Kahler decoupling for Kerr perturbations
Stephen R. Green, Kirill Krasnov, Adam Shaw
TLDR
This paper reveals that the hidden Kahler geometry of Kerr metrics provides a fundamental geometric explanation for the decoupling of Teukolsky equations.
Key contributions
- Identifies a hidden Kahler structure in Kerr metrics, both Euclidean and Lorentzian.
- Explains Teukolsky equation decoupling via Kahler geometry, where self-dual forms remain parallel.
- Shows spin-k Teukolsky operator derives from a Kahler Laplace-type operator by similarity transform.
- Demonstrates Maxwell's equations imply a decoupled Kahler operator matching spin-one Teukolsky.
Why it matters
Understanding the geometric underpinnings of Teukolsky equations is crucial for studying black hole perturbations. This work provides a novel, unified explanation for their decoupling, simplifying complex calculations. It offers new insights into the fundamental structure of Kerr spacetime.
Original Abstract
The Euclidean Kerr metric is conformal, in two distinct ways, to a Kahler metric, with conformal factors determined by the repeated eigenvalue of the two chiral halves of the Weyl curvature. A Lorentzian analogue holds, where the conformally related metric is complex but retains key features of Kahler geometry. We show that this hidden Kahler structure provides a geometric explanation for the existence of decoupled equations for curvature scalars, such as the Teukolsky equations. The essential mechanism is that, on a Kahler background, self-dual 2-forms are parallel with respect to a natural covariant derivative, so differential operators acting on them preserve their decomposition and do not mix components. In this way, decoupling is seen to be a direct consequence of Kahler geometry. We make this mechanism explicit in two ways. First, we show that the spin-k Teukolsky operator can be obtained from a Laplace-type operator associated with the Kahler metric by a similarity transformation. Second, for electromagnetic perturbations, we use the conformal invariance of Maxwell's equations delta F = 0 to show that they imply d delta F = 0, where delta is the co-differential of the Kahler metric. This operator automatically decouples, and the resulting equations for the extremal components coincide with the spin-one Teukolsky equations.
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