Geodesic completeness, curvature singularities and infinite tidal forces
Xiaotian Zhang, Sijie Gao

TL;DR
This paper explores the complex relationships between geodesic completeness, curvature singularities, and tidal forces, revealing that infinite tidal forces occur near singularities and that some spacetimes previously thought complete are actually incomplete due to divergent tidal effects.
Contribution
It demonstrates that infinite tidal forces are unavoidable near singularities and that certain spacetimes, like some wormholes, are geodesically incomplete despite prior claims.
Findings
Infinite tidal forces occur near curvature singularities.
Some spacetimes previously considered complete are actually incomplete.
Tidal forces diverge at the throat of certain wormholes.
Abstract
We report some new findings regarding the subtle relations among geodesic completeness, curvature singularities and tidal forces. It is well known that any particle may be torn up near a singularity at the center of a black hole due to the divergent tidal force. However, we find that singularity is not the only cause of tidal force divergence. Even on the surface of the Earth, the tidal force experienced by a particle could be arbitrarily large if the particle moves arbitrarily close to the speed of light in a nonradial direction. Moreover, we find that the maximum tidal force always occurs along the radial direction, regardless of the particle's motion. Usually, a curvature singularity implies geodesic incompleteness since in many cases the metric cannot be defined at the location of the singularity. Counterexamples have been found in recent years, suggesting that geodesics could pass…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics Simulations and Interactions
