Kahler decoupling for Kerr perturbations

Abstract

The Euclidean Kerr metric is conformal, in two distinct ways, to a Kahler metric, with conformal factors determined by the repeated eigenvalue of the two chiral halves of the Weyl curvature. A Lorentzian analogue holds, where the conformally related metric is complex but retains key features of Kahler geometry. We show that this hidden Kahler structure provides a geometric explanation for the existence of decoupled equations for curvature scalars, such as the Teukolsky equations. The essential mechanism is that, on a Kahler background, self-dual 2-forms are parallel with respect to a natural covariant derivative, so differential operators acting on them preserve their decomposition and do not mix components. In this way, decoupling is seen to be a direct consequence of Kahler geometry. We make this mechanism explicit in two ways. First, we show that the spin-k Teukolsky operator can be obtained from a Laplace-type operator associated with the Kahler metric by a similarity transformation. Second, for electromagnetic perturbations, we use the conformal invariance of Maxwell's equations delta F = 0 to show that they imply d delta F = 0, where delta is the co-differential of the Kahler metric. This operator automatically decouples, and the resulting equations for the extremal components coincide with the spin-one Teukolsky equations.

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