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In [[cosmological perturbation theory]], the '''
If the perturbed metric <math>g'_{\mu\nu} = g_{\mu\nu}+h_{\mu\nu}</math> where <math>h_{\mu\nu}</math> is the perturbation, then the decomposition is as follows,
where the Latin indices ''i'' and ''j'' run over spatial components (1,
where <math>\nabla\times\mathbf{w}^{||}=\mathbf{0}</math> and <math>\nabla\cdot\mathbf{w}^{\perp}=0</math> (<math>\nabla_i</math> is the [[covariant derivative]] defined with respect to the spatial metric <math>g_{ij}</math>). The notation is used because in [[Fourier space]], these equations indicate that the vector points parallel and perpendicular to the direction of the wavevector, respectively. The parallel component can be expressed as the gradient of a scalar, <math>w^{||}{}_i=\nabla_iA</math>. Thus <math>\mathbf{w}</math> can be written as a combination of a scalar and a divergenceless, two-component vector.
Finally, an analogous decomposition can be performed on the traceless tensor field <math>S_{ij}</math>.<ref>{{cite journal | author = J. M. Stewart | title = Perturbations of the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmological models | journal = Classical and Quantum Gravity | volume = 7 | number = 7 | pages = 1169–1180 | url = http://stacks.iop.org/0264-9381/7/i=7/a=013 | year = 1990 | doi=10.1088/0264-9381/7/7/013| bibcode = 1990CQGra...7.1169S | s2cid = 250864898 | url-access = subscription }}</ref> It can be written
where
where <math>B</math> is a scalar (the combination of derivatives is set by the condition that <math>S</math> be traceless), and
where <math>S^\perp{}_i</math> is a divergenceless spatial vector. This leaves only two independent components of <math>S^T{}_{ij}</math>, corresponding to the two [[Polarization (waves)|polarizations]] of [[gravitational wave]]s. (Since the graviton is massless, the two polarizations are orthogonal to the direction of propagation, just like the photon.)
The advantage of this formulation is that the scalar, vector and tensor evolution equations are decoupled. In [[representation theory]], this corresponds to decomposing perturbations under the group of [[Rotation group SO(3)|spatial rotation]]s. Two scalar components and one vector component can further be eliminated by [[gauge transformation]]s. However, the vector components are generally ignored, as there are few known physical processes in which they can be generated. As indicated above, the tensor components correspond to gravitational waves. The tensor <math>S^T{}_{ij}</math> is gauge invariant: it does not change under infinitesimal coordinate transformations.
==See also==
* [[Helmholtz decomposition]]
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
==References==
*{{
*{{cite journal | author = E. M. Lifshitz |title = On the gravitational stability of the expanding universe|journal=J. Phys. USSR | volume=10| pages=116| year=1946}}
*{{cite journal | author = Eanna E. Flanagan, Scott A. Hughes |title = The basics of gravitational wave theory|journal=New Journal of Physics | volume=7| pages=204| year=2005| doi=10.1088/1367-2630/7/1/204 | s2cid=9530657 | arxiv=gr-qc/0501041| bibcode=2005NJPh....7..204F }}
*{{cite book | author = E. Poisson, C. M. Will |title = Gravity: Newtonian, Post-Newtonian, Relativistic|publisher=Cambridge University Press | pages=257 | year=2014}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Scalar-vector-tensor decomposition}}
[[Category:Physical cosmology]]
[[Category:Mathematical methods in general relativity]]
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