Cotton tensor

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In differential geometry, the Cotton tensor on a pseudo-Riemannian manifold of dimension n is a third-order tensor concomitant of the metric tensor. The vanishing of the Cotton tensor for n = 3 is necessary and sufficient condition for the manifold to be locally conformally flat. By contrast, in dimensions n ≥ 4, the vanishing of the Cotton tensor is necessary but not sufficient for the metric to be conformally flat; instead, the corresponding necessary and sufficient condition in these higher dimensions is the vanishing of the Weyl tensor, while the Cotton tensor just becomes a constant times the divergence of the Weyl tensor. For n < 3 the Cotton tensor is identically zero. The concept is named after Émile Cotton.

The proof of the classical result that for n = 3 the vanishing of the Cotton tensor is equivalent to the metric being conformally flat is given by Eisenhart using a standard integrability argument. This tensor density is uniquely characterized by its conformal properties coupled with the demand that it be differentiable for arbitrary metric tensors, as shown by Script error: No such module "Footnotes"..

Recently, the study of three-dimensional spaces is becoming of great interest, because the Cotton tensor restricts the relation between the Ricci tensor and the energy–momentum tensor in the Einstein equations and plays an important role in the Hamiltonian formalism of general relativity.

Definition

In coordinates, and denoting the Ricci tensor by Rij and the scalar curvature by R, the components of the Cotton tensor are

Cijk=kRijjRik+12(n1)(jRgikkRgij).

The Cotton tensor can be regarded as a vector valued 2-form, and for n = 3 the Hodge star operator converts this into a second-order trace-free tensor density:

Cij=k(Rli14Rgli)ϵklj,

sometimes called the Cotton–York tensor.

Properties

Conformal rescaling

Under conformal rescaling of the metric g~=e2ωg for some scalar function ω, we see that the Christoffel symbols transform as

Γ~βγα=Γβγα+Sβγα

where Sβγα is the tensor

Sβγα=δγαβω+δβαγωgβγαω

The Riemann curvature tensor transforms as

R~λμαβ=Rλμαβ+αSβμλβSαμλ+SαρλSβμρSβρλSαμρ

In n-dimensional manifolds, we obtain the Ricci tensor by contracting the transformed Riemann tensor to see it transform as

R~βμ=Rβμgβμααω(n2)μβω+(n2)(μωβωgβμλωλω)

Similarly the Ricci scalar transforms as

R~=e2ωR2e2ω(n1)ααω(n2)(n1)e2ωλωλω

Combining all these facts together permits us to conclude the Cotton–York tensor transforms as

C~αβγ=Cαβγ+(n2)λωWβγαλ

or using coordinate independent language as

C~=C+(n2)gradωW,

where the gradient is contracted with the Weyl tensor W.

Symmetries

The Cotton tensor has the following symmetries:

Cijk=Cikj

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C[ijk]=0.

In addition the Bianchi formula for the Weyl tensor can be rewritten as

δW=(3n)C,

where δ is the positive divergence in the first component of W.

References

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