Tag Archives: Wormholes
The mathematics behind a “wormhole”
Let me tell you something that will sound ridiculous at first. Take a piece of paper. Draw a dot on the left and a dot on the right. The shortest path between them, if you are a little ant walking … Continue reading
How many solutions of Einstein’s equations are there?
How many solutions does the most beautiful equation in physics have? More than you’d think… probably infinitely many, and most of them will never have names. Continue reading
Posted in Expository, Notes
Tagged Astrophysics, Black holes, differential geometry, Einstein equation, general relativity, Kerr spacetime, Lorentzian Geometry, manifolds, Mathematical Physics, riemannian geometry, Schwarzschild spacetime, Tensor Calculus, theoretical physics, Wormholes
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Traversable wormholes and the geometry of effective exoticity
One of the useful lessons of general relativity is that the Einstein equations are not, by themselves, especially conservative about the kinds of geometries they permit. Smooth Lorentzian metrics can describe black holes, gravitational waves, expanding cosmologies, singularity formation, and … Continue reading