12 Further Contributions from the United States
12.1 Eisenhart in Princeton
While Einstein pursued his research in UFT along the lines of mixed geometry at the Institute for Advanced
Studies of Princeton, NJ, his colleague in the mathematics department of Princeton University,
L. P. Eisenhart, kept quiet until the beginning of the 1950s. He had written a book on Non-Riemannian
Geometry in 1927 [182*], and since the twenties had had a long-standing interest in teleparallelism and UFT
(cf. Section 6.4 of Part I and [181]). Being three years older than Einstein he had retired in 1945.
Nevertheless, in the 1950s he wrote three further papers about UFT. He first introduced a non-symmetric
metric and a non-symmetric connection [184] in 1951. Unlike Einstein, whose papers he
did not refer to, Eisenhart did not take the connection
as an independent variable but
built it entirely from the metric tensor and its first derivatives such as the Japanese physicist
K. Hattori248
had done in the 1920s [240*]:


![gρν ∗[μ λ,ρ]](article2321x.gif)



Eisenhart’s second attempt, after the death of Einstein, presented a new unified theory of gravitation
and electromagnetism within metric-affine geometry [186*, 187*, 188*], and [189*]. Although in a different
geometrical setting, eventually the theory formally led to the Einstein–Maxwell field equations in
Riemannian geometry. The main difference to Einstein’s approach was that Eisenhart kept the metric tensor
symmetric while embedding the electromagnetic field tensor
into the connection by an ad-hoc
ansatz [186]:





Again two months later, in his 3rd installment, Eisenhart finally arrived at the Einstein–Maxwell equation of general relativity [188*]. This time, the ansatz (440*) with (441*) was changed substantially into:
This equation is interesting because the energy-momentum tensor of the electromagnetic field is built directly into the connection (curvature). Eisenhart was aware that the Einstein–Maxwell equations did not represent the union of the gravitational and electromagnetic field aimed at. He quoted Einstein as saying that “A theory in which the gravitational field and electromagnetic field do not enter as logically distinct structures would be much preferable.” ([188], p. 881.) This quotation was repeated in the last of this sequence of papers by Eisenhart, in which “the final result of my third paper” were derived “in a somewhat different manner.” ([189], p. 333.)In his last contribution to UFT, when he was 83 years old, Eisenhart returned to mixed geometry [190]. Starting from Einstein’s condition (200*) on the metric, he aimed at solving it for the connection as a function of the metric and its first derivatives. Unaware of the solutions given previously (cf. Section 10.2.3), he achieved this only with the help of the additional constraint for torsion:
From this, again the vanishing of vector torsion follows. In this special case, from (444*) with the notation of (3*), (4*), Eisenhart’s solution is given by: Seen in context, Eisenhart’s papers on UFT from the 1950s did bring neither a new development in geometry nor an advance for physics. Cf. also the paper by Horvath [285*] in Section 15.1.
12.2 Hlavatý at Indiana University
Hlavatý is the fourth of the main figures in UFT besides Einstein, Schrödinger, and Tonnelat. His research was published first in a sizeable number of articles in the Journal of Rational Mechanics and Analysis of Indiana University251 and in other journals; they were then transformed into a book [269*]. According to its preface, his main intent was “to provide a detailed geometrical background for physical application of the theory”. As he was very optimistic with regard to its relation to physics, he went on: “It so happens that the detailed investigation of Einstein’s geometrical postulates opens an easy way to a physical interpretation”([269*], p. X). We have noticed in Section 9.7 that this possibly could not have been the case. In the preface of his book, Hlavatý became more explicit; his program was to encompass: (1) an investigation of the structure of the curvature and torsion imposed on space-time by the field equations, equations which he claimed to be “of a purely geometrical nature” without physical interpretation being “involved in them a priori”. The two further points of his program, i.e., (2) an attempt to identify the gravitational field and the electromagnetic field by means of the field equations, and (3) an investigation of the physical consequences of his theory, were treated only in “an outline of the basic ideas” ([269*], p. XVIII). In comparison with Einstein, Schrödinger and Tonnelat who followed their physical and mathematical intuition, Hlavatý’s investigations were much more systematical and directed first to what could be proven by mathematics; whether a relation to physics could be established became secondary to him. Although mostly working and publishing alone, he corresponded with about 40 scientists working on UFT. He also was a frequent reviewer for Mathematical Reviews (cf. Section 18.1). Hlavatý began by introducing a systematical classification of the non-symmetric metric



Throughout his research, the symmetric part is used for raising and lowering indices. From
Eq. (30*) he concluded that there are metrics
for which this “metric compatibility” equation
does not admit any solution”, and cases in which (30*) admits more than one solution [261*].
According to him, the condition for uniqueness of the solution is
if
(class 1), and
if
(class 2, 3). The
gravitational potential is identified with
while the electromagnetic field is taken to
be252
[261*]:
![κ = − sgn [ 𝜖ijrskijkrs ]](article2362x.gif)

His approach was more direct than Tonnelat’s: mostly, he worked just with and the
decomposition (363*) met before:






