In general relativity and tensor calculus, the contracted Bianchi identities are:[1]
where is the Ricci tensor, the scalar curvature, and indicates covariant differentiation.
These identities are named after Luigi Bianchi, although they had been already derived by Aurel Voss in 1880.[2] In the Einstein field equations, the contracted Bianchi identity ensures consistency with the vanishing divergence of the matter stress–energy tensor.
Proof
editStart with the Bianchi identity[3]
Contract both sides of the above equation with a pair of metric tensors:
The first term on the left contracts to yield a Ricci scalar, while the third term contracts to yield a mixed Ricci tensor,
The last two terms are the same (changing dummy index n to m) and can be combined into a single term which shall be moved to the right,
which is the same as
Swapping the index labels l and m on the left side yields
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Bianchi, Luigi (1902), "Sui simboli a quattro indici e sulla curvatura di Riemann", Rend. Acc. Naz. Lincei (in Italian), 11 (5): 3–7
- ^ Voss, A. (1880), "Zur Theorie der Transformation quadratischer Differentialausdrücke und der Krümmung höherer Mannigfaltigketien", Mathematische Annalen, 16 (2): 129–178, doi:10.1007/bf01446384, S2CID 122828265
- ^ Synge J.L., Schild A. (1949). Tensor Calculus. pp. 87–89–90.
References
edit- Lovelock, David; Hanno Rund (1989) [1975]. Tensors, Differential Forms, and Variational Principles. Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-65840-7.
- Synge J.L., Schild A. (1949). Tensor Calculus. first Dover Publications 1978 edition. ISBN 978-0-486-63612-2.
- J.R. Tyldesley (1975), An introduction to Tensor Analysis: For Engineers and Applied Scientists, Longman, ISBN 0-582-44355-5
- D.C. Kay (1988), Tensor Calculus, Schaum’s Outlines, McGraw Hill (USA), ISBN 0-07-033484-6
- T. Frankel (2012), The Geometry of Physics (3rd ed.), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-1107-602601