1. Introduction
Over the previous century, a vast number of solutions of Einstein’s field equations have been discovered [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7]. During this same period, however, a much smaller number of agreed-upon physical interpretations of these solutions have been established [
8,
9,
10,
11,
12]. Some spacetime solutions have clear interpretations: there is a consensus, for example, that certain metrics describe black holes, gravitational waves, and cosmologies, but other solutions have much more mysterious origins—some can be interpreted as describing
local regions of realistic spacetimes, some indeed have multiple feasible readings, and others currently have none at all [
8]. Dealing with the protean nature of solutions, a by-product of the general covariance of the field equations, can require subtle methods such as obscure coordinate transformations [
13].
Hidden within the structure of general relativity, there are doubtless undiscovered solutions describing novel spacetime configurations with relevance and importance today. It is nevertheless arguable that the immediate task is to interpret those solutions that have already been found through many years of great effort [
1,
2,
8]. It is a pressing task then, as it has been since the early days of general relativity, to find reasonable and useful interpretations of all its solutions and to reassess those with doubtful features.
In this paper, we make a contribution to this task by presenting a new interpretation of a class of solutions known as the
-metrics [
2,
8]. Previous explanations of the physics described by these solutions contain questionable properties, including fine-tuned parameters [
8]. We argue that our new interpretation is by far the most natural yet suggested, relating as it does to a local region of the Schwarzschild solution with finite mass parameter. Our result is found using only simple mathematical analysis.
The
-metrics are a subclass of the more general
A-metrics family, the latter classified by Ehlers and Kundt in 1962 [
2]. Each subclass of the
A-metrics family is characterized by a 2-space curvature parameter. Depending on the choice of this parameter, one finds the well-known Schwarzschild solution (
), a solution with a negative-Gaussian-curvature hypersurface (
), capable of describing the gravitational field produced by a tachyon [
14], or the
-metrics; in this paper, we focus purely on the final subclass, as the different interpretations and geometrical features present (including a curvature singularity) in these vacuum solutions make them an interesting topic of study.
As has been previously stated [
8], “most solutions of Einstein’s equations may have no satisfactory interpretation as global models of realistic physical situations at all. On the other hand, locally, many may reasonably represent particular regions of realistic space-times”. Consistent with this point of view, it is local spacetime regions that are the focus of this paper.
In
Section 2, we present our results reinterpreting the
-metrics as local regions of Schwarzschild spacetime.
Section 3 contains a critical survey of previous readings of the
-metrics, putting forward the case that ours is the most natural, avoiding as it does characteristics that render other interpretations unphysical or obscure.
Section 4 contains a summary of the paper. Several appendices contain useful coordinate transformations, a discussion of how the Kasner metric relates to the physics inside a black hole, and a description of the geometry connected with our results.
2. Results
The family of vacuum spacetimes known as the
A-metrics will be the focus of this work and is given by [
2,
8]
These are a rich and intriguing generalisation of the Schwarzschild solution, describing different spacetimes depending on the value of parameter
(which can be
,
or 0); fixing the value of
determines the Gaussian curvature of the hypersurface on which
t and
r are constant. Setting
produces the
-metric, i.e., the Schwarzschild solution.
M is an arbitrary, continuous parameter and
is the complex conjugate of
. Relevant coordinate ranges will be discussed below.
In this paper, we restrict our attention to the
AIII-metrics, which emerge setting
in Equation (
1). Performing the coordinate transformation
with
then gives
Due to the curvature singularity at
, it is appropriate to constrain the value of the coordinate as
. The line element (
2) has been interpreted in various different ways in the literature, as will be discussed in detail in
Section 3.
