corner
corner

Phys. Rev. D 56, 4745–4755 (1997)

Geometric structure of the generic static traversable wormhole throat

Download: PDF (308 kB) Buy this article Export: BibTeX or EndNote (RIS)

David Hochberg
Laboratorio de Astrofı ´sica Espacial y Fı ´sica Fundamental, Apartado 50727, 28080 Madrid, Spain

Matt Visser
Physics Department, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 63130-4899

Received 29 April 1997; published in the issue dated 15 October 1997

Traversable wormholes have traditionally been viewed as intrinsically topological entities in some multiply connected spacetime. Here, we show that topology is too limited a tool to accurately characterize a generic traversable wormhole: in general one needs geometric information to detect the presence of a wormhole, or more precisely to locate the wormhole throat. For an arbitrary static spacetime we shall define the wormhole throat in terms of a two-dimensional constant-time hypersurface of minimal area. (Zero trace for the extrinsic curvature plus a “flare-out” condition.) This enables us to severely constrain the geometry of spacetime at the wormhole throat and to derive generalized theorems regarding violations of the energy conditions, theorems that do not involve geodesic averaging but nevertheless apply to situations much more general than the spherically symmetric Morris-Thorne traversable wormhole. (For example, the null energy condition, when suitably weighted and integrated over the wormhole throat, must be violated.) The major technical limitation of the current approach is that we work in a static spacetime; this is already a quite rich and complicated system.

© 1997 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.56.4745
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.56.4745
PACS:
04.20.Gz, 04.20.Cv, 04.40.-b