I"m trying to understand the exact/technical link between the Eikonal equation and a double-null form of the metric (if such a direct link even exists). R. Wald, in his "General Relativity", doesn't say anything about it.
A function f satisfies (per definition) the Eikonal equation if
g(∇f,∇f)=0
i.e. the gradient field ∇f is a null vector field.
On the other hand, a metric g has double-null coordinates (u,v) if g=h+F˙dudv (i.e. no du2 and dv2 terms appear).
I was wondering if there is a direct link between this function f and the metric double null form?
Thank you for any hints.
This post imported from StackExchange MathOverflow at 2015-12-17 17:23 (UTC), posted by SE-user GregVoit