Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
Summary
The central aim of this book is the development of the results and techniques needed to determine when it is possible to extend a space-time through an “apparent singularity” (meaning, a boundary-point associated with some sort of incompleteness in the space-time). Having achieved this, we shall obtain a characterisation of a “genuine singularity” as a place where such an extension is not possible. Thus we are proceeding by elimination: rather than embarking on a direct study of genuine singularities, we study extensions in order to rule out all apparent singularities that are not genuine. It will turn out, roughly speaking, that the genuine singularities which then remain are associated either with some sort of topological obstruction to the construction of an extension, or with the unboundedness of the Riemann tensor when its size is measured in a suitable norm.
I had at one stage hoped that there would be a single simple criterion for when such an extension cannot be constructed, which would then lay down once and for all what a genuine singularity is. But it seems that this is not to be had: instead one has a variety of possible tools and concepts for constructing extensions, and when these fail one declares the space-time to be singular on pragmatic grounds. The main such tools are the use of Hölder and Sobolev norms of functions, used for measuring the extent to which the metric or the Riemann tensor is irregular.
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- The Analysis of Space-Time Singularities , pp. xi - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994