On the Significance of the Stress–Energy Tensor in Finsler Spacetimes
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Preliminaries and Setup
2.1. Anisotropic Tensors
2.2. Nonlinear and Anisotropic Connections
2.3. Lorentz–Finsler Metrics
3. Basic Interpretations on the Stress–Energy Tensor
3.1. Particles and Dusts: Anisotropic Picture of Isotropic Elements
3.2. Emergence of an Anisotropic Stress–Energy Tensor
- (a)
- Observer dependence: even if we assume that the components measured by any observer u are bilinear, and, then, it is a standard tensor, the components measured by a second observer may transform by a linear map, which depends on as well as the experimental method of measuring (as in the case of the energy–momentum vector).
- (b)
- Nonlinearity: it is not clear even why such a linear transformation must exist, as bilinearity is only ensured in the direction of u and of its rest-space. Thus, the tensor measured by a single observer u would not be enough to grasp the physics of the fluid at each event , as in the example above.
- (c)
- Contribution of the anisotropies of : as an additional possibility, the local geometry of at u underlies the measurements of this observer and might provide a contribution for the stress–energy tensor itself.
- is the energy density measured by ,being the measured energy.
- If w is -orthogonal to v and -unit, measures the flow of energy per unit of -volume in a surface -orthogonal to v and w (i.e., some small surface of area A flowing a lapse ), while measures the w-momentum density,
- If are -orthogonal to v and -unit, measures the flow of w-momentum per unit of -volume in a surface -orthogonal to v and z,
3.3. Lagrangian Viewpoint
- This is not the unique natural possibility to construct an anisotropic 2-tensor starting at . For example, an alternative would be the vertical Hessian,It is natural to wonder about the choice closer to the relativistic intuitions about the stress–energy tensor.
- Recently, the Palatini approach has also been studied for the Finslerian setting [17]. There, the dynamic variables are L and the components of an (independent) non-linear connection. Thus, a similar Lagrangian procedure would lead to a higher-order tensor. In the relativistic setting, this approach supports classical relativity, as it recovers both equations and (in the symmetric case) the Levi–Civita connection. However, the Palatini approach is no longer equivalent in the Finslerian case, as it yields non-equivalent connections, and it shows a variety of possibilities for the non-linear connections. So, it is natural to wonder about the most natural choice of a Lagrangian-based stress–energy tensor in this setting.
- As discussed above, such a function allows one to construct several tensors, in particular, the vertical Hessian (as in (10)), which also might play a role to compare with the relativistic .
4. Divergence of Anisotropic Vector Fields
4.1. Mathematical Formalism of the Anisotropic Lie Bracket
- (A)
- If ∇ is any A-anisotropic connection whose underlying nonlinear connection is , then for any ,(where is the torsion of ∇).
- (B)
- By imposing the Leibniz rule with respect to tensor products and the commutativity with contractions, the map extends unequivocally to an (anisotropic) tensor derivation given byfor and . In coordinates, ifthen
- (C)
- The mapis also a tensor derivation. When ,for all , where is the Lie derivative (16), regardless of the nonlinear connection.
- (D)
- Given and (), it holds that
4.2. Lie Bracket Definition of Divergence
4.3. Divergence Theorem and Boundary Term Representations
- (i)
- is an anisotropic vector field,
- (ii)
- is an A-admissible field with open, and
- (iii)
- is a domain with smooth up to subset of 0 -dimensional measure on M and compact,
- (i)
- Even though we do not use the pseudo-Riemannian metric to derive Theorem 2, from our physical viewpoint it is natural to use it to re-express the boundary term. If Γ is non--lightlike, then for a -normal field and a transverse field X along i, the formis nonvanishing and independent of X. In particular,is independent of the scale of , which we will always assume to be -unitary and D-salient, socoincides with the hypersurface -volume form of Γ. Taking into account that vanishes wherever is tangent to Γ and that , (37) allows us to represent and the right-hand side of (36) asIn fact, this is how Rund’s divergence theorem follows from Theorem 2.
- (ii)
- There is another way that one can try to represent the boundary term. Namely, assume that there exists a smooth with and (in the Lorentz–Finsler case, it will necessarily be ). This is called a Finslerian unit normal along . Analogously as in (i), one can puthere, due to the possible orientation difference between both sides,In fact, this is how Minguzzi deduces his divergence theorem (Theorem 2 in [19]). Note, however, that he does it under the hypothesis of vanishing mean Cartan tensor (), which implies that is independent of V. As we do not require this, Theorem 2 is more general statement than Minguzzi’s.
- (iii)
- The Finslerian unit normal presents some issues in the general case, as we are not taking . In our physical interpretation, with L Lorentz–Finsler, A consists of timelike vectors, so asking for a Finslerian unit normal is only reasonable when Γ is L-spacelike, that is, for . In such a case, the strong concavity of the indicatrix guarantees the existence and uniqueness of ξ: one defines to be the unique vector such that and the indicatrix are tangent at .
- (iv)
- Of course, if L comes from a pseudo-Riemannian metric on M, then and .
