A rigorous definition of symmetries in general relativity has been given by Hall (2004). In this approach, the idea is to use (smooth)
vector fields whose
local flow diffeomorphisms preserve some property of the
spacetime. (Note that one should emphasize in one's thinking this is a diffeomorphism—a transformation on a
differential element. The implication is that the behavior of objects with extent may not be as manifestly symmetric.) This preserving property of the diffeomorphisms is made precise as follows. A smooth vector field on a spacetime is said to
preserve a smooth tensor on (or is
invariant under ) if, for each smooth
local flow diffeomorphism associated with , the tensors and are equal on the domain of . This statement is equivalent to the more usable condition that the
Lie derivative of the
tensor under the vector field vanishes: \mathcal{L}_X T = 0 on . This has the consequence that, given any two points and on , the coordinates of in a coordinate system around are equal to the coordinates of in a coordinate system around . A
symmetry on the spacetime is a smooth vector field whose local flow diffeomorphisms preserve some (usually geometrical) feature of the spacetime. The (geometrical) feature may refer to specific tensors (such as the metric, or the energy–momentum tensor) or to other aspects of the spacetime such as its geodesic structure. The vector fields are sometimes referred to as
collineations,
symmetry vector fields or just
symmetries. The set of all symmetry vector fields on forms a
Lie algebra under the
Lie bracket operation as can be seen from the identity: \mathcal{L}_{[X,Y]} T = \mathcal{L}_X (\mathcal{L}_Y T) - \mathcal{L}_Y (\mathcal{L}_X T) the term on the right usually being written, with an
abuse of notation, as [\mathcal{L}_X, \mathcal{L}_Y] T. ==Killing symmetry==