BKL singularity

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A BKL (Belinsky-Khalatnikov-Lifshitz) singularity[1] is a model of the dynamic evolution of the Universe near the initial singularity, described by a non-symmetric, chaotic, vacuum solution to Einstein's field equations of gravitation. According to this model, the Universe is oscillating (expanding and contracting) around a singular point (singularity) in which time and space become equal to zero. This singularity is physically real in the sense that it is a necessary property of the solution, and will appear also in the exact solution of those equations. The singularity is not artificially created by the assumptions and simplifications made by the other well-known special solutions such as the Friedmann-Lemaître-Robertson-Walker, quasi-isotropic, and Kasner solutions.

The Mixmaster universe is a solution to general relativity that exhibits properties similar to those discussed by BKL.

Contents

[edit] Existence of time singularity

The basis of modern cosmology are the special solutions of Einstein's field equations found by Alexander Friedmann in 1922 and 1924 that describe a completely homogeneous and isotropic Universe ("closed" or "open" model, depending on closeness or infiniteness of space). The principal property of these solutions is their non-static nature. The concept of an inflating Universe that arises from Friedmann's solutions is fully supported by astronomical data and the present consensus is that the isotropic model, in general, gives an adequate description of the present state of the Universe.

Another important property of the isotropic model is the existence of a time singularity in the spacetime metric. In other words, the existence of such time singularity means finiteness of time. However, the adequacy of the isotropic model in describing the present state of the Universe by itself is not a reason to expect that it is so adequate in describing the early stages of Universe evolution. The problem initially addressed by the BKL paper[1] is whether the existence of such time singularity is a necessary property of relativistic cosmological models. There is the possibilty that the singularity is generated by the simplifying assumptions, made when constructing these models. Independence of singularity on assumptions would mean that time singularity exists not only in the particular but also in the general solutions of the Einstein equations. A criterion for generality of solutions is the number of arbitrary space coordinate functions that they contain. These include only the "physically arbitrary" functions whose number cannot be reduced by any choice of reference frame. In the general solution, the number of such functions must be sufficient for arbitrary definition of initial conditions (distribution and movement of matter, distribution of gravitational field) in some moment of time chosen as initial. This number is four for vacuum and eight for a matter and/or radiation filled space.[2][3]

For a system of non-linear differential equations, such as the Einstein equations, general solution is not unambiguously defined. In principle, there may be multiple general integrals, and each of those may contain only a finite subset of all possible initial conditions. Each of those integrals may contain all required arbitrary functions which, however, may be subject to some conditions (e.g., some inequalities). Existence of a general solution with a singularity, therefore, does not preclude the existence also of other general solutions that do not contain a singularity. For example, there is no reason to doubt the existence of a general solution without singularity that describes an isolated body with a relatively small mass.

It is impossible to find a general integral for all space and for all time. However, this is not necessary for resolving the problem: it is sufficient to study the solution near the singularity. This would also resolve another aspect of the problem: the characteristics of spacetime metric evolution in the general solution when it reaches the physical singularity, understood as a point where matter density and invariants of the Riemann curvature tensor become infinite. The BKL paper[1] concerns only the cosmological aspect. This means, that the subject is a time singularity in the whole spacetime and not in some limited region as in a gravitational collapse of a finite body.

Previous work by the Landau-Lifshitz group[4][5][6] (reviewed in [2]) led to a conclusion that the general solution does not contain a physical singularity. This search for a broader class of solutions with singularity has been done, essentially, by a trial-and-error method, since a systemic approach to the study of the Einstein equations is lacking. A negative result, obtained in this way, is not convincing by itself; a solution with the necessary degree of generality would invalidate it, and at the same time would confirm any positive results related to the specific solution.

