Brans-Dicke theory
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In theoretical physics, the Brans-Dicke theory of gravitation (sometimes called the Jordan-Brans-Dicke theory) is a well-known competitor of Einstein's theory of general relativity. The theory was developed by Robert H. Dicke and Carl H. Brans [1] building upon, among others, the earlier work of Pascual Jordan. It is an example of a scalar-tensor theory, a gravitational theory in which the gravitational interaction is mediated by a scalar field as well as the tensor field of general relativity.
At present, both Brans-Dicke theory and general relativity are generally held to be in agreement with observation, although the experiments of the golden age of general relativity have considerably constrained the allowed parameters of Brans-Dicke theory.
Contents |
[edit] Comparison with general relativity
Both Brans-Dicke theory and general relativity are examples of a class of relativistic classical field theories of gravitation, called metric theories. In these theories, spacetime is equipped with a metric tensor, gab, and the gravitational field is represented (in whole or in part) by the Riemann curvature tensor Rabcd, which is determined by the metric tensor.
All metric theories satisfy the equivalence principle, which in modern geometric language states that in a very small region (too small to exhibit measureable curvature effects), all the laws of physics known in special relativity are valid in local Lorentz frames. This implies in turn that metric theories all exhibit the gravitational redshift effect.
As in general relativity, the source of the gravitational field is considered to be the stress-energy tensor or matter tensor. However, the way in which the immediate presence of mass-energy in some region affects the gravitational field in that region differs from general relativity. So does the way in which spacetime curvature affects the motion of matter. In the Brans/Dicke theory, in addition to the metric, which is a rank two tensor field, there is a scalar field, φ, which has the physical effect of changing the effective gravitational constant from place to place. (This feature was actually a key desideratum of Dicke and Brans; see the paper by Brans cited below, which sketches the origins of the theory.)
The field equations of Brans-Dicke theory contain a parameter, ω, called the Brans-Dicke coupling constant. This is a true dimensionless constant which must be chosen once and for all. However, it can be chosen to fit observations. Such parameters are often called tuneable parameters. In addition, the present ambient value of the effective gravitational constant must be chosen as a boundary condition. General relativity contains no dimensionless parameters whatsoever, and therefore is easier to falsify than Brans-Dicke theory. Theories with tuneable parameters are sometimes deprecated on the principle that, of two theories which both agree with observation, the more audacious is preferable. On the other hand, it seems as though they are a necessary feature of some theories, such as the weak mixing angle of the Standard Model.
Brans-Dicke theory is "less stringent" than general relativity in another sense: it admits more solutions. In particular, exact vacuum solutions to the Einstein field equation of general relativity, augmented by the trivial scalar field φ = 1, become exact vacuum solutions in Brans-Dicke theory, but some spacetimes which are not vacuum solutions to the Einstein field equation become, with the appropriate choice of scalar field, vacuum solutions of Brans-Dicke theory. Similarly, an important class of spacetimes, the pp-wave metrics, are also exact null dust solutions of both general relativity and Brans-Dicke theory, but here too, Brans-Dicke theory allows additional wave solutions having geometries which are incompatible with general relativity.
Like general relativity, Brans-Dicke theory predicts light deflection and the precession of perihelia of planets orbiting the Sun. However, the precise formulas which govern these effects, according to Brans-Dicke theory, depend upon the value of the coupling constant ω. This means that it is possible to set an observational lower bound on the possible value of ω from observations of the solar system and other gravitational systems. The best currently available evidence – derived from the Cassini-Huygens experiment – shows that the value of ω must exceed 40,000.
It is often said that Brans-Dicke theory, but not general relativity, satisfies Mach's principle. However, some authors have argued that these claims are naive (especially when one recognizes that there is no agreement upon precisely what "Mach's principle" really is!) It is also often said that general relativity is obtained from the Brans-Dicke theory in the limit . But Faraoni (see references) has shown that this too is naive.
