1+3 Formalism in Relativity
- 1+3 Formalism is a covariant decomposition technique that splits spacetime into time and space using a timelike congruence.
- It enables clear separation of kinematical quantities like expansion, shear, and vorticity, forming the basis for constraint and evolution equations.
- Its adaptability to scenarios with nonzero vorticity and non-foliable geometries makes it invaluable in cosmology, gravitational theory, and magnetohydrodynamics.
The 1+3 formalism (sometimes called "threading") is a covariant splitting of four-dimensional Lorentzian manifolds into temporal and spatial parts relative to a chosen smooth timelike congruence , generalizing the more restrictive 3+1 ("slicing") approach based on spacelike foliations. The 1+3 framework enables a geometric and gauge-invariant decomposition of the fields and equations of General Relativity and its generalizations, accommodating scenarios that may lack a global spacelike foliation or involve nonzero vorticity, such as rotating cosmologies, congruences in elasticity, and magnetohydrodynamic flows. This decomposition is particularly powerful for formulating constraint and evolution equations in a form adapted to the local geometry defined by , with applications in cosmology, gravitational theory, and covariant perturbation theory.
1. Kinematical Decomposition and Projectors
The essential ingredient of the 1+3 formalism is the introduction of a unit future-directed timelike vector field on the spacetime manifold , such that (Park, 2018, Roy, 2014, Brito et al., 2012). This vector represents the local "flow" (for example, the four-velocity of a set of observers or a family of fluid elements), and enables the decomposition of all tensors into components parallel and orthogonal to .
The \emph{spatial projection tensor} is defined as
which projects vectors and tensors onto the three-dimensional "local rest space" orthogonal to . and , giving it the structure of a spatial metric on each local frame.
The covariant derivative of the flow vector admits the irreducible decomposition
where:
- is the acceleration (vanishing for geodesic congruences);
- is the expansion scalar;
- is the trace-free shear tensor (symmetric, -orthogonal);
- is the antisymmetric vorticity tensor.
is the spatially projected covariant derivative, and angular/square brackets represent symmetric-tracefree and antisymmetric projections.
This kinematics characterizes the local deformation of congruence worldlines: governs isotropic expansion, parameterizes shape distortions, and encodes rotation.
2. Covariant Derivatives and Intrinsic/Extrinsic Geometry
Once the spacetime is split via , two natural derivative operators are defined:
- The temporal derivative, , is the Lie derivative along the congruence;
- The spatial covariant derivative,
projects all slots orthogonally to .
The rest space at each event is equipped with the induced metric and the connection compatible with . For hypersurface-orthogonal congruences (), these rest spaces form bona fide spacelike hypersurfaces.
The \emph{second fundamental form} ("extrinsic curvature") is given by
which in general is not symmetric for nonzero vorticity, but recovers the conventional ADM extrinsic curvature in the hypersurface-orthogonal case.
3. Gauss, Codazzi, and Ricci Relations
The 1+3 formalism involves projection of the full spacetime Riemann tensor onto spatial and mixed directions, yielding relations among the intrinsic spatial curvature, extrinsic curvature, and kinematical quantities:
- Gauss equation (all spatial projection):
where is the Riemann tensor of (Park, 2018, Roy, 2014).
- Codazzi-Mainardi equation (two spatial, one time):
- Ricci evolution equation (two time, one spatial):
These relations play a central role in expressing the Einstein field equations as a set of constraint and evolution equations projected along and orthogonal to .
4. Projected Einstein Equations and Constraint Structure
Projecting Einstein's equations along and orthogonal to yields a manifestly covariant, gauge-invariant initial-value system (Park, 2018, Roy, 2014, Brito et al., 2012):
- Hamiltonian (energy) constraint:
where .
- Momentum constraint:
where .
- Raychaudhuri (expansion) evolution:
- Shear and vorticity evolution:
Evolution equations for and are similarly projected, with precise expressions for the effect of anisotropic pressure, acceleration, and spatial derivatives.