When
M is positive and finite, Equation (
2) describes the polar spacetime deep within a Schwarzschild black hole of finite positive mass. What has not been noted before, is that when
M is
negative and finite, metric (
2) describes the small-
r, polar region of negative-finite-mass Schwarzschild spacetime. By “polar spacetime” we mean that the spacetime is restricted to
, where
is the polar angle of the Schwarzschild coordinate system (see below), and “deep within” a Schwarzschild black hole denotes
, where
r is the radial Schwarzschild coordinate. Note that the negative-mass case has no event horizon and by “small-
r” we signify
, with
the characteristic length scale of the system. As there is no horizon for the negative-mass Schwarzschild spacetime, it contains a naked singularity; for a discussion of the physical feasibility of this configuration, see Ref. [
15] and references therein. See Ref. [
16] for a recent study of the possible role of negative mass in cosmology.
For the rest of this paper, we refer to the zone , as the “deep-radial region”.
New derivations supporting the above statements are now given. Starting from the Schwarzschild solution with
[
5],
and taking the limits
and
, one can see that the term
can be approximated by
and that
. Because
, we discard the
term in the Taylor series of
, leading to the metric
In general relativity, the coordinates have no intrinsic physical meaning and must be interpreted [
3]. We are therefore free to interpret
in Equation (
4) as a dimensionless radial coordinate, which, together with azimuth
, defines a two-dimensional polar coordinate system. This coordinate reinterpretation after taking the limits
and
above is natural, as the line element section
from (
4) is intrinsically flat. A relabelling
in (
4) yields the
-metric (
2) with
. The
t coordinate spans the real line.
In case the reinterpretation of coordinates above seems obscure, all we have done is to approximate the surface of a two-sphere as
locally Euclidean (when
holds). We are free to do this as the two-sphere
is a manifold and so, by definition, locally “looks like”
[
5]. If one chose to, one could “sew together” these pieces which locally resemble
in order to reconstruct
[
4]. Each of us unconsciously makes this approximation every day—the Earth appears locally flat as one walks on its surface even though it is of course globally (roughly) spherical.
An important point concerning the
constraint is that it does not pick out any special pole in Schwarzschild spacetime, thereby breaking the solution’s spherical symmetry [
17]. The choice of the origin of the
coordinate is arbitrary (in other words, there is no “north pole” of a Schwarzschild black hole) and fixing
simply restricts the geometry to a thin cone of the spacetime, centered around any radial line. The additional constraint
then “places” this cone behind the horizon. Note that the coordinate
r is
timelike in the deep-radial region for
and this must be kept in mind when visualizing the spacetime. See
Appendix A for details.
The -metric with can thus be interpreted as a local description of Schwarzschild spacetime in the limits and , using a simple approximation.
The preceding analysis held for
. In the case of the Schwarzschild solution with negative mass
, the metric can be written as
Taking the limits
and
, the term
can be approximated by
, giving
Substituting
into metric (
6) and relabeling
as before then yields
Metrics (
4) and (
7) are therefore just the positive- and negative-“mass” branches of the
-metrics (
2). An equivalent mathematical viewpoint is that instead of looking at the
-metrics for
and
separately, both having coordinate range
, one can fix
M as positive and expand the radial domain to
and
; this was also noted in Ref. [
18]. Whether this has any physical significance is unknown to the authors. See Ref. [
19] for a recent exploration of the interplay between the sign of the Schwarzschild mass and the choice of coordinate ranges.
The coordinate domain of
is the same throughout:
. Of course, due to the domain constraints introduced, in Equation (
2) the upper limit of the
coordinate must be restricted to a small, finite number
, i.e.,
, and the
r coordinate has to obey
.
Another way to compare geometries is via the use of curvature invariants. The following scalar invariants, defined using the metric tensor, are equal for both the (
)
- and Schwarzschild metrics: the Ricci scalar (
) and Kretschmann scalar (
) [
5,
20]. Another invariant, the Karlhede scalar
[
21,
22], differs globally over
r: for Schwarzschild spacetime,
, whereas for the
class of solutions,
. It is clear however that in the limit
the Karlhede scalars approximately match, as expected. The matching becomes closer as the singularity is approached. This argument can be easily adapted to the
case, showing a matching there too.
3. Discussion
There exist in the literature several different interpretations of the -metrics, with various properties. We introduce and discuss them in this section, comparing them critically with ours.
