Matching the Kerr solution on the surface of a rotating perfect fluid
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1309310
DOI10.1007/BF00757071zbMATH Open0804.53104MaRDI QIDQ1309310FDOQ1309310
Authors: C. L. Pekeris, K. Frankowski
Publication date: 20 December 1993
Published in: General Relativity and Gravitation (Search for Journal in Brave)
Recommendations
- Matching in a class of stationary axisymmetric perfect fluid solutions of Einstein's equations
- Slowly, rotating non-stationary, fluid solutions of Einstein's equations and their match to Kerr empty space-time
- Some solutions of the Einstein field equations for a rotating perfect fluid
- The Kerr/fluid duality and the singularity of solutions to the fluid equation
- On some geometric features of the Kramer interior solution for a rotating perfect fluid
- A new solution for a rotating perfect fluid in general relativity
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 970169
- On spherically symmetric perfect fluid solutions
- Parametrization of the Kerr solution
- On the locally rotationally symmetric Einstein-Maxwell perfect fluid
Applications of differential geometry to physics (53Z05) Exact solutions to problems in general relativity and gravitational theory (83C15) Macroscopic interaction of the gravitational field with matter (hydrodynamics, etc.) (83C55)
Cites Work
Cited In (8)
- On some geometric features of the Kramer interior solution for a rotating perfect fluid
- Can rigidly rotating polytropes be sources of the Kerr metric?
- Exact solution of the double-Kerr equilibrium problem
- Slowly, rotating non-stationary, fluid solutions of Einstein's equations and their match to Kerr empty space-time
- Counter-rotating Kerr manifolds separated by a fluid shell
- Regular interior solutions to the solution of Kerr which satisfy the weak and the strong energy conditions
- Slowly rotating, compact fluid sources embedded in Kerr empty space-time
- About the non-existence of perfect fluid bodies with the Kerr metric outside
This page was built for publication: Matching the Kerr solution on the surface of a rotating perfect fluid
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q1309310)