Einstein equations

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Because of the diffeomorphism invariance of the Einstein equations, these equations are not hyperbolic as stated. However, this can be remedied by choosing an appropriate choice of co-ordinate system (a gauge, if you will). One popular choice is harmonic co-ordinates or wave co-ordinates, where the co-ordinate functions x a are assumed to obey the wave equation Boxg x a = 0 with respect to the metric g. In this case the Einstein equations take a form which (in gross caricature) looks something like

Boxg g = G (g) Q(dg, dg) + lower order terms

where Q is some quadratic form of the first two derivatives. In other words, it becomes a [#Quasilinear quasilinear wave equation]. One would then specify initial
data on the initial surface x = 0; the co-ordinate x plays the role of time, locally at least.

  • Scaling is s_c = 3/2. Thus energy is super-critical, which seems to make a large data global theory extremely difficult.
  • LWP is known in H^s for s > 5/2 by energy estimates (see HuKaMar1977, [AnMc-p]; for smooth data s > 4 this is in Cq1952) - given that the initial data obeys the constraint equations, of course.
    • This result can be improved to s>2 by the [#Quasilinear recent quasilinear theory] (see in particular [KlRo-p3], [KlRo-p4], [KlRo-p5]).
    • This result has now been improved further to s=2 [KlRo-p6], [KlRo-p7], [KlRo-p8]
    • For smooth data, one has a (possibly geodesically incomplete) maximal Cauchy development CqGc1969.
  • GWP for small smooth asymptotically flat data was shown in CdKl1993 (see also CdKl1990). In other words, Minkowski space is stable.
    • Another proof using the double null foliation is in KlNi2003, [KlNi-p]
    • Another proof of this fact (using the Lorenz gauge, and assuming Schwarzschild metric outside of a compact set) is in [LbRo-p] (see also LbRo2003 for a treatment of the asymptotic dynamics)
    • Singularities must form if there is a trapped surface Pn1965.
  • Many special solutions (Schwarzschild space, Kerr space, etc.) The stability of these spaces is a very interesting (and difficult) question.
  • The equations can simplify under additional symmetry assumptions. The U(1)-symmetric case reduces to a system of equations which closely resembles the [#wm_on_R^2 two-dimensional wave maps equation] (with the target manifold being hyperbolic space H^2).
  • Another important question is the Cosmic Censorship Hypothesis. Informally, this asserts that singularities are always (or at least generically) concealed by black holes. Another (slightly different) version of the conjecture asserts that the maximal Cauchy development is always inextendable as a (suitably regular) Lorentzian manifold. This question is already interesting in the U(1)-symmetric case (perhaps with a matter coupling).