On the Weyl tensor classification in all dimensions and its relation with integrability properties
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5397808
DOI10.1063/1.4802240zbMath1284.53066arXiv1301.2016OpenAlexW2098331711MaRDI QIDQ5397808
Publication date: 24 February 2014
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1301.2016
integrabilityPetrov classificationGoldberg-Sachs theoremoptical matrixEinstein's equationself-dual manifolds
Einstein's equations (general structure, canonical formalism, Cauchy problems) (83C05) Global differential geometry of Lorentz manifolds, manifolds with indefinite metrics (53C50) Methods of global Riemannian geometry, including PDE methods; curvature restrictions (53C21)
Related Items
Pure subspaces, generalizing the concept of pure spinors ⋮ Spinors and the Weyl tensor classification in six dimensions ⋮ Lorentzian manifolds close to Euclidean space
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- The complex Goldberg-Sachs theorem in higher dimensions
- Canonical quantization of non-commutative holonomies in 2 + 1 loop quantum gravity
- Sharp version of the Goldberg-Sachs theorem
- Killing-Yano tensors and multi-Hermitian structures
- Republication of: a theorem on Petrov types
- Complex relativity and real solutions. II: Classification of complex bivectors and metric classes
- Radiation states and the problem of energy in general relativity
- From Navier-Stokes to Einstein
- Weyl tensor classification in four-dimensional manifolds of all signatures
- WANDs of the black ring
- Generalization of the Geroch–Held–Penrose formalism to higher dimensions
- On the local structure of Lorentzian Einstein manifolds with parallel distribution of null lines
- Spinor classification of the Weyl tensor in five dimensions
- Optical structures, algebraically special spacetimes, and the Goldberg–Sachs theorem in five dimensions
- On a five-dimensional version of the Goldberg–Sachs theorem
- Einstein Spaces With Four-Parameter Holonomy Groups
- Higher dimensional bivectors and classification of the Weyl operator
- Curvature operators and scalar curvature invariants
- A generalised Kerr-Robinson theorem
- Gravitational Field of a Spinning Mass as an Example of Algebraically Special Metrics
- Simple spinors and real structures
- Null geodesic surfaces and Goldberg–Sachs theorem in complex Riemannian spaces
- Breaking the sanserifM-waves
- Classification of the Weyl tensor in higher dimensions
- Algebraic classification of higher dimensional spacetimes based on null alignment
- On the Goldberg–Sachs theorem in higher dimensions in the non-twisting case
- Classification of the Weyl tensor in higher dimensions and applications
- Type D Vacuum Metrics
- Generalization of a Theorem by Goldberg and Sachs
- The classification of spaces defining gravitational fields