- (v)
- It should be clear from this discussion that the form that one integrates on the right-hand side of (36) is always the same and that the only difference between Rund’s and Minguzzi’s divergence theorems is how each of them represents it. Notwithstanding, this is an important difference, for the boundary terms (38) and (39) could potentially have different physical interpretations.
5. Divergence of Anisotropic Tensor Fields
5.1. Definition of Divergence with the Chern Connection
- (Ai)
- is antisymmetric.
- (Aii)
- is anti-self-adjoint with respect to , that is, .
- (Aiii)
- .
- (Ci)
- is antisymmetric.
- (Cii)
- is symmetric and .
- (i)
- First and foremost, by construction, (11) indeed holds for any . At this point, it is important that the connection with which one defines is the Chern one.
- (ii)
- Thanks to the fact that the Chern connection parallelizes g, namely, and , the following hold:
- (iii)
- Regardless of this, in general we are not assuming the symmetry of or —we only did in Proposition 3 (Cii). Instead, at the beginning of §5 we fixed a convention for the order of the indices in and (for example, )—in the remainder of §4 and with said condition (Cii) only.
5.2. Chern vs. Berwald
- (i)
- (ii)
- One sees that the vanishing of (or of the mean Cartan , see ((6.37) in [38])) implies that the divergence of elements of coincides with the trace of their Berwald covariant derivative. However, (or even ) is not enough if one wants to obtain the same characterization for elements of .
5.3. Finslerian Conservation Laws and Main Examples
- (i)
- is an anisotropic vector field,
- (ii)
- is an A-admissible field with open,
- (iii)
- is an anisotropic 2-tensor, and
- (iv)
- is a domain with smooth up to subset of 0 -dimensional measure on M and compact,
- (i)
- .
- (ii)
- Any of the conditions (Ci) or (Cii) of Proposition 3 holds for .
- (iii)
- .
- (i)
- Obviously, suffices, but we do not need to assume that the divergence vanishes for all observers.
- (ii)
- suffices. In fact, (Proposition 2.9 in [17]), so (Ci) of Proposition 3 holds for . Thus, assuming the other two hypotheses, we get
- (iii)
- Although the hypothesis may seem artificial as it stands, there are a number of natural situations in which it is guaranteed. First, in classical relativity (g, T, and X isotropic), because and ; the result is then independent of V. Second, when the observer field is parallel (), trivially. Third, when for some 1-form V and is 0-homogeneous, because of Euler’s theorem. Fourth, in the situation described in (Section 5.1 in [19]) (Z is our , s is our V, and I is our ).
5.3.1. Example: Lorentz Norms on an Affine Space
5.3.2. Example: Cauchy Hypersurfaces in a Finsler Spacetime
- (i)
- is again an exhaustion by compact domains of such that is smooth a. e.
- (ii)
- is a compact domain of U with smooth a. e. We do not really need to consider the union of all the ’s.
- (i)
- The volume form of coincides with that of , namely .
- (ii)
- The salient unit -normal to coincides with the corresponding -normal. We denote it by , as in Remark 12.
- (iii)
- The hypersurface volume form of with respect to coincides with the one computed with , namely with the inclusion. Hence we speak just of the hypersurface volume of , namely . As is -orthogonal to V, and hence -spacelike, we can use the representation
- (i)
- The hypersurface volume stays bounded. Then, it is enough for (49) that , and one could instead postulate the stronger condition that the maximum outside tends to 0, which is independent of the concrete compact exhaustion.
- (ii)
- grows without bound. In this case, one can just postulate that the decay of compensates the growth of , but this does depend on the compact exhaustion.
- (i)
- One could try to represent also the integrals of (50) in terms of , as in Section 5.3.1. However, according to Remark 12, that would require assuming that is non--lightlike, which is not very reasonable when all we know is that L-spacelike and L-Cauchy.
- (ii)
- On the other hand, in terms of the Finslerian unit normal ξ, (50) readswhen . The sign in front of the second integral is explained as follows (see Remark 5 (ii)). selects an orientation on each : the one for which is positive. However, in (50) already had an orientation and had : the -salient ones. Necessarily12, exactly one of these agrees with the -orientation: if lays in the future of and if it is the opposite. Notice that this, and hence (52), would fail if the Cauchy hypersurfaces crossed.
- (iii)
6. Conclusions
- 1
- Heuristic interpretations from fluids, Section 3.1 and Section 3.2—Possible breakings of Lorentz-invariance lead to non-trivial transformations of coordinates between observers. Such transformations are still linear and permit a well-defined energy-momentum vector at each tangent space , Section 3.1.However, the stress–energy–momentum T must not be regarded as a tensor on each but as an anisotropic tensor. This depends intrinsically on each observer and may vary with u in a nonlinear way. Indeed, the breaking of Lorentz invariance does not permit to fully replicate the relativistic arguments leading to (isotropic) tensors on M, even though classical interpretations of the anisotropic T in terms of fluxes can be maintained, Section 3.2.
