Energies and a gravitational charge for massive particles in general relativity
Abstract: In this paper, we investigate relations or differences among various conserved quantities which involve the matter Energy Momentum Tensor (EMT) in general relativity. These charges include the energy with Einstein's pseudo EMT, the generalized Komar integral, or the ADM energy, all of which can be derived from Noether's second theorem, as well as an extra conserved charge recently proposed in general relativity. For detailed analyses, we apply definitions of these charges to a system of free massive particles. We employ the post-Newtonian (PN) expansion to make physical interpretations. We find that the generalized Komar integral is not conserved at the first non-trivial order in the PN expansion due to non-zero contributions at spatial boundaries, while the energy with Einstein's pseudo EMT at this order agrees with a total energy of massive particles with gravitational interactions through the Newtonian potential, and thus is conserved. In addition, this total energy is shown to be identical to the ADM energy not only at this order but also all orders in the PN expansion. We next calculate an extra conserved charge for the system of massive particles, at all orders in the PN expansion, which turns out to be a total number of particles. We call it a gravitational charge, since it is clearly different from the total energy. We finally discuss an implication from a fact that there exist two conserved quantities, energy and gravitational charge, in general relativity.
- A. Einstein, “The foundation of the general theory of relativity.,” Annalen Phys. 49 (1916), no. 7, 769–822.
- W. H. Freeman, San Francisco, 1973.
- A. Komar, “Covariant conservation laws in general relativity,” Phys. Rev. 113 (1959) 934–936.
- R. L. Arnowitt, S. Deser, and C. W. Misner, “The Dynamics of general relativity,” Gen. Rel. Grav. 40 (2008) 1997–2027, gr-qc/0405109.
- S. Aoki and T. Onogi, “Conserved non-Noether charge in general relativity: Physical definition versus Noether’s second theorem,” Int. J. Mod. Phys. A 37 (2022), no. 22, 2250129, 2201.09557.
- E. Noether, “Invariant Variation Problems,” Gott. Nachr. 1918 (1918) 235–257, physics/0503066.
- S. Aoki, T. Onogi, and S. Yokoyama, “Conserved charges in general relativity,” Int. J. Mod. Phys. A 36 (2021), no. 10, 2150098, 2005.13233.
- S. Aoki, T. Onogi, and S. Yokoyama, “Charge conservation, entropy current and gravitation,” Int. J. Mod. Phys. A 36 (2021), no. 29, 2150201, 2010.07660.
- S. Weinberg, Gravitation and Cosmology: Principles and Applications of the General Theory of Relativity. John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1972.
- R. Utiyama, “New Equation and Energy Tensor of a Gravitational Field,” Prog. Theor. Phys. 72 (1984) 83.
- S. Aoki, “Noether’s 1st theorem with local symmetries,” PTEP 2022 (2022), no. 12, 123A02, 2206.00283.
- S. Aoki and K. Kawana, “Entropy and its conservation in expanding Universe,” 2210.03323.
- S. Aoki, “Colliding gravitational waves and singularities,” 2209.11357.
- D. N. Vollick, “On the meaning of various mass definitions for asymptotically flat spacetimes,” Can. J. Phys. 101 (2023), no. 1, 9–16, 2101.12570.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.