Applying a simple coordinate transformation to the
-metric (
2) for the case
demonstrates that it is the type D vacuum Kasner solution [
8] (for more details on this metric, and the vacuum Bianchi I class of solutions to which it belongs, see Refs. [
13,
23,
24,
25]). This solution can be interpreted as a description of a certain anisotropic cosmology beginning with a (spacelike) big bang-type singularity [
8] (note that the cosmological model discussed here is a vacuum solution; other well-known cosmological solutions of general relativity, such as the Friedmann-Lemaître-Robertson-Walker spacetimes, have instead a perfect-fluid source [
5]).
This “cosmological picture”, as we refer to it from here on, does not clash with the interpretation of the Kasner solution as a description of the deep-radial region of a Schwarzschild black hole. Both are valid, as we now show (for earlier discussions of the link between the Kasner and Schwarzschild solutions, see, e.g., Refs. [
26,
27,
28,
29,
30]).
Performing the aforementioned coordinate transformation (see
Appendix B for details) on the
-metric (
2) yields the line element
The cosmological picture asserts that the type D vacuum Kasner solution describes a spacetime originating in a spacelike singularity at the origin
[equivalent to
in Equation (
2)]. The coordinate origin
is also a spacelike singularity in Schwarzschild spacetime, hence both interpretations account for this feature. The similar presence of essential singularities in the Kasner and Schwarzschild solutions was noted by Aichelburg in Ref. [
31].
The fact that the coordinate
t is spacelike and
r is timelike for the
-metric (
2) with
is interpreted in the cosmological picture by treating
r as related to a global time coordinate [i.e.,
in Equation (
8)] characterising the evolution of the spacetime, and by taking
t as proportional to a spatial dimension [i.e.,
z in Equation (
8)]. The deep-radial interpretation also explains these features, as the Schwarzschild coordinates
t and
r are spacelike and timelike, respectively, behind the horizon.
In the cosmological picture, the vacuum spacetime (after its “big bang” at
) expands uniformly in two directions whilst contracting in the remaining spatial dimension. As was shown in
Section 2, the deep-radial region of Schwarzschild spacetime can be approximated by a flat disk for
constant. If one looks at the geometry of this disk, one can see how it matches the geometry in the cosmological picture, supplying a parallel viewpoint. Let us focus our attention on one piece of metric (
4), specifically
where the notation
denotes the
sector of the line element. Our approximation demands
, so we restrict the coordinate
to the range
, where
. As mentioned earlier, the symbol
is open to interpretation, as are all coordinates in general relativity, and the part of the metric (
9) in brackets defines a
flat disk of radius
, spanned by dimensionless radial coordinate
and azimuthal coordinate
. As can be read directly from (
9), the dimensionless disk grows with coordinate
r. This “growth” of the disk follows directly from conical geometry (see
Appendix A).
It is instructive to compare the Penrose diagram of the type D Kasner solution with that of the inside of a Schwarzschild black hole (see
Figure 1a,c). The condition
for the Schwarzschild spacetime is equivalent to
in Kasner coordinate; therefore, the small-
sector of the Kasner Penrose diagram matches the
sector of the Schwarzschild Penrose diagram, up to a reversal in the direction of time. The presence of a spacelike singularity in the
past, as in the Kasner solution, is a characteristic feature not only of big bang cosmologies but also of white holes [
32].
The conformal diagram of the Taub solution (
Figure 1b) for small-
matches that of negative-mass Schwarzschild (
Figure 1d) for
[
8].
This provides an example of an interesting feature of general relativity, namely that a single metric can describe apparently unrelated physical phenomena: in this case, both the birth and expansion of a universe and the spacetime deep within a black hole. To reiterate, the cosmological picture and the deep-radial Schwarzschild interpretation of the (
)
-metric (
2) are both valid and not mutually exclusive.
Let us now discuss the case of negative parameter,
. A simple coordinate transformation (see
Appendix C) shows that metric (
7) is in fact the Taub solution, the only static vacuum solution with planar symmetry [
8,
33,
34]; this solution has a timelike singularity at
.