- 2
- Lagrangian viewpoint, Section 3.3. In principle, the interpretations of Special Relativity about the canonical energy–momentum tensor associated with the invariance by translations remain for Lorentz norms and, thus, in Very Special Relativity. In the case of Lorentz–Finsler metrics, some issues to be studied further appear:
- (a)
- The canonical stress–energy tensor in Relativity leads to different types of (anisotropic) tensors in the Finslerian setting (a scalar function on in the Einstein-Hilbert setting, higher order tensors in Palatini’s). Starting at such tensors, different alternatives to recover the heuristic physical interpretations in terms of a 2-tensor appear.
- (b)
- In the particularly interesting case of a kinetic gas [1,16], the 1-PDF becomes naturally the matter source for the Euler-Lagrange equation of the Finslerian Einstein-Hilbert functional. However, the variational derivation of is obtained by means of a possibly non-natural Lagrangian. This might be analyzed by sharpening the framework of variational completion for Finslerian Einstein equations [15].
- 1
- Section 4.1: For any Lorentz–Finsler metric L, there is a natural definition of anisotropic Lie bracket derivation along Z, which depends only on the nonlinear connection and admits an interpretation by using flows.
- 2
- Section 4.2: This bracket allows one to give a natural definition of which depends exclusively on and the volume form of L. This provides a geometric interpretation for the definition of divergence introduced by Rund [18].
- 3
- A general divergence theorem is obtained (Theorem 2) so that Section 4.3:
- (a)
- It can be seen as a conservation law for Z measured by each observer field V, even if the conserved quantity depends on V.
- (b)
- The computation of the boundary term is intrinsically expressed in terms of forms. However, several metric elements can be used to re-express it, in particular the normal vector field for: (i) the pseudo-Riemannian metric (Rund), or (ii) the pseudo-Finsler metric L, when L is defined on the whole (Minguzzi).
- 1
- Section 5.1 and Section 5.2: The computation of priviledges the Levi-Civita–Chern anisotropic connection, showing explicit equivalence with Rund’s approach.
- 2
- Corollaries 1 and 2: A vector field on M is preserved assuming that some natural elements vanish on V for T, X and .
- 3
- Section 5.3: Natural laws of conservation on Cauchy hypersurfaces under general conditions (including rates of decay for unbounded domains) can be obtained by a combination of the techniques (i) and (ii) in the item 3b above.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Kinematics: Observers and Relative Velocities
Appendix A.1. The Lorentz Metric g Π up to a Constant
Appendix A.2. Simple Relative Velocity
Appendix A.3. Velocity as a Distance between Observers
Appendix A.4. Length-Contraction and Velocity
Appendix A.5. Symmetric Lorentz Velocities in Π
| 1 | |
| 2 | In this section, and , but in the others they will run freely from 1 to n (= dim M). |
| 3 | The symmetry of T is dropped for the case of theories with high spin because of its contribution to angular momentum. |
| 4 | |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | Some arguments which support strongly their choice are (see [1]): (a) the simplest analogous to the vacuum Einstein equation in the Finslerian approach Ricci (proposed by Rund [18], and satisfied by Finsler pp-waves [9]) is not a variational equation; (b) the Ricci scalar functional yields an Euler–Lagrange equation, which agrees with Einstein’s in the vacuum Lorentz case, and (c) this Euler–Lagrange equation is the variational completion of the Finslerian Ricci . |
| 8 | This is not to be mistaken by the torsion of the nonlinear connection , which would have coordinates (even though this can be seen as a particular case of the torsion of some ∇ and hence it is also denoted by in [17]). |
| 9 | Here, is the operator that (metrically) contracts the first index of S with the one introduced by ∇, and is the operator that (naturally) contracts the first index of R with the one introduced by ∇. |
| 10 | For instance, it is clear that in affine coordinates the components of the metric spray vanish, so the geodesics are the straight lines of E. |
| 11 | The case when they interesect can be also conisdered by taking into account that, then, the open set is still globally hyperbolic and a Cauchy hypersurface of this open subset will be also Cauchy for M (and it will not intersect any of the previous ones). |
| 12 | Suppose, for instance, that lays in the future of : the ’s departing from reach points with . Take bases for and for such that and are -positive. Then and are both -positive ( and V always lie in the same half-space), the former is -negative (V is -entering at ) and the latter is -positive (V is -salient at ). |
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Javaloyes, M.Á.; Sánchez, M.; Villaseñor, F.F. On the Significance of the Stress–Energy Tensor in Finsler Spacetimes. Universe 2022, 8, 93. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe8020093
Javaloyes MÁ, Sánchez M, Villaseñor FF. On the Significance of the Stress–Energy Tensor in Finsler Spacetimes. Universe. 2022; 8(2):93. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe8020093
Chicago/Turabian StyleJavaloyes, Miguel Ángel, Miguel Sánchez, and Fidel F. Villaseñor. 2022. "On the Significance of the Stress–Energy Tensor in Finsler Spacetimes" Universe 8, no. 2: 93. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe8020093
APA StyleJavaloyes, M. Á., Sánchez, M., & Villaseñor, F. F. (2022). On the Significance of the Stress–Energy Tensor in Finsler Spacetimes. Universe, 8(2), 93. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe8020093

