19 research outputs found
The Simplicial Ricci Tensor
The Ricci tensor (Ric) is fundamental to Einstein's geometric theory of
gravitation. The 3-dimensional Ric of a spacelike surface vanishes at the
moment of time symmetry for vacuum spacetimes. The 4-dimensional Ric is the
Einstein tensor for such spacetimes. More recently the Ric was used by Hamilton
to define a non-linear, diffusive Ricci flow (RF) that was fundamental to
Perelman's proof of the Poincare conjecture. Analytic applications of RF can be
found in many fields including general relativity and mathematics. Numerically
it has been applied broadly to communication networks, medical physics,
computer design and more. In this paper, we use Regge calculus (RC) to provide
the first geometric discretization of the Ric. This result is fundamental for
higher-dimensional generalizations of discrete RF. We construct this tensor on
both the simplicial lattice and its dual and prove their equivalence. We show
that the Ric is an edge-based weighted average of deficit divided by an
edge-based weighted average of dual area -- an expression similar to the
vertex-based weighted average of the scalar curvature reported recently. We use
this Ric in a third and independent geometric derivation of the RC Einstein
tensor in arbitrary dimension.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figure
A scalar field condensation instability of rotating anti-de Sitter black holes
Near-extreme Reissner-Nordstrom-anti-de Sitter black holes are unstable
against the condensation of an uncharged scalar field with mass close to the
Breitenlohner-Freedman bound. It is shown that a similar instability afflicts
near-extreme large rotating AdS black holes, and near-extreme hyperbolic
Schwarzschild-AdS black holes. The resulting nonlinear hairy black hole
solutions are determined numerically. Some stability results for (possibly
charged) scalar fields in black hole backgrounds are proved. For most of the
extreme black holes we consider, these demonstrate stability if the ``effective
mass" respects the near-horizon BF bound. Small spherical
Reissner-Nordstrom-AdS black holes are an interesting exception to this result.Comment: 34 pages; 13 figure
A proof of the Geroch-Horowitz-Penrose formulation of the strong cosmic censor conjecture motivated by computability theory
In this paper we present a proof of a mathematical version of the strong
cosmic censor conjecture attributed to Geroch-Horowitz and Penrose but
formulated explicitly by Wald. The proof is based on the existence of
future-inextendible causal curves in causal pasts of events on the future
Cauchy horizon in a non-globally hyperbolic space-time. By examining explicit
non-globally hyperbolic space-times we find that in case of several physically
relevant solutions these future-inextendible curves have in fact infinite
length. This way we recognize a close relationship between asymptotically flat
or anti-de Sitter, physically relevant extendible space-times and the so-called
Malament-Hogarth space-times which play a central role in recent investigations
in the theory of "gravitational computers". This motivates us to exhibit a more
sharp, more geometric formulation of the strong cosmic censor conjecture,
namely "all physically relevant, asymptotically flat or anti-de Sitter but
non-globally hyperbolic space-times are Malament-Hogarth ones".
Our observations may indicate a natural but hidden connection between the
strong cosmic censorship scenario and the Church-Turing thesis revealing an
unexpected conceptual depth beneath both conjectures.Comment: 16pp, LaTeX, no figures. Final published versio
Ricci solitons, Ricci flow, and strongly coupled CFT in the Schwarzschild Unruh or Boulware vacua
The elliptic Einstein-DeTurck equation may be used to numerically find
Einstein metrics on Riemannian manifolds. Static Lorentzian Einstein metrics
are considered by analytically continuing to Euclidean time. Ricci-DeTurck flow
is a constructive algorithm to solve this equation, and is simple to implement
when the solution is a stable fixed point, the only complication being that
Ricci solitons may exist which are not Einstein. Here we extend previous work
to consider the Einstein-DeTurck equation for Riemannian manifolds with
boundaries, and those that continue to static Lorentzian spacetimes which are
asymptotically flat, Kaluza-Klein, locally AdS or have extremal horizons. Using
a maximum principle we prove that Ricci solitons do not exist in these cases
and so any solution is Einstein. We also argue that Ricci-DeTurck flow
preserves these classes of manifolds. As an example we simulate Ricci-DeTurck
flow for a manifold with asymptotics relevant for AdS_5/CFT_4. Our maximum
principle dictates there are no soliton solutions, and we give strong numerical
evidence that there exists a stable fixed point of the flow which continues to
a smooth static Lorentzian Einstein metric. Our asymptotics are such that this
describes the classical gravity dual relevant for the CFT on a Schwarzschild
background in either the Unruh or Boulware vacua. It determines the leading
O(N^2) part of the CFT stress tensor, which interestingly is regular on both
the future and past Schwarzschild horizons.Comment: 48 pages, 7 figures; Version 2 - section 2.2.1 on manifolds with
boundaries substantially modified, corrected and extended. Discussion in
section 3.1 amended. References added and minor change