Bondi–Metzner–Sachs group

In gravitational theory, the Bondi–Metzner–Sachs (BMS) group, or the Bondi–Van der Burg–Metzner–Sachs group, is an asymptotic symmetry group of asymptotically flat, Lorentzian spacetimes at null (i.e., light-like) infinity. It was originally formulated in 1962 by Hermann Bondi, M. G. Van der Burg, A. W. Metzner[1] and Rainer K. Sachs[2] in order to investigate the flow of energy at infinity due to propagating gravitational waves. Instead of the expected ordinary four spacetime translations of special relativity associated with the well-known conservation of momentum and energy, they found, much to their puzzling surprise, a novel infinite superset of direction-dependent time translations, which were named supertranslations. Half a century later, this work of Bondi, Van der Burg, Metzner, and Sachs is considered pioneering and seminal.[3] In his autobiography, Bondi considered the 1962 work as his "best scientific work".[4]: 79  The group of supertranslations is key to understanding the connections to quantum fields and gravitational wave memories.

1962 work of Bondi, Van der Burg, Metzner, and Sachs

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To give some context for the general reader, the naive expectation for asymptotically flat spacetime symmetries, i.e., symmetries of spacetime seen by observers located far away from all sources of the gravitational field, would be to extend and reproduce the symmetries of flat spacetime of special relativity, viz., the Poincaré group, also called the inhomogeneous Lorentz group,[2] which is a ten-dimensional group of three Lorentz boosts, three rotations, and four spacetime translations.[5] In short, expectation was that in the limit of weak fields and long distances, general relativity would reduce to special relativity.

Expectations aside, the first step in the work of Bondi, Van der Burg, Metzner, and Sachs was to decide on some physically sensible boundary conditions to place on the gravitational field at light-like infinity to characterize what it means to say a metric is asymptotically flat, with no a priori assumptions made about the nature of the asymptotic symmetry group — not even the assumption that such a group exists. Then after artfully designing what they considered to be the most sensible boundary conditions, they investigated the nature of the resulting asymptotic symmetry transformations that leave invariant the form of the boundary conditions appropriate for asymptotically flat gravitational fields.[1] What they found was that the asymptotic symmetry transformations actually do form a group and the structure of this group does not depend on the particular gravitational field that happens to be present. This means that, as expected, one can separate the kinematics of spacetime from the dynamics of the gravitational field at least at spatial infinity. The puzzling surprise in 1962 was their discovery of a rich infinite-dimensional group (the so-called BMS group) as the asymptotic symmetry group, instead of the expected ten-dimensional Poincaré group. The asymptotic symmetries include not only the six Lorentz boost/rotations but also an additional infinity of symmetries that are not Lorentz. These additional non-Lorentz asymptotic symmetries, which constitute an infinite superset of the four spacetime translations, are named supertranslations.[2] This implies that General Relativity (GR) does not reduce to special relativity in the case of weak fields at long distances.[3]: 35 

The coordinates used in the 1962 formulation were those introduced by Bondi[6] and generalized by Sachs,[7] which focused on null (i.e., light-like) geodesics, called null rays, along which the gravitational waves traveled. The null rays form a null hypersurface, defined by the retarded time   for outgoing waves and advanced time   for incoming waves. The basic idea, which was novel then, was to use the family of outgoing (or incoming) null hypersurfaces to build spacetime coordinates that would describe outgoing (or incoming) gravitational waves. In addition to the retarded (or advanced) time are the space-like distance   and the null-ray direction   to complete the local spacetime coordinates  . As   is large and approaches infinity, the set of   null hypersurfaces form the future null infinity, where the outgoing gravitational waves "exit". Similar considerations of   null hypersurfaces as   goes to infinity yield the past null infinity, where the incoming gravitational waves "enter". These two null (i.e., light-like) infinities, found using the non-inertial Bondi-Sachs coordinates, are not obvious in the inertial Cartesian coordinates of flat spacetime, where the two time-like infinities and the space-like infinity are obvious. All five infinities are revealed in the asymptotic conformal treatment of infinity by Penrose,[8][9] where the future (or past) null infinity is denoted by script   (or script  ) and pronounced "scr-EYE plus" (or "scr-EYE minus").[10]

