Brought to you by:

A rigorous derivation of gravitational self-force

and

Published 30 September 2008 2008 IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation Samuel E Gralla and Robert M Wald 2008 Class. Quantum Grav. 25 205009 DOI 10.1088/0264-9381/25/20/205009

This article is corrected by 2011 Class. Quantum Grav. 28 159501

0264-9381/25/20/205009

Abstract

There is general agreement that the MiSaTaQuWa equations should describe the motion of a 'small body' in general relativity, taking into account the leading order self-force effects. However, previous derivations of these equations have made a number of ad hoc assumptions and/or contain a number of unsatisfactory features. For example, all previous derivations have invoked, without proper justification, the step of 'Lorenz gauge relaxation', wherein the linearized Einstein equation is written in the form appropriate to the Lorenz gauge, but the Lorenz gauge condition is then not imposed—thereby making the resulting equations for the metric perturbation inequivalent to the linearized Einstein equations. (Such a 'relaxation' of the linearized Einstein equations is essential in order to avoid the conclusion that 'point particles' move on geodesics.) In this paper, we analyze the issue of 'particle motion' in general relativity in a systematic and rigorous way by considering a one-parameter family of metrics, gab(λ), corresponding to having a body (or black hole) that is 'scaled down' to zero size and mass in an appropriate manner. We prove that the limiting worldline of such a one-parameter family must be a geodesic of the background metric, gab(λ = 0). Gravitational self-force—as well as the force due to coupling of the spin of the body to curvature—then arises as a first-order perturbative correction in λ to this worldline. No assumptions are made in our analysis apart from the smoothness and limit properties of the one-parameter family of metrics, gab(λ). Our approach should provide a framework for systematically calculating higher order corrections to gravitational self-force, including higher multipole effects, although we do not attempt to go beyond first-order calculations here. The status of the MiSaTaQuWa equations is explained.

Export citation and abstract BibTeX RIS

Please wait… references are loading.
10.1088/0264-9381/25/20/205009