It is reasonable to suggest that if a singularity is present in the general solution, there must be some indications that are based only on the most general properties of the Einstein equations, although those indications by themselves might be insufficient for characterizing the singularity. At that time, the only known indication was related to the form of Einstein equations written in a synchronous reference frame, that is, in a frame in which the interval element is

ds^2 = dt^2 - dl^2 , dl^2 = \gamma_{\alpha \beta} dx^{\alpha} dx^{\beta}\, (eq. 1)

where the space distance element dl is separate from the time interval dt, and x0 = t is the proper time synchronized throughout the whole space.[7] The Einstein equation \scriptstyle{R_0^{0}=T_0^{0}-\frac{1}{2}T} written in synchronous frame gives a result in which the metric determinant g inevitably becomes zero in a finite time irrespective of any assumptions about matter distribution.[2][3]

This indication, however, was dropped after it became clear that it is linked with a specific geometric property of the synchronous frame: crossing of time line coordinates. This crossing takes place on some encircling hypersurfaces which are four-dimensional analogs of the caustic surfaces in geometrical optics; g becomes zero exactly at this crossing.[6] Therefore, although this singularity is general, it is fictional, and not a physical one; it disappears when the reference frame is changed. This, apparently, stopped the incentive for further investigations.

However, the interest in this problem waxed again after Penrose published his theorems[8] that linked the existence of a singularity of unknown character with some very general assumptions that did not have anything in common with a choice of reference frame. Other similar theorems were found later on by Hawking[9][10] and Geroch[11] (see Penrose-Hawking singularity theorems). It became clear that the search for a general solution with singularity must continue.

[edit] Generalized Kasner solution

Further generalization of solutions depended on some solution classes found previously. The Friedmann solution, for example, is a special case of a solution class that contains three physically arbitrary coordinate functions.[2] In this class the space is anisotropic; however, its compression when approaching the singularity has "quasi-isotropic" character: the linear distances in all directions diminish as the same power of time. Like the fully homogeneous and isotropic case, this class of solutions exist only for a matter-filled space.

Much more general solutions are obtained by a generalization of an exact particular solution derived by Kasner[12] for a field in vacuum, in which the space is homogeneous and has Euclidean metric that depends on time according to the Kasner metric

dl^2=t^{2p_1}dx^2+t^{2p_2}dy^2+t^{2p_3}dz^2 (eq. 2)

(see [13]). Here, p1, p2, p3 are any 3 numbers that are related by

p_1+p_2+p_3=p_1^2+p_2^2+p_3^2=1. (eq. 3)

Because of these relationships, only 1 of the 3 numbers is independent. All 3 numbers are never the same; 2 numbers are the same only in the sets of values \scriptstyle{(-\frac {1}{3},\frac{2}{3},\frac {2}{3})} and (0, 0, 1).[14] In all other cases the numbers are different, one number is negative and the other two are positive. If the numbers are arranged in increasing order, p1 < p2 < p3, they change in the ranges

-\frac {1}{3} \le p_1 \le 0,\ 0 \le p_2 \le \frac{2}{3},\ \frac{2}{3} \le p_3 \le 1. (eq. 4)

The numbers p1, p2, p3 can be written parametrically as

p_1(u)=\frac {-u}{1+u+u^2},\ p_2(u)=\frac {1+u}{1+u+u^2},\ p_3(u)=\frac {u(1+u)}{1+u+u^2} (eq. 5)

All different values of p1, p2, p3 ordered as above are obtained by changing the value of the parameter u in the range u ≥ 1. The values u < 1 are brought into this range according to

p_1 \left( \frac {1}{u} \right )=p_1(u),\ p_2 \left( \frac {1}{u} \right )=p_3(u),\ p_3 \left( \frac {1}{u} \right )=p_2(u) (eq. 6)
Figure 1
Figure 1

Figure 1 is a plot of p1, p2, p3 with an argument \scriptstyle{\frac {1}{u}}. The numbers p1(u) and p3(u) are monotonously increasing while p2(u) is monotonously decreasing function of the parameter u.

