Singularities of plane gravitational waves and their memory effects
Tongzheng Wang, Jared Fier, Bowen Li, Guoliang Lv, Zhaojun Wang, Yumei, Wu, and Anzhong Wang

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the singularities in Baldwin-Jeffery-Rosen coordinates for plane gravitational waves, showing that these singularities prevent studying asymptotic properties like memory effects at null infinity.
Contribution
It identifies specific conditions under which the BJR coordinates are non-singular, clarifying limitations in analyzing gravitational wave memory effects.
Findings
Singularities occur at focused points in BJR coordinates except for special cases.
Hypersurfaces at singularities form boundaries, excluding null infinity.
Standard coordinates are inadequate for studying asymptotic properties of plane waves.
Abstract
Similar to the Schwarzschild coordinates for spherical black holes, the Baldwin, Jeffery and Rosen (BJR) coordinates for plane gravitational waves are often singular, and extensions beyond such singularities are necessary, before studying asymptotic properties of such spacetimes at the null infinity of the plane, on which the gravitational waves propagate. The latter is closely related to the studies of memory effects and soft graviton theorems. In this paper, we point out that in the BJR coordinates all the spacetimes are singular physically at the focused point , except for the two cases: (1) ; and (2) , where are the coefficients in the expansion $\chi \equiv \left[{\mbox{det}}\left(g_{ab}\right) \right]^{1/4} = \left(u - u_s\right)^{\alpha}\sum_{n = 0}^{\infty}\chi_n \left(u -…
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