[edit] The field equations
The field equations of the Brans/Dicke theory are
where
- gab is the metric tensor,
- is the Einstein tensor, a kind of average curvature,
- is the Ricci tensor, a kind of trace of the curvature tensor,
- is the Ricci scalar, the trace of the Ricci tensor,
- Tab is the stress-energy tensor,
- T is the trace of Tab,
- φ is the scalar field,
- is the Laplace-Beltrami operator or covariant wave operator,
The first equation says that the trace of the stress-energy tensor acts as the source for the scalar field φ. Since electromagnetic fields contribute only a traceless term to the stress-energy tensor, this implies that in a region of spacetime containing only an electromagnetic field (plus the gravitational field), the right hand side vanishes, and φ obeys the (curved spacetime) wave equation. Therefore changes in φ propagate through electrovacuum regions; in this sense, we say that φ is a long-range field.
The second equation describes how the stress-energy tensor and scalar field φ together affect spacetime curvature. The left hand side, the Einstein tensor, can be thought of as a kind of average curvature. It is a matter of pure mathematics that, in any metric theory, the Riemann tensor can always be written as the sum of the Weyl curvature (or conformal curvature tensor) plus a piece constructed from the Einstein tensor.
For comparison, the field equation of general relativity is simply
- Gab = 8πTab
This means that in general relativity, the Einstein curvature at some event is entirely determined by the stress-energy tensor at that event; the other piece, the Weyl curvature, is the part of the gravitational field which can propagate as a gravitational wave across a vacuum region. But in the Brans/Dicke theory, the Einstein tensor is determined partly by the immediate presence of mass-energy and momentum, and partly by the long-range scalar field φ.
The vacuum field equations of both theories are obtained when the stress-energy tensor vanishes. This models situations in which no non-gravitational fields are present.
[edit] The action principle
The following Lagrangian contains the complete description of the Brans/Dicke theory:
where
- g is the determinant of the metric,
- is the four-dimensional volume form,
- LM is the matter term or matter Lagrangian.
The matter term includes the contribution of ordinary matter (e.g. gaseous matter) and also electromagnetic fields. In a vacuum region, the matter term vanishes identically; the remaining term is the gravitational term. To obtain the vacuum field equations, we must vary the gravitational term in the Lagrangian with respect to the metric gab; this gives the second field equation above. When we vary with respect to the scalar field φ, we obtain the first field equation.
Note that, unlike for the General Relativity field equations, the δRab / δgcd term does not vanish, as the result is not a total derivative. It can be shown that
To prove this result, use
By evaluating the δΓs in Riemann normal coordinates, 6 individual terms vanish. 6 further terms combine when manipulated using Stokes' theorem to provide the desired (gabgcdφ;cd − φ;ab)δgab.
For comparison, the Lagrangian defining general relativity is
Varying the gravitational term with respect to gab gives the vacuum Einstein field equation.
In both theories, the full field equations can be obtained by more elaborate variations of the Lagrangian.
[edit] See also
- Classical theories of gravitation
- Self-creation cosmology, a modification of the Brans-Dicke theory that is concordant with experiment and observation.
[edit] References
- ^ Brans, C. H., Dicke, R. H. (November 1 1961). "Mach's Principle and a Relativistic Theory of Gravitation". Physical Review 124 (3): 925–935. DOI:10.1103/PhysRev.124.925. Retrieved on 2006-09-23.
- Carl H. Brans, The roots of scalar-tensor theory: an approximate history. ArXiv. Retrieved on June 14, 2005.
- P. G. Bergmann (1968). "Comments on the scalar-tensor theory". Int. J. Theor. Phys. 1: 25.
- R. V. Wagoner (1970). "Scalar-tensor theory and gravitational waves". Phys. Rev. D1: 3209.
- Faraoni, Valerio (2004). Cosmology in scalar-tensor gravity. Boston: Kluwer. ISBN 1-4020-1988-2.
- Faroni, Valerio (1999). "Illusions of general relativity in Brans-Dicke gravity". Phys. Rev. D59: 084021. See also the eprint version on the ArXiv.
- Misner, Charles; Thorne, Kip S.; & Wheeler, John Archibald (1973). Gravitation. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman. ISBN 0-7167-0344-0. See Box 39.1.
edit | ||||||||
Theories of gravitation | ||||||||
[S] = Stub only |