In the generalized solution, the form corresponding to (eq. 2) applies only to the asymptotic metric (the metric close to the singularity t = 0), respectively, to the major terms of its series expansion by powers of t. In the synchronous reference frame it is written in the form of (eq. 1) with a space distance element

dl^2=(a^2l_{\alpha}l_{\beta}+b^2m_{\alpha}m_{\beta}+c^2n_{\alpha}n_{\beta})dx^{\alpha}dx^{\beta}\, (eq. 7)

where a=t^{p_l},\ b=t^{p_m},\ c=t^{p_n} (eq. 8)

The three-dimensional vectors l, m, n define the directions at which space distance changes with time by the power laws (eq. 8). These vectors, as well as the numbers pl, pm, pn which, as before, are related by (eq. 3), are functions of the space coordinates. The powers pl, pm, pn are not arranged in increasing order, reserving the symbols p1, p2, p3 for the numbers in (eq. 5) that remain arranged in increasing order. The determinant of the metric of (eq. 7) is

-g=a^2b^2c^2v^2=t^2v^2 \, (eq. 9)

where v = l[mn]. It is convenient to introduce the following quantitities [15]

\lambda=\frac{\mathbf{l}\ \mathrm{rot}\ \mathbf{l}}{v},\ \mu=\frac{\mathbf{m}\ \mathrm{rot}\ \mathbf{m}}{v},\ \nu=\frac{\mathbf{n}\ \mathrm{rot}\ \mathbf{n}}{v}. (eq. 10)

The space metric in (eq. 7) is anisotropic because the powers of t in (eq. 8) cannot have the same values. On approaching the singularity at t = 0, the linear distances in each space element decrease in two directions and increase in the third direction. The volume of the element decreases in proportion to t.

The Einstein equations in vacuum in synchronous reference frame are[2][3]

R_0^0=-\frac{1}{2}\frac{\partial \varkappa_{\alpha}^{\alpha}}{\partial t}-\frac{1}{4} \varkappa_{\alpha}^{\beta} \varkappa_{\beta}^{\alpha}=0, (eq. 11)
R_{\alpha}^{\beta}=-\left ( \frac{1}{2}\sqrt{-g} \right ) \frac{\partial}{\partial t} \left (\sqrt{-g} \varkappa_{\alpha}^{\beta} \right )-P_{\alpha}^{\beta}=0, (eq. 12)
R_{\alpha}^{0}=\frac{1}{2} \left (\varkappa_{\alpha;\beta}^{\beta}- \varkappa_{\beta;\alpha}^{\beta}\right )=0, (eq. 13)

where \scriptstyle{\varkappa_{\alpha}^{\beta}} is the 3-dimensional tensor \scriptstyle{\varkappa_{\alpha}^{\beta}=\frac{\partial \gamma_{\alpha}^{\beta}}{\partial t}}, and Pαβ is the 3-dimensional Ricci tensor, which is expressed by the 3-dimensional metric tensor γαβ in the same way as Rik is expressed by gik; Pαβ contains only the space (but not the time) derivatives of γαβ.

The Kasner metric is introduced in the Einstein equations by substituting the respective metric tensor γαβ from (eq. 7) without defining a priori the dependence of a, b, c from t:

\varkappa_{\alpha}^{\beta}=\left ( \frac{2 \dot a}{a} \right )l_{\alpha}l^{\beta}+\left ( \frac{2 \dot b}{b} \right )m_{\alpha}m^{\beta}+\left ( \frac{2 \dot c}{c} \right )n_{\alpha}n^{\beta}

where the dot above a symbol designates differentiation with respect to time. The Einstein equation (eq. 11) takes the form

-R_0^0=\frac{\ddot a}{a}+\frac{\ddot b}{b}+\frac{\ddot c}{c}=0. (eq. 14)

All its terms are to a second order for the large (at t → 0) quantity 1/t. In the Einstein equations (eq. 12), terms of such order appear only from terms that are time-differentiated. If the components of Pαβ do not include terms of order higher than 2, then

-R_l^l=\frac{(\dot a b c)\dot{ }}{abc}=0,\ -R_m^m=\frac{(a \dot b c)\dot{ }}{abc}=0,\ -R_n^n=\frac{(a b \dot c)\dot{ }}{abc}=0 (eq. 15)

where indices l, m, n designate tensor components in the directions l, m, n.[2] These equations together with (eq. 14) give the expressions (eq. 8) with powers that satisfy (eq. 3).

