2 research outputs found
Causal symmetries
Based on the recent work \cite{PII} we put forward a new type of
transformation for Lorentzian manifolds characterized by mapping every causal
future-directed vector onto a causal future-directed vector. The set of all
such transformations, which we call causal symmetries, has the structure of a
submonoid which contains as its maximal subgroup the set of conformal
transformations. We find the necessary and sufficient conditions for a vector
field \xiv to be the infinitesimal generator of a one-parameter submonoid of
pure causal symmetries. We speculate about possible applications to gravitation
theory by means of some relevant examples.Comment: LaTeX2e file with CQG templates. 8 pages and no figures. Submitted to
Classical and Quantum gravit
Causal Relationship: a new tool for the causal characterization of Lorentzian manifolds
We define and study a new kind of relation between two diffeomorphic
Lorentzian manifolds called {\em causal relation}, which is any diffeomorphism
characterized by mapping every causal vector of the first manifold onto a
causal vector of the second. We perform a thorough study of the mathematical
properties of causal relations and prove in particular that two given
Lorentzian manifolds (say and ) may be causally related only in one
direction (say from to , but not from to ). This leads us to the
concept of causally equivalent (or {\em isocausal} in short) Lorentzian
manifolds as those mutually causally related. This concept is more general and
of a more basic nature than the conformal relationship, because we prove the
remarkable result that a conformal relation \f is characterized by the fact
of being a causal relation of the {\em particular} kind in which both \f and
\f^{-1} are causal relations. For isocausal Lorentzian manifolds there are
one-to-one correspondences, which sometimes are non-trivial, between several
classes of their respective future (and past) objects. A more important feature
of isocausal Lorentzian manifolds is that they satisfy the same causality
constraints. This indicates that the causal equivalence provides a possible
characterization of the {\it basic causal structure}, in the sense of mutual
causal compatibility, for Lorentzian manifolds. Thus, we introduce a partial
order for the equivalence classes of isocausal Lorentzian manifolds providing a
classification of spacetimes in terms of their causal properties, and a
classification of all the causal structures that a given fixed manifold can
have. A full abstract inside the paper.Comment: 47 pages, 10 figures. Version to appear in Classical and Quantum
Gravit