Interior Schwarzschild metric

In Einstein's theory of general relativity, the interior Schwarzschild metric (also interior Schwarzschild solution or Schwarzschild fluid solution) is an exact solution for the gravitational field in the interior of a non-rotating spherical body which consists of an incompressible fluid (implying that density is constant throughout the body) and has zero pressure at the surface. This is a static solution, meaning that it does not change over time. It was discovered by Karl Schwarzschild in 1916, who earlier had found the exterior Schwarzschild metric.[1]

Mathematics

Spherical coordinates

The interior Schwarzschild metric is framed in a spherical coordinate system with the body's centre located at the origin, plus the time coordinate. Its line element is[2][3]

where

  • is the proper time (time measured by a clock moving along the same world line with the test particle).
  • is the speed of light.
  • is the time coordinate (measured by a stationary clock located infinitely far from the spherical body).
  • is the Schwarzschild radial coordinate. Each surface of constant and has the geometry of a sphere with measurable (proper) circumference and area (as by the usual formulas), but the warping of space means the proper distance from each shell to the center of the body is greater than .
  • is the colatitude (angle from north, in units of radians).
  • is the longitude (also in radians).
  • is the Schwarzschild radius of the body, which is related to its mass by , where is the gravitational constant. (For ordinary stars and planets, this is much less than their proper radius.)
  • is the value of the -coordinate at the body's surface. (This is less than its proper (measurable interior) radius, although for the Earth the difference is only about 1.4 millimetres.)

This solution is valid for . For a complete metric of the sphere's gravitational field, the interior Schwarzschild metric has to be matched with the exterior one,

at the surface. It can easily be seen that the two have the same value at the surface, i.e., at .

Other formulations

Defining a parameter , we get

We can also define an alternative radial coordinate and a corresponding parameter , yielding[4]

Properties

Volume

With and the area

the integral for the proper volume is

which is larger than the volume of a euclidean reference shell.

Density

The fluid has a constant density by definition. It is given by

where is the Einstein gravitational constant.[3][5] It may be counterintuitive that the density is the mass divided by the volume of a sphere with radius , which seems to disregard that this is less than the proper radius, and that space inside the body is curved so that the volume formula for a "flat" sphere shouldn't hold at all. However, is the mass measured from the outside, for example by observing a test particle orbiting the gravitating body (the "Kepler mass"), which in general relativity is not necessarily equal to the proper mass. This mass difference exactly cancels out the difference of the volumes.

Pressure and stability

The pressure of the incompressible fluid can be found by calculating the Einstein tensor from the metric. The Einstein tensor is diagonal (i.e., all off-diagonal elements are zero), meaning there are no shear stresses, and has equal values for the three spatial diagonal components, meaning pressure is isotropic. Its value is

As expected, the pressure is zero at the surface of the sphere and increases towards the centre. It becomes infinite at the centre if , which corresponds to or , which is true for a body that is extremely dense or large. Such a body suffers gravitational collapse into a black hole. As this is a time dependent process, the Schwarzschild solution does not hold any longer.[2][3]

Redshift

Gravitational redshift for radiation from the sphere's surface (for example, light from a star) is

From the stability condition follows .[3]

Visualization

Embedding of a Schwarzschild metric's slice in three-dimensional Euclidean space. The interior solution is the darker cap at the bottom.
This embedding should not be confused with the unrelated concept of a gravity well.

The spatial curvature of the interior Schwarzschild metric can be visualized by taking a slice (1) with constant time and (2) through the sphere's equator, i.e. . This two-dimensional slice can be embedded in a three-dimensional Euclidean space and then takes the shape of a spherical cap with radius and half opening angle . Its Gaussian curvature is proportional to the fluid's density and equals . As the exterior metric can be embedded in the same way (yielding Flamm's paraboloid), a slice of the complete solution can be drawn like this:[5][6]

In this graphic, the blue circular arc represents the interior metric, and the black parabolic arcs with the equation represent the exterior metric, or Flamm's paraboloid. The -coordinate is the angle measured from the centre of the cap, that is, from "above" the slice. The proper radius of the sphere – intuitively, the length of a measuring rod spanning from its centre to a point on its surface – is half the length of the circular arc, or .

This is a purely geometric visualization and does not imply a physical "fourth spatial dimension" into which space would be curved. (Intrinsic curvature does not imply extrinsic curvature.)

Examples

Here are the relevant parameters for some astronomical objects, disregarding rotation and inhomogeneities such as deviation from the spherical shape and variation in density.

Object (redshift)
Earth 6,370 km 8.87 mm 170,000,000 km
9.5 light-minutes
7.7 7×10−10
Sun 696,000 km 2.95 km 338,000,000 km
19 light-minutes
7.0′ 2×10−6
White dwarf with 1 solar mass 5000 km 2.95 km 200,000 km 1.4° 3×10−4
Neutron star with 2 solar masses 20 km 6 km 37 km 30° 0.15

History

The interior Schwarzschild solution was the first static spherically symmetric perfect fluid solution that was found. It was published on 24 February 1916, only three months after Einstein's field equations and one month after Schwarzschild's exterior solution.[1][2]

References

  1. ^ a b Karl Schwarzschild (1916). "Über das Gravitationsfeld eines Massenpunktes nach der Einsteinschen Theorie" [On the gravitational field of a point mass following Einstein's theory]. Sitzungsberichte der Königlich-Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften (in German). Berlin: 189–196. Bibcode:1916SPAW.......189S.
  2. ^ a b c Karl Schwarzschild (1916). "Über das Gravitationsfeld einer Kugel aus inkompressibler Flüssigkeit nach der Einsteinschen Theorie" [On the gravitational field of a ball of incompressible fluid following Einstein's theory]. Sitzungsberichte der Königlich-Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften (in German). Berlin: 424–434. Bibcode:1916skpa.conf..424S.
  3. ^ a b c d Torsten Fließbach (2003). Allgemeine Relativitätstheorie [General Theory of Relativity] (in German) (4th ed.). Spektrum Akademischer Verlag. pp. 231–241. ISBN 3-8274-1356-7.
  4. ^ R. Burghardt (2009). "Interior Schwarzschild Solution and Free Fall" (PDF). Austrian Reports on Gravitation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-03-05. Retrieved 2016-05-05.
  5. ^ a b P. S. Florides (1974). "A New Interior Schwarzschild Solution". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 337 (1611): 529–535. Bibcode:1974RSPSA.337..529F. doi:10.1098/rspa.1974.0065. JSTOR 78530. S2CID 122449954.
  6. ^ R. Burghardt (2009). "New Embedding of Schwarzschild Geometry. II. Interior Solution" (PDF). Austrian Reports on Gravitation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-05-08. Retrieved 2016-05-03.

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