However, the presence of 1 negative power among the 3 powers pl, pm, pn results in appearance of terms from Pαβ with an order greater than t−2. If the negative power is pl (pl = p1 < 0), then Pαβ contains the coordinate function λ and (eq. 12) become

\begin{align}
 -R_l^l & =\frac{(\dot a b c)\dot{ }}{abc}+\frac{\lambda^2 a^2}{2b^2 c^2}=0,\\
 -R_m^m & =\frac{(a \dot b c)\dot{ }}{abc}-\frac{\lambda^2 a^2}{2b^2 c^2}=0,\\
 -R_n^n & =\frac{(a b \dot c)\dot{ }}{abc}-\frac{\lambda^2 a^2}{2b^2 c^2}=0.\\
\end{align} (eq. 16)

Here, the second terms are of order t−2(pm + pnpl) whereby pm + pnpl = 1 + 2 |pl| > 1.[16] To remove these terms and restore the metric (eq. 7), it is necessary to impose on the coordinate functions the condition λ = 0.

The remaining 3 Einstein equations (eq. 13) contain only first order time derivatives of the metric tensor. They give 3 time-independent relations that must be imposed as necessary conditions on the coordinate functions in (eq. 7). This, together with the condition λ = 0, makes 4 conditions. These conditions bind 10 different coordinate functions: 3 components of each of the vectors l, m, n, and one function in the powers of t (any one of the functions pl, pm, pn, which are bound by the conditions (eq. 3)). When calculating the number of physically arbitrary functions, it must be taken into account that the synchronous system used here allows time-independent arbitrary transformations of the 3 space coordinates. Therefore, the final solution contains overall 10 − 4 − 3 = 3 physically arbitrary functions which is 1 less than what is needed for the general solution in vacuum.

The degree of generality reached until now is not lessened by introducing matter; matter is written into the metric (eq. 7) and contributes 4 new coordinate functions necessary to describe the initial distribution of its density and the 3 components of its velocity. This makes possible to determine matter evolution merely from the laws of its movement in an a priori given gravitational field. These movement laws are the hydrodynamic equations

\frac{1}{\sqrt{-g}}\frac{\partial}{\partial x^i} \left (\sqrt{-g}\sigma u^i \right ) = 0, (eq. 17)
(p+\varepsilon) u^k \left \{ \frac{\partial u_i}{\partial x^k}-\frac{1}{2} u^l \frac{\partial g_{kl}}{\partial x^i} \right \rbrace =-\frac{\partial p}{\partial x^i}-u_i u^k \frac{\partial p}{\partial x^k}, (eq. 18)

where u i is the 4-dimensional velocity, ε and σ are the densities of energy and entropy of matter.[17] For the ultrarelativistic equation of state p = ε/3 the entropy σ ~ ε1/4. The major terms in (eq. 17) and (eq. 18) are those that contain time derivatives. From (eq. 17) and the space components of (eq. 18) one has

\frac{\partial}{\partial t} \left (\sqrt{-g} u_0 \varepsilon^{\frac{3}{4}} \right ) = 0,\ 4 \varepsilon \cdot \frac{\partial u_{\alpha}}{\partial t}+u_{\alpha} \cdot \frac{\partial \varepsilon}{\partial t} = 0,

resulting in

abc u_0 \varepsilon^{\frac{3}{4}}= \mathrm{const},\ u_{\alpha} \varepsilon^{\frac{1}{4}}= \mathrm{const}, (eq. 19)

where 'const' are time-independent quantities. Additionally, from the identity uiui = 1 one has (because all covariant components of uα are to the same order)

u_0^2 \approx u_n u^n = \frac{u_n^2}{c^2},

where un is the velocity component along the direction of n that is connected with the highest (positive) power of t (supposing that pn = p3). From the above relations, it follows that

\varepsilon \sim \frac{1}{a^2 b^2},\ u_{\alpha} \sim \sqrt{ab} (eq. 20)

or

\varepsilon \sim t^{-2(p_1+p_2)}=t^{-2(1-p_3)},\ u_{\alpha} \sim t^{\frac{(1-p_3)}{2}}. (eq. 21)

