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Published June 15, 2022 | Published
Journal Article Open

New first-order formulation of the Einstein equations exploiting analogies with electrodynamics

Abstract

The Einstein and Maxwell equations are both systems of hyperbolic equations which need to satisfy a set of elliptic constraints throughout evolution. However, while electrodynamics and magnetohydrodynamics have benefited from a large number of evolution schemes that are able to enforce these constraints and are easily applicable to curvilinear coordinates, unstructured meshes, or N-body simulations, many of these techniques cannot be straightforwardly applied to existing formulations of the Einstein equations. We develop a 3 + 1 a formulation of the Einstein equations that shows a striking resemblance to the equations of relativistic magnetohydrodynamics and to electrodynamics in material media. The fundamental variables of this formulation are the frame fields, their exterior derivatives, and the Nester-Witten and Sparling forms. These mirror the roles of the electromagnetic four potential, the electromagnetic field strengths, the field excitations and the electric current. The role of the lapse function and shift vector, corresponds exactly to that of the scalar electric potential. The formulation is manifestly first order and flux-conservative, which makes it suitable for high-resolution shock capturing schemes and finite-element methods. Being derived as a system of equations in exterior derivatives, it is directly applicable to any coordinate system and to unstructured meshes, and leads to a natural discretization potentially suitable for the use of machine-precision constraint propagation techniques such as the Yee algorithm and constrained transport. Due to these properties, we expect this new formulation to be beneficial in simulations of many astrophysical systems, such as binary compact objects and core-collapse supernovae as well as cosmological simulations of the early Universe.

Additional Information

© 2022 American Physical Society. During the development of this project, the authors became aware of a work in preparation by I. Peshkov and E. Romenski on a first-order reduction of pure tetrad teleparallel gravity that includes as a special case a system of equations identical to that presented here, and which served as an independent verification of our derivations. H. O. is grateful to M. DeLaurentis, B. Ripperda, M. Moscibrodzka, O. Porth, A. Jiménez-Rosales, J. Vos, J. Davelaar, C. Brinkerink, T. Bronzwaer, and A. Cruz-Osorio for useful discussions on the formulation, and to V. Ardachenko for sharing thoughts on the relation between constraint-preserving discretizations and equations in exterior derivatives. E. R. M. thanks L. Kidder, F. Pretorius, and M. Scheel for useful discussions related to this work. Funding for H. O. comes from Radboud University Nijmegen through a Virtual Institute of Accretion (VIA) postdoctoral fellowship from the Netherlands Research School for Astronomy (NOVA). I. P. is a member of the Gruppo Nazionale per il Calcolo Scientifico of the Istituto Nazionale di Alta Matematica (INdAM GNCS) and acknowledges the financial support received from the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR) in the frame of the Departments of Excellence Initiative 2018–2022 attributed to the Department of Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering (DICAM) of the University of Trento (Grant No. L.232/2016) and in the frame of the Progetti di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale (PRIN) 2017, Project No. 2017KKJP4X, "Innovative numerical methods for evolutionary partial differential equations and applications". E. R. M. gratefully acknowledges support from postdoctoral fellowships at the Princeton Center for Theoretical Science, the Princeton Gravity Initiative, and the Institute for Advanced Study. F. M. G. acknowledges funding from the Fondazione CARITRO, program Bando post-doc 2021, Project No. 11745.

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Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023