Einstein-Rosen waves and the self-similarity hypothesis in cylindrical symmetry
Tomohiro Harada, Ken-ichi Nakao, Brien C. Nolan

TL;DR
This paper investigates self-similar vacuum solutions in cylindrical symmetry within general relativity, revealing a family of solutions including Minkowski, Kasner, and cylindrical Milne, and discusses their implications for gravitational wave behavior.
Contribution
It generalizes the self-similarity hypothesis from spherical to cylindrical symmetry, identifying a two-parameter family of solutions including known spacetimes.
Findings
Solutions include Minkowski, Kasner, and cylindrical Milne spacetimes.
Demonstrates nonuniqueness and nonvanishing of C energy in these solutions.
Suggests these solutions describe the asymptotic behavior of gravitational waves.
Abstract
The self-similarity hypothesis claims that in classical general relativity, spherically symmetric solutions may naturally evolve to a self-similar form in certain circumstances. In this context, the validity of the corresponding hypothesis in nonspherical geometry is very interesting as there may exist gravitational waves. We investigate self-similar vacuum solutions to the Einstein equation in the so-called whole-cylinder symmetry. We find that those solutions are reduced to part of the Minkowski spacetime with a regular or conically singular axis and with trivial or nontrivial topology if the homothetic vector is orthogonal to the cylinders of symmetry. These solutions are analogous to the Milne universe, but only in the direction parallel to the axis. Using these solutions, we discuss the nonuniqueness (and nonvanishing nature) of C energy and the existence of a cylindrical trapping…
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