The above equations can be used to confirm that the components of the matter stress-energy-momentum tensor standing in the right hand side of the equations

R_0^0 = T_0^0 - \frac{1}{2}T,\ R_{\alpha}^{\beta} = T_{\alpha}^{\beta}- \frac{1}{2}\delta_{\alpha}^{\beta}T,

are, indeed, to a lower order by 1/t than the major terms in their left hand sides. In the equations \scriptstyle{R_{\alpha}^0 = T_{\alpha}^0} the presence of matter results only in the change of relations imposed on their constituent coordinate functions.[2]

The fact that ε becomes infinite by the law (eq. 21) confirms that in the solution to (eq. 7) one deals with a physical singularity at any values of the powers p1, p2, p3 excepting only (0, 0, 1). For these last values, the singularity is non-physical and can be removed by a change of reference frame.

The fictional singularity corresponding to the powers (0, 0, 1) arises as a result of time line coordinates crossing over some 2-dimensional "focal surface". As pointed out in [2], a synchronous reference frame can always be chosen in such way that this inevitable time line crossing occurs exactly on such surface (instead of a 3-dimensional caustic surface). Therefore, a solution with such simultaneous for the whole space fictional singularity must exist with a full set of arbitrary functions needed for the general solution. Close to the point t = 0 it allows a regular expansion by whole powers of t.[18]

[edit] Oscillating mode towards the singularity

The four conditions that had to be imposed on the coordinate functions in the solution (eq. 7) are of different types: three conditions that arise from the equations \scriptstyle{R_{\alpha}^0} = 0 are "natural"; they are a consequence of the structure of Einstein equations. However, the additional condition λ = 0 that causes the loss of one derivative function, is of entirely different type.

The general solution by definition is completely stable; otherwise the Universe would not exist. Any perturbation is equivalent to a change in the initial conditions in some moment of time; since the general solution allows arbitrary initial conditions, the perturbation is not able to change its character. In other words, the existence of the limiting condition λ = 0 for the solution of (eq. 7) means instability caused by perturbations that break this condition. The action of such perturbation must bring the model to another mode which thereby will be most general. Such perturbation cannot be considered as small: a transition to a new mode exceeds the range of very small perturbations.

The analysis of the behavior of the model under perturbative action, performed by BKL, delineates a complex oscillatory mode on approaching the singularity.[1][19][20][21] They could not give all details of this mode in the broad frame of the general case. However, BKL explained the most important properties and character of the solution on specific models that allow far-reaching analytical study.

These models are based on a homogeneous space metric of a particular type. Supposing a homogeneity of space without any additional symmetry leaves a great freedom in choosing the metric. All possible homogeneous (but anisotropic) spaces are classified, according to Bianchi, in 9 classes.[22] BKL investigate only spaces of Bianchi Types VIII and IX.

If the metric has the form of (eq. 7), for each type of homogeneous spaces exists some functional relation between the reference vectors l, m, n and the space coordinates. The specific form of this relation is not important. The important fact is that for Type VIII and IX spaces, the quantities λ, μ, ν (eq. 10) are constants while all "mixed" products l rot m, l rot n, m rot l, etc. are zeros. For Type IX spaces, the quantities λ, μ, ν have the same sign and one can write λ = μ = ν = 1 (the simultaneous sign change of the 3 constants does not change anything). For Type VIII spaces, 2 constants have a sign that is opposite to the sign of the third constant; one can write, for example, λ = − 1, μ = ν = 1.[23]

The study of the effect of the perturbation on the "Kasner mode" is thus confined to a study on the effect of the λ-containing terms in the Einstein equations. Type VIII and IX spaces are the most suitable models exactly in this connection. Since all 3 quantities λ, μ, ν differ from zero, the condition λ = 0 does not hold irrespective of which direction l, m, n has negative power law time dependence.

