37 research outputs found

    Well-posed forms of the 3+1 conformally-decomposed Einstein equations

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    We show that well-posed, conformally-decomposed formulations of the 3+1 Einstein equations can be obtained by densitizing the lapse and by combining the constraints with the evolution equations. We compute the characteristics structure and verify the constraint propagation of these new well-posed formulations. In these formulations, the trace of the extrinsic curvature and the determinant of the 3-metric are singled out from the rest of the dynamical variables, but are evolved as part of the well-posed evolution system. The only free functions are the lapse density and the shift vector. We find that there is a 3-parameter freedom in formulating these equations in a well-posed manner, and that part of the parameter space found consists of formulations with causal characteristics, namely, characteristics that lie only within the lightcone. In particular there is a 1-parameter family of systems whose characteristics are either normal to the slicing or lie along the lightcone of the evolving metric.Comment: 22 page

    Einstein's Equations with Asymptotically Stable Constraint Propagation

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    We introduce a proposal to modify Einstein's equations by embedding them in a larger symmetric hyperbolic system. The additional dynamical variables of the modified system are essentially first integrals of the original constraints. The extended system of equations reproduces the usual dynamics on the constraint surface of general relativity, and therefore naturally includes the solutions to Einstein gravity. The main feature of this extended system is that, at least for a linearized version of it, the constraint surface is an attractor of the time evolution. This feature suggests that this system may be a useful alternative to Einstein's equations when obtaining numerical solutions to full, non-linear gravity.Comment: 23 pages, submitted to JMP, added reference for section

    Stability of quasi-linear hyperbolic dissipative systems

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    In this work we want to explore the relationship between certain eigenvalue condition for the symbols of first order partial differential operators describing evolution processes and the linear and nonlinear stability of their stationary solutions.Comment: 16 pages, Te

    Fast and Slow solutions in General Relativity: The Initialization Procedure

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    We apply recent results in the theory of PDE, specifically in problems with two different time scales, on Einstein's equations near their Newtonian limit. The results imply a justification to Postnewtonian approximations when initialization procedures to different orders are made on the initial data. We determine up to what order initialization is needed in order to detect the contribution to the quadrupole moment due to the slow motion of a massive body as distinct from initial data contributions to fast solutions and prove that such initialization is compatible with the constraint equations. Using the results mentioned the first Postnewtonian equations and their solutions in terms of Green functions are presented in order to indicate how to proceed in calculations with this approach.Comment: 14 pages, Late

    Global existence and exponential decay for hyperbolic dissipative relativistic fluid theories

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    We consider dissipative relativistic fluid theories on a fixed flat, compact, globally hyperbolic, Lorentzian manifold. We prove that for all initial data in a small enough neighborhood of the equilibrium states (in an appropriate Sobolev norm), the solutions evolve smoothly in time forever and decay exponentially to some, in general undetermined, equilibrium state. To prove this, three conditions are imposed on these theories. The first condition requires the system of equations to be symmetric hyperbolic, a fundamental requisite to have a well posed and physically consistent initial value formulation. The second condition is a generic consequence of the entropy law, and is imposed on the non principal part of the equations. The third condition is imposed on the principal part of the equations and it implies that the dissipation affects all the fields of the theory. With these requirements we prove that all the eigenvalues of the symbol associated to the system of equations of the fluid theory have strictly negative real parts, which in fact, is an alternative characterization for the theory to be totally dissipative. Once this result has been obtained, a straight forward application of a general stability theorem due to Kreiss, Ortiz, and Reula, implies the results above mentioned.Comment: 10 pages, Late
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