There have been numerous attempts to physically interpret the
-metric for
(Equation (
7)), but, as stated in Ref. [
8], “a totally satisfactory interpretation of this simple static metric has still not been found”. One of the reasons for this past difficulty may have been a too-strong focus on obtaining a
global interpretation of the solution, which is problematic due to its planar symmetry. Our approach is local in nature.
Previously-published suggestions include one arguing that the origin at
describes a static infinite plane source that repels timelike geodesics [
10,
18,
35]. Another is that this spacetime is a description of the external region sourced by an infinite line of fixed negative gravitational mass per unit length [
8]; yet another interpretation is that the spacetime describes the exterior region of a semi-infinite rod source, again with a specific, fixed negative mass density [
36]. A reading of the metric as modeling the field due to a null particle [
37] has also been published, but has been argued to be incorrect [
36,
38].
Our new interpretation removes all need for fine-tuned parameters and, in addition, explains the behavior of test particles (timelike geodesics) and null rays as they approach the singularity. The behavior of geodesics in the Taub spacetime has been studied by Bedran et al. [
18]. They found that massive particles cannot reach the singularity, independent of initial conditions, but that massless particles can attain the singularity when falling perpendicular to the plane of symmetry. The behavior of geodesics in negative-mass Schwarzschild spacetime has also previously been studied [
39,
40], demonstrating the same qualitative behavior: test particles are repulsed from the singularity, but a radially-infalling ray of light can reach it in finite time. The consistent behavior of geodesics in both Taub and negative-mass Schwarzschild spacetimes is not a coincidence, as the former describes a local region of the latter.
Our interpretation also explains a hitherto mysterious feature of the behavior of test particles in Taub spacetime, pointed out by Bonnor [
10]: the proper distance between two test particles decreases as the singularity is approached. There is no apparent reason for this if the singular source were a plane, however, our new interpretation resolves this: as the
singularity is approached, two neighboring paths will indeed begin to coalesce for negative-mass Schwarzschild spacetime, as the “Taub plane” itself (the base of the cone in
Appendix A) shrinks.
Another piece of evidence against a negative-mass planar source seeding Taub spacetime, noted previously [
8,
10], is that general relativity does not seem to predict a corresponding positive-mass planar source, making the negative-mass source suspect. Our interpretation offers a different, perhaps more consistent perspective, as both positive- and negative-mass sources are provided by the
and
Schwarzschild solutions, respectively. This pleasing symmetry in our new reading of the
-metrics illuminates the previously-noted “dual” nature [
18] of the Taub and Kasner solutions.
As has been pointed out by other authors, the Kasner and Taub solutions also emerge from infinite-mass limits of Schwarzschild spacetime [
2,
7,
18,
37,
41,
42]. A simple proof of this fact was given in Ref. [
41], which we reproduce here. The following solution of Einstein’s field equations,
has a limit to Schwarzschild spacetime when
and a limit to Taub (Kasner) spacetime when
and
(
). The symbol
K now represents a parameter taking an arbitrary value and no longer denotes the Kretschmann invariant as it did in
Section 2 (note the unusual form that the Schwarzschild metric takes here in the
limit, due to the presence of the
term, as opposed to the usual
term. This is nothing more than a rotation of the coordinate system by 90 degrees:
). Using the coordinate transformations
metric (
10) becomes
which is the Schwarzschild solution with mass parameter
. As is clear in these new coordinates, for positive
M, the limit
corresponds to the limit
. For negative
M, the limit
corresponds to
.
We argue that the deep-radial interpretations of the Kasner and Taub metrics are considerably more natural than the ones suggested by the above limits, as the former avoid the pathologies of infinite positive or negative mass, which are evidently unphysical.
In the future, it is hoped that other simple physical pictures for solutions to Einstein’s field equations may be found, using local considerations such as ours when global descriptions are problematic. It would also be interesting to investigate whether local approaches may be useful, as a complement to global techniques, in finding new interpretations of other A-metrics and generalizations thereof with additional parameters.