The Einstein equations for the Type VIII and Type IX space models are[24]

\begin{align}
 -R_l^l & =\frac{\left(\dot a b c\right)\dot{ }}{abc}+\frac{1}{2}\left (a^2b^2c^2\right )\left [\lambda^2 a^4-\left (\mu b^2-\nu c^2\right )^2\right ]=0,\\
 -R_m^m & =\frac{(a \dot{b} c)\dot{ }}{abc}+\frac{1}{2}\left(a^2b^2c^2\right )\left [\mu^2 b^4-\left(\lambda a^2-\nu c^2\right)^2\right]=0,\\
 -R_n^n & =\frac{\left(a b \dot c\right)\dot{ }}{abc}+\frac{1}{2}\left(a^2b^2c^2\right)\left[\nu^2 c^4-\left(\lambda a^2-\mu b^2\right)^2\right]=0,\\
\end{align} (eq. 22)
-R_0^0=\frac{\ddot a}{a}+\frac{\ddot b}{b}+\frac{\ddot c}{c}=0 (eq. 23)

(the remaining components \scriptstyle{R_l^0}, \scriptstyle{R_m^0}, \scriptstyle{R_n^0}, \scriptstyle{R_l^m}, \scriptstyle{R_l^n}, \scriptstyle{R_m^n} are identically zeros). These equations contain only functions of time; this is a condition that has to be fulfiled in all homogeneous spaces. Here, the (eq. 22) and (eq. 23) are exact and their validity does not depend on how near one is to the singularity at t = 0.[25]

The time derivatives in (eq. 22) and (eq. 23) take a simpler form if а, b, с are substituted by their logarithms α, β, γ:

a=e^\alpha,\ b=e^\beta,\ c=e^\gamma, (eq. 24)

substituting the variable t for τ according to:

dt=abc\ d\tau\, (eq. 25).

Then:

\begin{align}
 2\alpha_{\tau\tau} & =\left (\mu b^2-\nu c^2\right )^2-\lambda^2 a^4=0,\\
 2\beta_{\tau\tau} & =\left (\lambda a^2-\nu c^2\right )^2-\mu^2 b^4=0,\\
 2\gamma_{\tau\tau} & =\left (\lambda a^2-\mu b^2\right )^2-\nu^2 c^4=0,\\
\end{align} (eq. 26)
\frac{1}{2}\left(\alpha+\beta+\gamma \right)_{\tau\tau}=\alpha_\tau \beta_\tau +\alpha_\tau \gamma_\tau+\beta_\tau \gamma_\tau. (eq. 27)

Adding together equations (eq. 26) and substituting in the left hand side the sum (α + β + γ)τ τ according to (eq. 27), one obtains an equation containing only first derivatives which is the first integral of the system (eq. 26):

\alpha_\tau \beta_\tau +\alpha_\tau \gamma_\tau+\beta_\tau \gamma_\tau = \frac{1}{4}\left(\lambda^2a^4+\mu^2b^4+\nu^2c^4-2\lambda \mu a^2b^2-2\lambda \nu a^2c^2-2\mu \nu b^2c^2 \right). (eq. 28)

This equation plays the role of a binding condition imposed on the initial state of (eq. 26). The Kasner mode (eq. 8) is a solution of (eq. 26) when ignoring all terms in the right hand sides. But such situation cannot go on (at t → 0) indefinitely because among those terms there are always some that grow. Thus, if the negative power is in the function a(t) (pl = p1) then the perturbation of the Kasner mode will arise by the terms λ2a4; the rest of the terms will decrease with decreasing t. If only the growing terms are left in the right hand sides of (eq. 26), one obtains the system:

\alpha_{\tau\tau}=-\frac{1}{2}\lambda^2e^{4\alpha},\ \beta_{\tau\tau}=\gamma_{\tau\tau}=\frac{1}{2}\lambda^2e^{4\alpha} (eq. 29)

(compare (eq. 16); below it is substituted λ2 = 1). The solution of these equations must describe the metric evolution from the initial state, in which it is described by (eq. 8) with a given set of powers (with pl < 0); let pl = р1, pm = р2, pn = р3 so that

a \sim t^{p_1},\ b \sim t^{p_2},\ c \sim t^{p_3}. (eq. 30)