The main surprise found in 1962 was that at the future null infinity, " -translations" of the retarded time   to   at any given direction   are asymptotic symmetry transformations, which were named supertranslations. As   can be expanded as an infinite series of spherical harmonics, it was shown that the first four terms ( = 0, 1) reproduce the four ordinary spacetime translations, which form a subgroup of the supertranslations. In other words, supertranslations are direction-dependent time translations on the boundary of asymptotically flat spacetimes and include the ordinary spacetime translations.[2] Loosely speaking, "neighboring" points on the future null infinity with slightly different   coordinates are actually very "far apart" in space such that they are not causally connected. Light rays from one point can't reach another, clocks can not be synchronized, and thus an arbitrary time offset   can be added to the clocks in each   direction, viz., a supertranslation. In fact, for any point on the future null infinity with a given  , the only other points on the future null infinity that it is causally connected to are points with the same   coordinates with different   coordinates.[11]

Abstractly, the BMS group is an infinite-dimensional extension, or a superset, of the Poincaré group, in which four of the ten conserved quantities or charges of the Poincaré group (namely, the total energy and momentum associated with spacetime translations) are extended to include an infinite number of conserved supermomentum charges associated with spacetime supertranslations, while the six conserved Lorentz charges remain unchanged. The BMS group also has a similar structure as the Poincaré group: just as the Poincaré group is a semidirect product between the Lorentz group and the four-dimensional Abelian group of spacetime translations, the BMS group is a semidirect product of the Lorentz group with an infinite-dimensional Abelian group of spacetime supertranslations. The translation group is a normal subgroup of the supertranslation group.[2] This structure turns the BMS group into an infinite-dimensional Lie group.[12]

Asymptotic symmetries interpreted and extended

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After half a century lull, interest in the study of this asymptotic symmetry group of General Relativity (GR) surged, in part due to the advent of gravitational-wave astronomy (the hope of which prompted the pioneering 1962 studies). Interestingly, the extension of ordinary four spacetime translations to infinite-dimensional supertranslations, viewed in 1962 with consternation, is interpreted, half a century later, to be a key feature of the original BMS symmetry.

For example, by imposing supertranslation invariance (using a smaller BMS group acting only on the future or past null infinity) on S-matrix elements involving gravitons, the resulting Ward identities turn out to be equivalent to Weinberg's 1965 soft graviton theorem. In fact, such a relation between asymptotic symmetries and soft Quantum field theory theorems is not specific to gravitation alone, but is rather a general property of gauge theories including electromagnetism.[3]

Furthermore, a gravitational memory effect, named displacement memory effect, can be associated with a BMS supertranslation. When a gravitating radiation pulse transit past arrays of detectors stationed near future null infinity in the vacuum, the relative positions and clock times of the detectors before and after the radiation transit differ by a BMS supertranslation. The relative spatial displacement found for a pair of nearby detectors reproduces the well-known and potentially measurable gravitational memory effect. Hence the displacement memory effect both physically manifests and directly measures the action of a BMS supertranslation.[13]

BMS supertranslations, the leading soft graviton theorem, and displacement memory effect form the three vertices of an IR triangle describing the leading infrared structure of asymptotically flat spacetimes at null infinity.[3]

In addition, BMS supertranslations have been utilized to motivate the microscopic origin of black hole entropy,[14] and that black hole formed by different initial star configurations would have different supertranslation hair.[13]

Whether the GR asymptotic symmetry group should be larger or smaller than the original BMS group is a subject of research, since various and differing extensions have been proposed in the literature.[15] Most notable is the so-called extended BMS group where the six-dimensional Lorentz group is also extended into an infinite-dimensional group of so-called superrotations.[16] Just like displacement memory effect is associated with a BMS supertranslation, a new gravitational memory effect, named spin memory effect, can be associated with a superrotation of the extended BMS group.[17] But unlike displacement memory, which can represent a shift to a supertranslated time frame, spin memory does not correspond to a spacetime merely superrotated from an early frame.[15]

