Abstract

The behaviour of a “test” electromagnetic field in the background of an exact gravitational plane wave is investigated in the framework of Einstein's general relativity. We have expressed the general solution to the de Rham equations as a Fourier-like integral. In the general case we have reduced the problem to a set of ordinary differential equations and have explicitly written the solution in the case of linear polarization of the gravitational wave. We have expressed our results by means of Fermi normal coordinates (FNC), which define the proper reference frame of the laboratory. Moreover, we have provided some Gedanken experiments, which show that an external gravitational wave induces measurable effects of a nontidal nature via electromagnetic interaction. Consequently it is not possible to eliminate gravitational effects on electromagnetic field, even in an arbitrarily small spatial region around an observer freely falling in the field of a gravitational wave. This is in contrast to the case of mechanical interaction involving measurements of geodesic deviation effects. This behaviour is not in contrast with the principle of equivalence, which applies to arbitrarily small regions of both space and time.

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