Published May 2024 | Published
Journal Article Open

Rindler fluids from gravitational shockwaves

  • 1. ROR icon Arizona State University
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
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Abstract

We study a correspondence between gravitational shockwave geometry and its fluid description near a Rindler horizon in Minkowski spacetime. Utilizing the Petrov classification that describes algebraic symmetries for Lorentzian spaces, we establish an explicit mapping between a potential fluid and the shockwave metric perturbation, where the Einstein equation for the shockwave geometry is equivalent to the incompressibility condition of the fluid, augmented by a shockwave source. Then we consider an Ansatz of a stochastic quantum source for the potential fluid, which has the physical interpretation of shockwaves created by vacuum energy fluctuations. Under such circumstance, the Einstein equation, or equivalently, the incompressibility condition for the fluid, becomes a stochastic differential equation. By smearing the quantum source on a stretched horizon in a Lorentz invariant manner with a Planckian width (similarly to the membrane paradigm), we integrate fluctuations near the Rindler horizon to find an accumulated effect of the variance in the round-trip time of a photon traversing the horizon of a causal diamond.

Copyright and License

© The Authors. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits any use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.

Article funded by SCOAP3.

Acknowledgement

We thank Tom Banks for collaboration on related directions [39], as well as Lars Aalsma, Samarth Chawla, Tom Hartman, Temple He, Maulik Parikh, Jude Pereira, Allic Sivaramakrishnan, Marika Taylor, and Raphaela Wutte for insightful discussions. YZ and KZ are supported by the Heising-Simons Foundation “Observational Signatures of Quantum Gravity” collaboration grant 2021-2817, the U.S. Department of Energy grant DE-SC0011632, and the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics. KZ is also supported by a Simons Investigator award. C.K. and S.-E.B. are supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under grant number DE-SC0019470 and by the Heising-Simons Foundation Observational Signatures of Quantum Gravity collaboration grant 2021-2818.

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March 17, 2025
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March 17, 2025