- Shear-balance (momentum transport) and Bianchi constraints appear naturally in this language and are essential for the closure and consistency of the system (Brito et al., 2012).
These equations, together with conservation laws for the energy-momentum tensor and an equation of state, form a closed system suitable for cosmological and astrophysical modelling.
5. Generalizations and Applications
The 1+3 formalism is particularly advantageous in situations where spacelike hypersurface foliations may be ill-defined or inconvenient:
- Rotating spacetimes or congruences with nonzero vorticity, where spatial slices are ill-defined but threading structure remains (Roy, 2014).
- Covariant cosmological perturbation theory: all kinematical and dynamical fields admit gauge-invariant, observer-related interpretation.
- Reconstruction of modified gravity models: for example, -gravity, with combined electromagnetic fields and anisotropic stresses, can be efficiently handled using 1+3 projections of the modified field equations and Raychaudhuri equation (Tajahmad, 2020).
- Magnetohydrodynamics, elasticity, and electromagnetic field evolution naturally take their canonical form in this language (Brito et al., 2012, Tajahmad, 2020).
Table: Key fields in 1+3 formalism
| Symbol | Geometric/Dynamical Role | Orthogonality Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Flow/congruence vector | ||
| Spatial metric (projector) | ||
| Acceleration | ||
| Expansion scalar | Scalar | |
| Shear tensor | , traceless | |
| Vorticity tensor | , antisymm. |
A plausible implication is that gauge-invariant and observer-dependent effects (such as anisotropic stress, vorticity, or expansion history) can be separated unambiguously in strongly gravitating or nontrivially topological spacetimes.
6. Relation to 3+1 Formalism and Reduction
The 1+3 and 3+1 approaches are closely related but distinct in generality and applicability. In the limit where the congruence is hypersurface-orthogonal (), one recovers the 3+1 "slicing" approach, with as the normal to spacelike hypersurfaces. In this limit:
- becomes symmetric;
- The spatial metric can be interpreted as the induced metric on the slicing;
- The ADM (Arnowitt-Deser-Misner) formalism's coordinate-based evolution/constraint equations are recovered in covariant notation (Park, 2018, Roy, 2014).
However, for rotating fluids, electromagnetic fields with nontrivial topology, and nontrivial matter congruences, 1+3 retains applicability where 3+1 may not be available.
Illustrative comparison:
| Feature | 3+1 ("Slicing") | 1+3 ("Threading") |
|---|---|---|
| Split direction | Normal to | Timelike congruence |
| Vorticity | Typically zero | Arbitrary |
| Slicing required | Yes | No |
| Extrinsic curv. | Symmetric | Can be asymmetric |
This suggests that formal differences—antisymmetric extrinsic curvature, torsion terms in Codazzi, arbitrary acceleration—are essential from the perspective of physical observer congruences and non-foliable geometries.
7. Practical Computation and Extensions
The 1+3 formalism has found extensive use in both analytical and numerical relativity:
- Derivation of ODE systems for spatially homogeneous cosmologies, anisotropic elastic media, and rotating fluids reduces higher-dimensional PDEs to tractable equations (Brito et al., 2012).
- Covariant perturbation theory in and anisotropic cosmologies is enabled by clean separation of spatial/temporal projections (Tajahmad, 2020).
- Maxwell and Einstein–Maxwell equations admit systematic split, with electric and magnetic fields decomposed directly relative to (Tajahmad, 2020, Brito et al., 2012).
- The presence and algebraic structure of the commutator (Jacobi) and Bianchi identities is manifest in the frame approach, ensuring completeness of the field equation hierarchy.
The 1+3 formalism transparently enforces physical viability conditions—such as positivity of energy, gauge invariance, and proper decomposition of electromagnetic and gravitational stresses—across general spacetimes and matter models.
In summary, 1+3 formalism constitutes a foundational geometric tool for the study of dynamical and constraint structures in relativistic gravity, offering generality, gauge-invariance, and adaptability in a variety of physical and mathematical settings.