Then

abc=\Lambda t,\ \tau=\Lambda^{-1}\ln t+\mathrm{const} (eq. 31)

where Λ is constant. Initial conditions for (eq. 29) are redefined as[26]

\alpha_\tau=\Lambda p_1,\ \beta_\tau=\Lambda p_2,\ \gamma_\tau=\Lambda p_3\ \mathrm{at}\ \tau \to \infty (eq. 32)

Equations (eq. 29) are easily integrated; the solution that satisfies the condition (eq. 32) is

\begin{cases}a^2=\frac{2|p_1|\Lambda}{\operatorname{ch}(2|p_1|\Lambda\tau)},\ b^2=b_0^2e^{2\Lambda(p_2-|p_1|)\tau}\operatorname{ch}(2|p_1|\Lambda\tau),\\ 
c^2=c_0^2e^{2\Lambda(p_2-|p_1|)\tau}\operatorname{ch}(2|p_1|\Lambda\tau),\end{cases} (eq. 33)

where b0 and c0 are two more constants.

It can easily be seen that the asymptotic of functions (eq. 33) at t → 0 is (eq. 30). The asymptotic expressions of these functions and the function t(τ) at τ → −∞ is[27]

a \sim e^{-\Lambda p_1\tau},\ b \sim e^{\Lambda(p_2+2p_1)\tau},\ c \sim e^{\Lambda(p_3+2p_1)\tau},\ t \sim e^{\Lambda(1+2p_1)\tau}.

Expressing a, b, c as functions of t, one has

a \sim t^{p'_l}, b \sim t^{p'_m}, c \sim t^{p'_n} (eq. 34)

where

p'_l=\frac{|p_1|}{1-2|p_1|}, p'_m=-\frac{2|p_1|-p_2}{1-2|p_1|}, p'_n=\frac{p_3-2|p_1|}{1-2|p_1|}.

Then

abc=\Lambda' t,\ \Lambda'=(1-2|p_1|)\Lambda. (eq. 35)

The above shows that perturbation acts in such way that it changes one Kasner mode with another Kasner mode, and in this process the negative power of t flips from direction l to direction m: if before it was pl < 0, now it is p'm < 0. During this change the function a(t) passes through a maximum and b(t) passes through a minimum; b, which before was decreasing, now increases: a from increasing becomes decreasing; and the decreasing c(t) decreases further. The perturbation itself (λ2a in (eq. 29)), which before was increasing, now begins to decrease and die away. Further evolution similarly causes an increase in the perturbation from the terms with μ2 (instead of λ2) in (eq. 26), next change of the Kasner mode, and so on.

