Linear-Polarization
Linear Polarization of null geodesics in the Newmann-Penrose Formalism
The Newmann-Penrose formalism allows the linear polarization of a null vector to be modelled with the definition of a flag plane. Here, we provide a summarized construction.[1]
Let
There exists a set of equivalent spin vectors for each vector. These spin vectors are related to each other through a complex phase
The relationship between linear polarization and the phase is first acheived by constructing a polarization tensor from
Both
a fact which follows from expressing
From this consideration, we can define another spacelike vector,
Reproducing the above construction with a phase rotated spinor,
Thus a polarization orientation can be encoded as a phase rotation in
Walker-Penrose Constant and Killing Spinors of type D spacetimes
It can be shown that type-
with
which satisfies the spinoral Killing equation,
The Walker-Penrose constant is then defined by first constructing the complex tensor,
which in Boyer-Lindquist coordinates takes the form[3][4]
Contracting
where
References
Penrose, R., & Rindler, W. (1984). Spinors and Space-Time (Cambridge Monographs on Mathematical Physics). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511564048 ↩︎
Ezra Newman, Roger Penrose; An Approach to Gravitational Radiation by a Method of Spin Coefficients. J. Math. Phys. 3, 566–578 (1962) ↩︎
Adamo, T., & Newman, E. T. (2014). The Kerr-Newman metric: A Review. arXiv. https://doi.org/10.48550/ARXIV.1410.6626 ↩︎
Gates, D., Kapec, D., Lupsasca, A., Shi, Y., & Strominger, A. (2018). Polarization Whorls from M87* at the Event Horizon Telescope. arXiv. https://doi.org/10.48550/ARXIV.1809.09092 ↩︎
CONNORS, P. A., & STARK, R. F. (1977). Observable gravitational effects on polarised radiation coming from near a black hole. In Nature (Vol. 269, Issue 5624, pp. 128–129). Springer Science and Business Media LLC. https://doi.org/10.1038/269128a0 ↩︎