on
shows that
is already a trivial solution. Therefore, any non-trivial solutions must reside in the 3-dimensional subspace orthogonal to
so the tensor
is effectively only 3-dimensional. Thus, the determinant condition is insufficient to provide any information. However, the classical
adjugate of a matrix
is related to its determinant by
. Since in this case
but
is arbitrary, one obtains the secondary condition
Notice that the adjugate of a matrix is still a matrix, so the scalar determinant condition has now been replaced by a matrix condition. This would appear to add a great deal of complexity to the problem, but it has been shown
that this adjugate has the form
where
is a fourth order polynomial in
The vanishing condition on the adjugate matrix is therefore equivalent to the scalar condition
The goal now is to demonstrate that the polynomial
takes the form
Then the condition
is satisfied by either of
(written with indices,
). What has been shown so far is that wave solutions of Maxwell's equations, in the ray limit, must satisfy one of these two polynomial conditions. The tensors
therefore determine the lightcone structures. The fact that there are two of them implies a double light cone structure - one for each of the two polarization states, i.e. birefringence. In vacuum, it is readily found that
degenerates to the space-time metric. Since the
determine the lightcones in media in the way that
does for the vacuum, they are referred to as optical metrics. However, it is perhaps more appropriate to take the point of view that the space-time metric happens to also serve as the optical metric in vacuum,
which is not so surprising considering that the space-time metric is the only available structure in vacuum.
So far, no assumptions have been imposed on the form of
or
so there are currently 36 freely specifiable parameters. To determine the optical metrics, Thompson imposes the conditions that
and
are antisymmetric with respect to
(i.e. antisymmetric when the indices on
and
are either both up or both down). The antisymmetry condition allows them to be written in the forms
With this restriction, it is found that
is
biquadratic in
and can be factored to
where
with
Finally, the optical metrics correspond to
The presence of the square root in
and consequently in
shows that the birefringent optical metrics are of the pseudo-Finslerian type. A key feature here is that the optical metric is not only a function of position, but also retains a dependency on
. These pseudo-Finslerian optical metrics degenerate to a common, non-birefringent, pseudo-Riemannian optical metric for media that obey a curved space-time generalization of the Post conditions.
References
{{reflist
Effects of gravitation
Spacetime
Gravitational lensing
Theory of relativity