[edit] Model of evolution

[edit] Two perturbations

[edit] The small-time domain

[edit] Statistics near the singularity

[edit] General long era solution with small oscillations

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Belinsky, Khalatnikov & Lifshitz 1970
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Lifshitz & Khalatnikov 1963
  3. ^ a b c Landau & Lifshitz 1988, Section 97, Synchronous reference frame
  4. ^ Lifshitz, Evgeny M.; I.M. Khalatnikov (1960). "". Zhurnal' Eksperimental'noy i Teoreticheskoy Fiziki 39: 149. 
  5. ^ Lifshitz, Evgeny M.; I.M. Khalatnikov (1960). "". Zhurnal' Eksperimental'noy i Teoreticheskoy Fiziki 39: 800. 
  6. ^ a b Lifshitz, Evgeny M.; V.V. Sudakov and I.M. Khalatnikov (1961). "". Zhurnal' Eksperimental'noy i Teoreticheskoy Fiziki 40: 1847. ; Phys. Rev. Letts., 6, 311 (1961)
  7. ^ The convention used by BKL is the same as in the Landau & Lifshitz (1988) book. The Latin indices run through the values 0, 1, 2, 3; Greek indices run through the space values 1, 2, 3. The metric gik has the signature (+ − − −); γαβ = − gαβ is the 3-dimensional space metric tensor. BKL use a system of units, in which the speed of light and the Einstein gravitational constant are equal to 1.
  8. ^ Penrose, Roger (1965). "". Physical Review Letters 14: 57. 
  9. ^ Hawking, Stephen W. (1965). "". Physical Review Letters 15: 689. 
  10. ^ Hawking, Stephen W. (1968). "". Astrophysical Journal 152: 25. 
  11. ^ Geroch, Robert P. (1966). "". Physical Review Letters 17: 445. 
  12. ^ Kasner, Edward (1921). "". American Journal of Mathematics 43. 
  13. ^ Landau & Lifshitz 1988, Section 117, Flat anisotropic model
  14. ^ When (p1, p2, p3) = (0, 0, 1) the spacetime metric (eq. 1) with dl2 from (eq. 2) transforms to Galilean metric with the substitution t sh z = ζ, t ch z = τ, that is, the singularity is fictional and the spacetime is flat.
  15. ^ Here and below all symbols for vector operations (vector products, the operations rot, grad, etc.) should be understood in a very formal way as operations over the covariant components of the vectors l, m, n such that are performed in Cartesian coordinates x1, x2, x3.
  16. ^ Excepting the case (p1, p2, p3) = (0, 0, 1), in which the metric singularity is fictitious.
  17. ^ cf. Misner, Charles W.; Kip S. Thorne and John Archibald Wheeler (1973). Gravitation. San Francisco: W.H. Freeman and Company, p. 564. ISBN 0-7167-0334-3. 
  18. ^ For an analysis of this case, see Belinsky, Vladimir A.; Khalatnikov, I.M. (1965). "". Zhurnal' Eksperimental'noy i Teoreticheskoy Fiziki 49: 1000. 
  19. ^ Khalatnikov, I.M.; E.M. Lifshitz (1970). "". Physical Review Letters 24: 76. 
  20. ^ Belinsky, Vladimir A.; Khalatnikov, I.M. (1969). "". Zhurnal' Eksperimental'noy i Teoreticheskoy Fiziki 56: 1700. 
  21. ^ Lifshitz, Evgeny M.; Khalatnikov, I.M. (1970). "". Pis'ma Zhurnalya Eksperimental'noy i Teoreticheskoy Fiziki 11: 200. 
  22. ^ Belinsky, Khalatnikov & Lifshitz 1970, Appendix C
  23. ^ The constants λ, μ, ν are the so-called structural constants of the space movement group.
  24. ^ Lifshitz & Khalatnikov 1963, Appendix C
  25. ^ In their exact form, the Einstein equations for homogeneous space contain, in general, 6 different functions of time γαβ(t) in the metric. The fact that in the present case a consistent system of exact equations is obtained for the metric which contains only 3 functions of time (γ11 = а2, γ22 = b2, γ33 = c2) is related to a symmetry that leads to the disappearance of 6 Ricci tensor components.
  26. ^ It should be reminded that BKL model the evolution in the direction t → 0; therefore, the "initial" conditions exist at later rather than at earlier times.
  27. ^ The asymptotic values of ατ, βτ, γτ at τ → −∞ can be found without fully solving (eq. 29). It suffices to note that the first of these equations has a form of a "particle" moving in one dimension in the field of an exponential potential wall with α playing the role of a constant. In this analogy, the Kasner mode refers to a free movement with constant velocity ατ = Λp1. After reflection from the wall, the particle moves freely with velocity ατ = −Λp1. Also noting that from (eq. 29) ατ + βτ = const, and ατ + γτ = const, one can see that βτ and γτ take the values βτ = Λ(p2 − 2p1), γτ = Λ(p3 − 2p1).

[edit] References

  • Khalatnikov, Isaak M. & Kamenshchik, Aleksander Yu. (2008), Lev Landau and the problem of singularities in cosmology, To be published in the journal Physics - Uspekhi, arXiv:0803.2684v1 .
  • Bini, Donato; Cherubini, Christian & Jantzen, Robert (2007), The Lifshitz-Khalatnikov Kasner index parametrization and the Weyl Tensor, to appear in the Proceedings of the First Italian-Pakistan Workshop on Relativistic Astrophysics which will be published as a special issue of Nuovo Cimento B, arXiv:0710.4902v1 .
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