Nonmetricity tensor

In this article we are going to explore Nonmetricity tensor and its impact on various aspects of daily life. We will delve into different perspectives and analyzes to better understand its influence on society, the economy, politics and culture. Nonmetricity tensor has been the subject of study and debate throughout history, and its relevance remains fundamental today. Through this article, we aim to examine how Nonmetricity tensor has shaped and continues to shape our world, and how we can understand and address its challenges and opportunities in the future.

In mathematics, the nonmetricity tensor in differential geometry is the covariant derivative of the metric tensor.[1][2] It is therefore a tensor field of order three. It vanishes for the case of Riemannian geometry and can be used to study non-Riemannian spacetimes.[3]

Definition

By components, it is defined as follows.[1]

It measures the rate of change of the components of the metric tensor along the flow of a given vector field, since

where is the coordinate basis of vector fields of the tangent bundle, in the case of having a 4-dimensional manifold.

Relation to connection

We say that a connection is compatible with the metric when its associated covariant derivative of the metric tensor (call it , for example) is zero, i.e.

If the connection is also torsion-free (i.e. totally symmetric) then it is known as the Levi-Civita connection, which is the only one without torsion and compatible with the metric tensor. If we see it from a geometrical point of view, a non-vanishing nonmetricity tensor for a metric tensor implies that the modulus of a vector defined on the tangent bundle to a certain point of the manifold, changes when it is evaluated along the direction (flow) of another arbitrary vector.

References

  1. ^ a b Hehl, Friedrich W.; McCrea, J. Dermott; Mielke, Eckehard W.; Ne'eman, Yuval (July 1995). "Metric-affine gauge theory of gravity: field equations, Noether identities, world spinors, and breaking of dilation invariance". Physics Reports. 258 (1–2): 1–171. arXiv:gr-qc/9402012. Bibcode:1995PhR...258....1H. doi:10.1016/0370-1573(94)00111-F. S2CID 119346282.
  2. ^ Kopeikin, Sergei; Efroimsky, Michael; Kaplan, George (2011), Relativistic Celestial Mechanics of the Solar System, John Wiley & Sons, p. 242, ISBN 9783527408566.
  3. ^ Puntigam, Roland A.; Lämmerzahl, Claus; Hehl, Friedrich W. (May 1997). "Maxwell's theory on a post-Riemannian spacetime and the equivalence principle". Classical and Quantum Gravity. 14 (5): 1347–1356. arXiv:gr-qc/9607023. Bibcode:1997CQGra..14.1347P. doi:10.1088/0264-9381/14/5/033. S2CID 44439510.