Wahlquist fluid

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In general relativity, the Wahlquist fluid is an exact rotating perfect fluid solution to Einstein's equation with equation of state corresponding to constant gravitational mass density.

Introduction

The Wahlquist fluid was first discovered by Hugo D. Wahlquist in 1968.[1] It is one of few known exact rotating perfect fluid solutions in general relativity. The solution reduces to the static Whittaker metric in the limit of zero rotation.

Metric

The metric of a Wahlquist fluid is given by

ds2=f(dtA~dφ)2r02(ζ2+ξ2)[dζ2(1k~2ζ2)h~1+dξ2(1+k~2ξ2)h~2+h~1h~2h~1h~2dφ2]

where

f=h~1h~2ζ2+ξ2
A~=r0(ξ2h~1+ζ2h~2h~1h~2ξA2)
h~1(ζ)=1+ζ2+ζκ2[ζ+1k~1k~2ζ2arcsin(k~ζ)]
h~2(ξ)=1ξ2ξκ2[ξ1k~1+k~2ξ2sinh1(k~ξ)]

and ξA is defined by h~2(ξA)=0. It is a solution with equation of state μ+3p=μ0 where μ0 is a constant.

Properties

The pressure and density of the Wahlquist fluid are given by

p=12μ0(1κ2f)
μ=12μ0(3κ2f1)

The vanishing pressure surface of the fluid is prolate, in contrast to physical rotating stars, which are oblate. It has been shown that the Wahlquist fluid can not be matched to an asymptotically flat region of spacetime.[2]

References

  1. Wahlquist, Hugo D. (1968). "Interior Solution for a Finite Rotating Body of Perfect Fluid". Physical Review. 172 (5): 1291–1296. Bibcode:1968PhRv..172.1291W. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.172.1291.
  2. Bradley, Michael; Fodor, Gyula; Marklund, Mattias; Perjés, Zoltán (2000). "The Wahlquist metric cannot describe an isolated rotating body". Classical and Quantum Gravity. 17 (2): 351–359. arXiv:gr-qc/9910001. Bibcode:2000CQGra..17..351B. doi:10.1088/0264-9381/17/2/306. S2CID 2911496.