To sort out which GR asymptotic symmetry might represent the Universe, recent simulations suggest that determining which gravitational-wave (GW) memory terms, displacement and spin, would give the best fit to the GW data to be collected in next generation detectors might constrain the three model symmetry scenarios: (a) Poincaré group (no memory); original BMS group (only displacement memory); and (c) extended BMS group (both displacement and spin memories).[18]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Bondi, H.; Van der Burg, M.G.J.; Metzner, A. (1962). "Gravitational waves in general relativity: VII. Waves from axisymmetric isolated systems". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A. 269 (1336): 21–52. Bibcode:1962RSPSA.269...21B. doi:10.1098/rspa.1962.0161. S2CID 120125096.
  2. ^ a b c d e Sachs, R. (1962). "Asymptotic symmetries in gravitational theory". Physical Review. 128 (6): 2851–2864. Bibcode:1962PhRv..128.2851S. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.128.2851.
  3. ^ a b c d Strominger, Andrew (2018). Lectures on the Infrared Structure of Gravity and Gauge Theory. Princeton University Press. arXiv:1703.05448. ISBN 9780691179506. ...redacted transcript of a course given by the author at Harvard in spring semester 2016. It contains a pedagogical overview of recent developments connecting the subjects of soft theorems, the memory effect and asymptotic symmetries in four-dimensional QED, nonabelian gauge theory and gravity with applications to black holes.
  4. ^ Bondi, Hermann (1990). Science, Churchill, and me : the autobiography of Hermann Bondi, master of Churchill College, Cambridge. Oxford: Pergamon Press. ISBN 008037235X. The 1962 paper I regard as the best scientific work I have ever done, which is later in life than mathematicians supposedly peak.
  5. ^ Oblak, Blagoje (February 2018). "Can You See Asymptotic Symmetries?". CQG+. Journal of Classical and Quantum Gravity. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  6. ^ Bondi, H. (14 May 1960). "Gravitational Waves in General Relativity". Nature. 186 (4724): 535. Bibcode:1960Natur.186..535B. doi:10.1038/186535a0. S2CID 123669981.
  7. ^ Sachs, R. K. (30 October 1962). "Gravitational Waves in General Relativity. VIII. Waves in Asymptotically Flat Space-Time". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A. 270 (1340): 103–126. Bibcode:1962RSPSA.270..103S. doi:10.1098/rspa.1962.0206. S2CID 120407613.
  8. ^ Penrose, Roger (15 January 1963). "Asymptotic properties of fields and space-times". Physical Review Letters. 10 (2): 66–68. Bibcode:1963PhRvL..10...66P. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.10.66.
  9. ^ Penrose, Roger (1964). "Conformal treatment of infinity (republished 2011)". Gen Relativ Gravit. 43: 901–922. doi:10.1007/s10714-010-1110-5. S2CID 119935220.; originally published in Relativity, groups and topology, ed. C. de Witt & B. de Witt (Gordon and Breach, New York) pp. 563–584 (1964).
  10. ^ Dray, Tevian (2014). "Penrose Diagrams, from "The Geometry of General Relativity"". Oregon State University. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  11. ^ Boyle, Michael (April 2016). "Transformations of asymptotic gravitational-wave data". Physical Review D. 93 (8): 084031. arXiv:1509.00862. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.93.084031.
  12. ^ Prinz, David; Schmeding, Alexander (17 March 2022). "Lie theory for asymptotic symmetries in general relativity: The BMS group". Classical and Quantum Gravity. 39 (6): 065004. arXiv:2106.12513. doi:10.1088/1361-6382/ac4ae2. ISSN 0264-9381.
  13. ^ a b Strominger, Andrew; Zhiboedov, Alexander (2016). "Gravitational Memory, BMS Supertranslations and Soft Theorems". Journal of High Energy Physics. 01 (86). arXiv:1411.5745.
  14. ^ Hawking, Stephen; Perry, Malcolm; Strominger, Andrew (2016). "Soft Hair on Black Holes". Physical Review Letters. 116 (23): 231301. arXiv:1601.00921. Bibcode:2016PhRvL.116w1301H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.231301. PMID 27341223. S2CID 16198886.
  15. ^ a b Ruzziconi, Romain (2020). "On the Various Extensions of the BMS Group". arXiv:2009.01926 [hep-th].
  16. ^ Barnich, Glenn; Troessaert, Cédric (2010). "Symmetries of asymptotically flat 4 dimensional spacetimes at null infinity revisited". Physical Review Letters. 105 (11): 111103. arXiv:0909.2617. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.111103. PMID 20867563. S2CID 14678633.
  17. ^ Pasterski, Sabrina; Strominger, Andrew; Zhiboedov, Alexander (14 December 2016). "New gravitational memories". Journal of High Energy Physics. 2016 (12): 53. arXiv:1502.06120. Bibcode:2016JHEP...12..053P. doi:10.1007/JHEP12(2016)053. S2CID 256045385.
  18. ^ Goncharov, Boris; Donnay, Laura; Harms, Jan (13 June 2024). "Inferring Fundamental Spacetime Symmetries with Gravitational-Wave Memory: From LISA to the Einstein Telescope". Phys. Rev. Lett. 132 (241401): 241401. arXiv:2310.10718. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.132.241401.
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