English

Visualizing curved spacetime

General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology 2008-11-26 v1

Abstract

I present a way to visualize the concept of curved spacetime. The result is a curved surface with local coordinate systems (Minkowski Systems) living on it, giving the local directions of space and time. Relative to these systems, special relativity holds. The method can be used to visualize gravitational time dilation, the horizon of black holes, and cosmological models. The idea underlying the illustrations is first to specify a field of timelike four-velocities. Then, at every point, one performs a coordinate transformation to a local Minkowski system comoving with the given four-velocity. In the local system, the sign of the spatial part of the metric is flipped to create a new metric of Euclidean signature. The new positive definite metric, called the absolute metric, can be covariantly related to the original Lorentzian metric. For the special case of a 2-dimensional original metric, the absolute metric may be embedded in 3-dimensional Euclidean space as a curved surface.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0708.2483,
  title  = {Visualizing curved spacetime},
  author = {Rickard Jonsson},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0708.2483},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

15 pages, 20 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:08:34.325Z