Formalism
Definition
Spacetime configurations
Properties
Spacetimes
black hole spacetimes | vanishing angular momentum | positive angular momentum |
---|---|---|
vanishing charge | Schwarzschild spacetime | Kerr spacetime |
positive charge | Reissner-Nordstrom spacetime | Kerr-Newman spacetime |
Quantum theory
The past of any physical event (object, system, etc) consists of everything that might (by the principles of causality) have potentially influenced that event; while its future consists of everything that it might potentially influence.
Let be a spacetime, that is a Lorentzian manifold equipped with time orientation. This time-orientation consists precisely of specification of which timelike and lightlike curves are future-directed (and which are complementarily past-directed).
Let be a point in this spacetime. Then:
the future of is the subset of all points of connected to by a future-directed timelike or lightlike curve starting at ;
the past of is the subset of all points of connected to by a future-directed timelike or lightlike curve ending at .
Let be a more general subset of this spacetimes. Then:
the future of is the subset defined as the union of for all ;
the past of is the subset defined as the union of for all .
A Cauchy surface in is a minimal subset of with the property that is the union of the future and past of . (Does this suffice to define Cauchy surfaces in the case of a Lorentzian manifold that admits a time-orientation?)
The operations and are (separately) Moore closures on the power set of . Stated explicitly (for ):
Sometimes one wants to remove itself from and (or more precisely, to include only in the case of a closed timelike curve through ). However, the operations and are not quite as mathematically well-behaved in this case. (Note that may still intersect , or even contain all of , even in the absence of closed timelike curves.)
Last revised on September 6, 2017 at 07:31:34. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.