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I have had something nagging at me about this for a while, and it finally hit me while looking through this paper about the Godel Universe:
https://elib.uni-stuttgart.de/handle/11682/4945
Equations A.2 in this paper are the same as equations 2.10.2 in the paper you linked to. But as the paper I linked to makes clear, these equations are for a rotating frame! That is, objects at rest in this frame are "rotating with the universe", since the matter in the universe itself is at rest in this frame. The "at rest" frame field associated with this frame, which the paper I linked to calls a "static local tetrad", is geodesic--zero proper acceleration--but it has nonzero vorticity; it's the vorticity you would expect for a family of observers rotating with "the angular velocity of the universe".
So this frame is not the "bucket frame" in the Godel universe case. The "bucket frame" would be non-rotating--that is, we would have to take the worldline at the origin of the above frame and Fermi-Walker transport its spatial basis vectors. This would give us a different frame field than the one described in the paper, one in which every worldline other than the one at the origin would not be at rest in the given coordinates, but would be "rotating" about the origin, relative to the coordinates, in the opposite sense to the "rotation of the universe", i.e., in the negative ##\varphi## direction. And that means we have to look at other Christoffel symbols besides ##\Gamma_{tt}^{r}## to compute the relevant invariants, proper acceleration and vorticity.
I haven't had time yet to do those computations in detail, but just looking at the Christoffel symbols, we have ##\Gamma_{t \varphi}^{r} \neq 0##, so we would expect a nonzero proper acceleration in the ##r## direction for an object that is rotating about the origin in the ##\varphi## direction. And that means that water in a "non-rotating" bucket in this universe would not have a flat shape! Whereas water in a rotating bucket--one "rotating with the universe"--would have a flat shape!
I need to look at this more.
Dale said:It is actually fairly simple to show that it does not exert the same influence. We can just look up the Christoffel symbols in the Catalog of Spacetimes: https://arxiv.org/abs/0904.4184
Where equation 2.1.30 (rotating bucket in the bucket's frame) has ##\Gamma_{tt}^{r}=-\omega^2 r## but equation 2.10.2 (rotating universe in the bucket's frame) has ##\Gamma_{tt}^{r}=0##.
I have had something nagging at me about this for a while, and it finally hit me while looking through this paper about the Godel Universe:
https://elib.uni-stuttgart.de/handle/11682/4945
Equations A.2 in this paper are the same as equations 2.10.2 in the paper you linked to. But as the paper I linked to makes clear, these equations are for a rotating frame! That is, objects at rest in this frame are "rotating with the universe", since the matter in the universe itself is at rest in this frame. The "at rest" frame field associated with this frame, which the paper I linked to calls a "static local tetrad", is geodesic--zero proper acceleration--but it has nonzero vorticity; it's the vorticity you would expect for a family of observers rotating with "the angular velocity of the universe".
So this frame is not the "bucket frame" in the Godel universe case. The "bucket frame" would be non-rotating--that is, we would have to take the worldline at the origin of the above frame and Fermi-Walker transport its spatial basis vectors. This would give us a different frame field than the one described in the paper, one in which every worldline other than the one at the origin would not be at rest in the given coordinates, but would be "rotating" about the origin, relative to the coordinates, in the opposite sense to the "rotation of the universe", i.e., in the negative ##\varphi## direction. And that means we have to look at other Christoffel symbols besides ##\Gamma_{tt}^{r}## to compute the relevant invariants, proper acceleration and vorticity.
I haven't had time yet to do those computations in detail, but just looking at the Christoffel symbols, we have ##\Gamma_{t \varphi}^{r} \neq 0##, so we would expect a nonzero proper acceleration in the ##r## direction for an object that is rotating about the origin in the ##\varphi## direction. And that means that water in a "non-rotating" bucket in this universe would not have a flat shape! Whereas water in a rotating bucket--one "rotating with the universe"--would have a flat shape!
I need to look at this more.
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