Carminati–McLenaghan invariants

In general relativity, the Carminati–McLenaghan invariants or CM scalars are a set of 16 scalar curvature invariants for the Riemann tensor. This set is usually supplemented with at least two additional invariants.

Mathematical definition edit

The CM invariants consist of 6 real scalars plus 5 complex scalars, making a total of 16 invariants. They are defined in terms of the Weyl tensor   and its right (or left) dual  , the Ricci tensor  , and the trace-free Ricci tensor

 

In the following, it may be helpful to note that if we regard   as a matrix, then   is the square of this matrix, so the trace of the square is  , and so forth.

The real CM scalars are:

  1.   (the trace of the Ricci tensor)
  2.  
  3.  
  4.  
  5.  
  6.  

The complex CM scalars are:

  1.  
  2.  
  3.  
  4.  
  5.  

The CM scalars have the following degrees:

  1.   is linear,
  2.   are quadratic,
  3.   are cubic,
  4.   are quartic,
  5.   are quintic.

They can all be expressed directly in terms of the Ricci spinors and Weyl spinors, using Newman–Penrose formalism; see the link below.

Complete sets of invariants edit

In the case of spherically symmetric spacetimes or planar symmetric spacetimes, it is known that

 
 

comprise a complete set of invariants for the Riemann tensor. In the case of vacuum solutions, electrovacuum solutions and perfect fluid solutions, the CM scalars comprise a complete set. Additional invariants may be required for more general spacetimes; determining the exact number (and possible syzygies among the various invariants) is an open problem.

See also edit

References edit

  • Carminati J.; McLenaghan, R. G. (1991). "Algebraic invariants of the Riemann tensor in a four-dimensional Lorentzian space". J. Math. Phys. 32 (11): 3135–3140. Bibcode:1991JMP....32.3135C. doi:10.1063/1.529470.

External links edit