In
spherical coordinates, the Reissner–Nordström metric (i.e. the
line element) is
where is the
speed of light, is the proper time, is the time coordinate (measured by a stationary clock at infinity), is the radial coordinate, are the spherical angles, and is the
Schwarzschild radius of the body given by
and is a characteristic length scale given by
Here, is the
electric constant.
The total mass of the central body and its irreducible mass are related by[6][7]
In the limit that the charge (or equivalently, the length scale ) goes to zero, one recovers the
Schwarzschild metric. The classical Newtonian theory of gravity may then be recovered in the limit as the ratio goes to zero. In the limit that both and go to zero, the metric becomes the
Minkowski metric for
special relativity.
In practice, the ratio is often extremely small. For example, the Schwarzschild radius of the
Earth is roughly 9
mm (3/8
inch), whereas a
satellite in a
geosynchronous orbit has an orbital radius that is roughly four billion times larger, at 42,164
km (26,200
miles). Even at the surface of the Earth, the corrections to Newtonian gravity are only one part in a billion. The ratio only becomes large close to
black holes and other ultra-dense objects such as
neutron stars.
Charged black holes
Although charged black holes with rQ âȘ rs are similar to the
Schwarzschild black hole, they have two horizons: the
event horizon and an internal
Cauchy horizon.[8] As with the Schwarzschild metric, the event horizons for the spacetime are located where the metric component diverges; that is, where
This equation has two solutions:
These concentric
event horizons become
degenerate for 2rQ = rs, which corresponds to an
extremal black hole. Black holes with 2rQ > rs cannot exist in nature because if the charge is greater than the mass there can be no physical event horizon (the term under the square root becomes negative).[9] Objects with a charge greater than their mass can exist in nature, but they can not collapse down to a black hole, and if they could, they would display a
naked singularity.[10] Theories with
supersymmetry usually guarantee that such "superextremal" black holes cannot exist.
If magnetic monopoles are included in the theory, then a generalization to include magnetic charge P is obtained by replacing Q2 by Q2 + P2 in the metric and including the term P cos ΞdÏ in the electromagnetic potential.[clarification needed]
Given the Christoffel symbols, one can compute the geodesics of a test-particle.[11][12]
Tetrad form
Instead of working in the holonomic basis, one can perform efficient calculations with a
tetrad.[13] Let be a set of
one-forms with internal
Minkowski index, such that . The Reissner metric can be described by the tetrad
,
,
where . The
parallel transport of the tetrad is captured by the
connection one-forms. These have only 24 independent components compared to the 40 components of . The connections can be solved for by inspection from Cartan's equation , where the left hand side is the
exterior derivative of the tetrad, and the right hand side is a
wedge product.
The
Riemann tensor can be constructed as a collection of two-forms by the second Cartan equation which again makes use of the exterior derivative and wedge product. This approach is significantly faster than the traditional computation with ; note that there are only four nonzero compared with nine nonzero components of .
Because of the
spherical symmetry of the metric, the coordinate system can always be aligned in a way that the motion of a test-particle is confined to a plane, so for brevity and without restriction of generality we use Ξ instead of Ï. In dimensionless natural units of G = M = c = K = 1 the motion of an electrically charged particle with the charge q is given by
which yields
All total derivatives are with respect to proper time .
Constants of the motion are provided by solutions to the partial differential equation[15]
after substitution of the second derivatives given above. The metric itself is a solution when written as a differential equation
The separable equation
immediately yields the constant relativistic specific angular momentum
a third constant obtained from
is the specific energy (energy per unit rest mass)[16]
Substituting and into yields the radial equation
Multiplying under the integral sign by yields the orbital equation
The total
time dilation between the test-particle and an observer at infinity is
The first derivatives and the
contravariant components of the local 3-velocity are related by
of the test-particle are conserved quantities of motion. and are the radial and transverse components of the local velocity-vector. The local velocity is therefore
Notice that k is a
unit vector. Here M is the constant mass of the object, Q is the constant charge of the object, and η is the
Minkowski tensor.
Quantum gravitational corrections to the metric
In certain approaches to
quantum gravity, the classical ReissnerâNordström metric receives quantum corrections. An example of this is given by the effective field theory approach pioneered by Barvinsky and Vilkovisky.[17][18][19][20] At second order in
curvature, the classical
Einstein-Hilbert action is supplemented by local and non-local terms:
where is an energy scale. The exact values of the coefficients are unknown, as they depend on the nature of the ultra-violet theory of quantum gravity. On the other hand, the coefficients are calculable.[21]
The operator has the integral representation
The new additional terms in the action imply a modification of the classical solution. The quantum corrected ReissnerâNordström metric, up to order , was found by Campos Delgado:[22]
^Nordström, G. (1918). "On the Energy of the Gravitational Field in Einstein's Theory". Verhandl. Koninkl. Ned. Akad. Wetenschap., Afdel. Natuurk., Amsterdam. 26: 1201â1208.
Bibcode:
1918KNAB...20.1238N.
^Chandrasekhar, S. (1998).
The Mathematical Theory of Black Holes (Reprinted ed.).
Oxford University Press. p. 205.
ISBN0-19850370-9. Archived from
the original on 29 April 2013. Retrieved 13 May 2013. And finally, the fact that the ReissnerâNordström solution has two horizons, an external event horizon and an internal 'Cauchy horizon,' provides a convenient bridge to the study of the Kerr solution in the subsequent chapters.
^Barvinsky, Vilkovisky, A.O, G.A (1983). "The generalized Schwinger-DeWitt technique and the unique effective action in quantum gravity". Phys. Lett. B. 131 (4â6): 313â318.
Bibcode:
1983PhLB..131..313B.
doi:
10.1016/0370-2693(83)90506-3.
^Barvinsky, Vilkovisky, A.O, G.A (1990). "Covariant perturbation theory. 2: Second order in the curvature. General algorithms". Nucl. Phys. B. 333: 471â511.
doi:
10.1016/0550-3213(90)90047-H.