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Maximality and Cauchy developments of Lorentzian length spaces

Olaf Müller

Abstract

This article suggests the definition of "Lorentzian space" weakening the notion of Lorentzian length spaces just as much that it allows for a functor from the category of strongly causal Lorentzian manifolds to the corresponding category of Lorentzian spaces, and considers three problems in the context of maximal Cauchy developments of Lorentzian length spaces (LLSs): The first is to define pointed Gromov-Hausdorff metrics for spatially and temporally noncompact LLSs, the second to present an explicit non-spacetime example of a maximal globally hyperbolic Lorentzian space, the third to define canonical representatives for Cauchy developments. A certain well-posedness property for geodesics plays a key role in each of the problems.

Maximality and Cauchy developments of Lorentzian length spaces

Abstract

This article suggests the definition of "Lorentzian space" weakening the notion of Lorentzian length spaces just as much that it allows for a functor from the category of strongly causal Lorentzian manifolds to the corresponding category of Lorentzian spaces, and considers three problems in the context of maximal Cauchy developments of Lorentzian length spaces (LLSs): The first is to define pointed Gromov-Hausdorff metrics for spatially and temporally noncompact LLSs, the second to present an explicit non-spacetime example of a maximal globally hyperbolic Lorentzian space, the third to define canonical representatives for Cauchy developments. A certain well-posedness property for geodesics plays a key role in each of the problems.
Paper Structure (9 theorems, 7 equations)

This paper contains 9 theorems, 7 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1

All assertions on g.h. LLS in KS and BGH are true for g.h. LS. Even more, for $X$ g.h. LS we have $J(A,S)$ and $J(A,B)$ compact for $A,B \subset X$ and $S$ a Cauchy set of $X$.

Theorems & Definitions (9)

  • Theorem 1
  • Theorem 2
  • Theorem 3
  • Theorem 4
  • Theorem 5
  • Theorem 6
  • Theorem 7
  • Theorem 8
  • Theorem 9