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Physics 364: Problem Set 3

This document contains a physics problem set with 4 problems: 1) Calculating projection tensors for vectors orthogonal to a normalized vector field on a submanifold and applying it to a hyperboloid. 2) Finding an expanding universe metric that allows horizons to both the past and future. 3) Expressing a particle path in spherical coordinates and calculating tangent vectors. 4) Reducing Maxwell's equations to a scalar field in 2D spacetime and writing the field equations.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views

Physics 364: Problem Set 3

This document contains a physics problem set with 4 problems: 1) Calculating projection tensors for vectors orthogonal to a normalized vector field on a submanifold and applying it to a hyperboloid. 2) Finding an expanding universe metric that allows horizons to both the past and future. 3) Expressing a particle path in spherical coordinates and calculating tangent vectors. 4) Reducing Maxwell's equations to a scalar field in 2D spacetime and writing the field equations.

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Machodog
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Physics 364: Problem Set 3

Sean Carroll, Winter 2005 Due Wednesday 2 February, 12:00 noon. 1. (20 points) Given a vector n normalized to g n n = (where = 1 depending on whether n is spacelike or timelike), we can construct the tensor P = n n . This is known as the rst fundamental form on the submanifold orthogonal to n. (a) Show that P projects a vector A into one orthogonal to n ; that is, show that P A is both orthogonal to n and also unaected by P : P P A = P A . (b) Show that P acts like the metric on vectors orthogonal to n; that is, for A and B orthogonal to n, P A B = g A B . (c) In a 3-dimensional Minkowski space with coordinates {t, x, y }, consider the timelike hyperboloid described by x2 + y 2 = t2 + 1 . Find the components {nt , nx , ny } of the vector eld orthogonal to the hyperboloid. (Possibly, although not necessarily, useful hint: the hyperboloid is left invariant under Lorentz transformations.) You can express the components as functions of angular coordinates {r, } in space if you like (although you want {nt , nx , ny }, not {nt , nr , n }). (d) Calculate P for the hyperboloid. 2. (10 points) Section 2.6 of the book explores the metric of an expanding universe with at spatial slices, ds2 = dt2 + a2 (t)[dx2 + dx2 + dx2 ] , and shows that for a(t) tq , with 0 < q < 1, there can be horizons we can nd two events with spacelike separation such that their past light cones do not overlap. Find an example of some other form of a(t) such that there are horizons to both the past and the future we can nd two events with spacelike separation such that neither the past nor the future light cones overlap. 1

3. (10 points) Consider R3 as a manifold with the at Euclidean metric, and coordinates {x, y, z }. Introduce spherical polar coordinates {r, , } related to {x, y, z } by x = r sin cos y = r sin sin z = r cos , so that the metric becomes ds2 = dr2 + r2 d2 + r2 sin2 d2 . (a) A particle moves along a parameterized curve given by x() = cos , y () = sin , z () = . (0.1)

Express the path of the curve in the {r, , } system. (b) Calculate the components of the tangent vector to the curve in both the Cartesian and spherical polar coordinate systems. 4. (10 points) Consider Maxwells equations, dF = 0 and d F = J , in a two-dimensional spacetime. (a) Explain why one of the two equations can be discarded. (b) Show that the electromagnetic eld can be expressed in terms of a scalar eld, and write out the eld equations for this scalar in component form.

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