English

Generalized derivations and general relativity

General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology 2014-03-13 v3 Mathematical Physics math.MP

Abstract

We construct differential geometry (connection, curvature, etc.) based on generalized derivations of an algebra A{\cal A}. Such a derivation, introduced by Bresar in 1991, is given by a linear mapping u:AAu: {\cal A} \rightarrow {\cal A} such that there exists a usual derivation dd of A{\cal A} satisfying the generalized Leibniz rule u(ab)=u(a)b+ad(b)u(a b) = u(a) b + a \, d(b) for all a,bAa,b \in \cal A. The generalized geometry "is tested" in the case of the algebra of smooth functions on a manifold. We then apply this machinery to study generalized general relativity. We define the Einstein-Hilbert action and deduce from it Einstein's field equations. We show that for a special class of metrics containing, besides the usual metric components, only one nonzero term, the action reduces to the O'Hanlon action that is the Brans-Dicke action with potential and with the parameter ω\omega equal to zero. We also show that the generalized Einstein equations (with zero energy-stress tensor) are equivalent to those of the Kaluza-Klein theory satisfying a "modified cylinder condition" and having a noncompact extra dimension. This opens a possibility to consider Kaluza-Klein models with a noncompact extra dimension that remains invisible for a macroscopic observer. In our approach, this extra dimension is not an additional physical space-time dimension but appears because of the generalization of the derivation concept.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1301.0910,
  title  = {Generalized derivations and general relativity},
  author = {M. Heller and T. Miller and L. Pysiak and W. Sasin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1301.0910},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

21 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-21T23:04:22.944Z