Hawking energy
One of the possible definitions of mass in general relativity From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
One of the possible definitions of mass in general relativity From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Hawking energy or Hawking mass is one of the possible definitions of mass in general relativity. It is a measure of the bending of ingoing and outgoing rays of light that are orthogonal to a 2-sphere surrounding the region of space whose mass is to be defined.
Let be a 3-dimensional sub-manifold of a relativistic spacetime, and let be a closed 2-surface. Then the Hawking mass of is defined[1] to be
where is the mean curvature of .
In the Schwarzschild metric, the Hawking mass of any sphere about the central mass is equal to the value of the central mass.
A result of Geroch[2] implies that Hawking mass satisfies an important monotonicity condition. Namely, if has nonnegative scalar curvature, then the Hawking mass of is non-decreasing as the surface flows outward at a speed equal to the inverse of the mean curvature. In particular, if is a family of connected surfaces evolving according to
where is the mean curvature of and is the unit vector opposite of the mean curvature direction, then
Said otherwise, Hawking mass is increasing for the inverse mean curvature flow.[3]
Hawking mass is not necessarily positive. However, it is asymptotic to the ADM[4] or the Bondi mass, depending on whether the surface is asymptotic to spatial infinity or null infinity.[5]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.