Lorentz covariant theory of light propagation in gravitational fields of arbitrary moving bodies

Feb, 1999
50 pages
Published in:
  • Phys.Rev.D 60 (1999) 124002
e-Print:

Citations per year

19992005201120172023024681012
Abstract: (arXiv)
The Lorentz covariant theory of propagation of light in the (weak) gravitational fields of N-body systems consisting of arbitrarily moving point-like bodies with constant masses is constructed. The theory is based on the Lienard-Wiechert presentation of the metric tensor. A new approach for integrating the equations of motion of light particles depending on the retarded time argument is applied. In an approximation which is linear with respect to the universal gravitational constant, G, the equations of light propagation are integrated by quadratures and, moreover, an expression for the tangent vector to the perturbed trajectory of light ray is found in terms of instanteneous functions of the retarded time. General expressions for the relativistic time delay, the angle of light deflection, and gravitational red shift are derived. They generalize previously known results for the case of static or uniformly moving bodies. The most important applications of the theory are given. They include a discussion of the velocity dependent terms in the gravitational lens equation, the Shapiro time delay in binary pulsars, and a precise theoretical formulation of the general relativistic algorithm of data processing of radio and optical astrometric measurements in the non-stationary gravitational field of the solar system. Finally, proposals for future theoretical work being important for astrophysical applications are formulated.