Tidal tensor
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In Newton's theory of gravitation and in various relativistic classical theories of gravitation, such as general relativity, the tidal tensor represents
- tidal accelerations of a cloud of (electrically neutral, nonspinning) test particles,
- tidal stresses in a small object immersed in an ambient gravitational field.
Newton's theory
In the field theoretic elaboration of Newtonian gravity, the central quantity is the gravitational potential [U], which obeys the Poisson equation
- [\Delta U = 4 \pi \, \mu]
The tidal tensor is given by the traceless part
- [\Phi_ = J_ - \frac \, _m \, \eta_]
- [ J_ = \frac]
- [ ds^2 = dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2, \; -\infty < x,y,z < \infty]
- [ ds^2 = d\rho^2 + \rho^2 \, \left( d\theta^2 + \sin(\theta)^2 \, d\phi^2 \right) ]
- [ 0 < \rho < \infty, \; 0 < \theta < \pi, \; -\pi < \phi < \pi]
Spherically symmetric field
As an example, we compute the tidal tensor for the vacuum field outside an isolated spherically symmetric massive object in two different ways.
Let us adopt the frame obtained from the polar spherical chart for our three-dimensional Euclidean space:
- [ \vec_1 = \partial_r, \; \vec_2 = \frac \, \partial_\theta, \; \vec_3 = \frac \, \partial_\phi]
- [ m/(r+h)^2 - m/r^2 = -2m/r^3 \, h + 3m/r^4 \, h^2 + O(h^3) ]
- [ \frac \, \sin(\theta) \approx \frac \, \frac = \frac \, h]
Next, let us plug the gravitational potential [U = -m/\rho] into the Hessian. We can convert the expression above to one valid in polar spherical coordinates, or we can convert the potential to Cartesian coordinates before plugging in. Adopting the second course, we have [U = -m/\sqrt(x^2+y^2+z^2)], which gives
- [\Phi_ = \frac} \, \left[ begin y^2+z^2-2x^2 & -3xy & -3xz \ -3xy & x^2+z^2-2y^2 & -3yz \ -3xz & -3yz & x^2+y^2-2z^2 end right] ]
General relativity
In general relativity, the tidal tensor is identified with the electrogravitic tensor, which is one piece of the Bel decomposition of the Riemann tensor.
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