Hlavatý used the Ricci-tensors and
(cf. (75*) of Section 2.3.2), and proved that:

He stressed that Einstein’s weak field equations for UFT were of a purely geometrical nature with no physical interpretation needed. Equation (30*) was written in the form [261]:
where the covariant derivative is defined by (16*) in Section 2.1.1. The conditions on curvature are subsumed in with arbitrary


According to Hlavatý, the first two classes cannot be handled simultaneously with the third class
([266*], p. 421). This makes it more involved to read his papers, because the results proven by him must now
be distinguished according to the special class of .
i) Fields of third class.
In the course of his investigations when he tried to interpret geometrical quantities in terms of physical
variables, Hlavatý replaced the four equations following from (449*) by four complicated
looking equations:






The tensor received its meaning from what Hlavatý called “the gravitational field
equations”, i.e., Einstein’s equations with a geometrical energy-momentum tensor of matter:












For incoherent matter, , and from (451*)
. A somewhat disappointing
consequence is that, in a manageable approximation, charged particles remain unaffected by the
electromagnetic field: they move along geodesics in the gravitational field
([264], p. 329; [269*], p. 174,
187). Upon neglect of the cubic terms in
, i.e., for
, the equation of motion coincides with the
geodesic equation:
This is the more strange as Hlavatý claimed:
“In the unified theory the electromagnetic field is always present; hence we might look upon it as a primary field which […] creates the gravitational field. However, there is at least one known electromagnetic field which does not create a gravitational field (i.e., the field of the plane wave in the electromagnetic theory of light).” ([266*], p. 420.)
ii) Fields of class 1 and 2.
Here, and two new quantities were introduced:









![R {[ik],j} = 0](article2422x.gif)







For paths of photons Eq. (453*) still holds. If gravitation is neglected, i.e., , Hlavatý found
a discrepancy with the special relativistic explanation of the Michelson-Morley experiment.
Although he referred to the judgment of Shankland et al. that Miller’s result is erroneous [575], he
concluded: “From the point of view of the unified field theory Miller’s result, properly interpreted,
is not necessarily at variance with the assumption of the constant velocity of light.” ([266],
p. 471).
Hlavatý’s research will be appealing to some by its logical guideline concerning mathematical
structures. His many special cases and set up “agreements” in proving results are somewhat
bemusing for a physicist. An example is given by his publications dealing with the special case
when the symmetric part
of the metric
is degenerated [267, 268]. It is a
purely mathematical exercise meant to fill a gap, but is without physical meaning. For the
cases in which the theory could be applied to physical systems, in principle, Hlavatý was also
forced to alter the original field equations in order to avoid objections against the unphysical
results following from them. It is not unfair to conclude that he did not succeed in making a
break-through in the sense of his physical interpretations being more convincing than those suggested by
others.
The investigations of his doctoral student R. Wrede were directed to the mathematical structure of the theory: He partially extended
Hlavatý’s theory to an n-dimensional space by adhering to the two principles: A.) The algebraic structure
of the theory is imposed on the space by a general real tensor ; B.) The differential geometrical
structure is imposed on the space by the tensor
by means of a connection defined by (30*). Hlavatý’s
third principle, i.e., the existence of the constraints
with an arbitrary vector
field
is left out [708]. The paper solves (30*) in
dimensions for the various possible
cases.
12.3 Other contributions
A theoretician of the younger generation and assistant at Princeton University, R. L. Arnowitt , tried to look at UFT from the point of view of the electromagnetic field forming a link between the description of microscopic charges by quantum field theory and macroscopic ray optics [5*]. He introduced four postulates:
- Any unified field theory should reduce to Einstein–Maxwell theory in a first approximation for weak electromagnetic fields.
- First-order corrections to the Coulomb field of the electron should not become appreciable for
.
- The affine connection has the form
, where
is related to the vector potential of the Maxwell field. Also
is assumed.
- The Lagrangian must be invariant under the combined gauge
transformation
and (for the metric)
. The metric tensor is also symmetric.
The appearance of a microscopic length-parameter (and the cosmological constant) in his Lagrangian
and the occurrence of two “metrical” tensors turned out to be a consequence of the postulates. The
symmetrical first one is supposed to “be measured by rods and clocks” and used to set up the
Lagrangian; the second asymmetric one is derived from the Lagrangian:
. It is an
auxiliary device for the introduction of the electromagnetic field. Arnowitt chose the Lagrangian:


In order to obtain the field equations, the quantities and
are to be varied. From the first
two variations
and
resulted where
was
introduced by
and interpreted to be the “gravitational” metric tensor. The first of these
equations was rewritten as sourceless Maxwell equation such that
is the “electromagnetic” metric
tensor:
![fij = − a− 12R [ij]](article2459x.gif)




After some manipulation, variation with respect to led to:









A further contribution came from B. Kursunŏglu, whom we have met before in Section 9.3.3, now situated in Coral Gables, Florida. He continued to alter and study his variant of the Einstein–Schrödinger field equations [345]. In place of (300*) – (302*), he postulated the system:253
where
with

The denominator is related to .
The auxiliary field satisfies the vacuum Maxwell equations.