The Schwarzschild metric is a
spherically symmetric Lorentzian metric (here, with signature convention ), defined on (a subset of) \mathbb{R}\times \left(E^3 -O\right) \cong \mathbb{R} \times (0,\infty) \times S^2 where E^3 is 3 dimensional Euclidean space, and S^2 \subset E^3 is the two-sphere. The rotation group \mathrm{SO}(3) = \mathrm{SO}(E^3) acts on the E^3 - O or S^2 factor as rotations around the center O, while leaving the first \mathbb{R} factor unchanged. The Schwarzschild metric is a solution of
Einstein's field equations in empty space, meaning that it is valid only
outside the gravitating body. That is, for a spherical body of radius R the solution is valid for r > R. To describe the gravitational field both inside and outside the gravitating body the Schwarzschild solution must be matched with some suitable interior solution at , such as the
interior Schwarzschild metric. In
Schwarzschild coordinates (t, r, \theta, \phi) the Schwarzschild metric (or equivalently, the
line element for
proper time) has the form {d s}^{2} = c^2 \,{d \tau}^{2} = \left (1 - \frac{r_\mathrm{s}}{r} \right) c^2 \,dt^2 - \left(1-\frac{r_\mathrm{s}}{r}\right)^{-1} \,dr^2 - r^2 {d \Omega}^{2}, where {d \Omega}^{2} is the metric on the two-sphere, i.e. {{tmath|1= {d \Omega}^{2} = \left(d\theta^2 + \sin^2\theta \, d\phi^2\right) }}. Furthermore, • d\tau^2 is positive for timelike curves, in which case \tau is the
proper time (time measured by a clock moving along the same
world line with a
test particle), • c is the
speed of light, • t is, for {{tmath|1= r > r_\text{s} }}, the time coordinate (measured by a clock located infinitely far from the massive body and stationary with respect to it), • r is, for {{tmath|1= r > r_\text{s} }}, the radial coordinate (measured as the circumference, divided by 2, of a sphere centered around the massive body), • \Omega is a point on the two-sphere , • \theta is the
colatitude of \Omega (angle from north, in units of
radians) defined after arbitrarily choosing a
z-axis, • \phi is the
longitude of \Omega (also in radians) around the chosen
z-axis, and • r_\text{s} is the
Schwarzschild radius of the massive body, a
scale factor which is related to its mass M by {{tmath|1= r_\text{s} = {2GM}/{c^2} }}, where G is the
gravitational constant. The Schwarzschild metric has a singularity for , which is an intrinsic curvature singularity. It also seems to have a singularity on the
event horizon . Depending on the point of view, the metric is therefore defined only on the exterior region r > r_\text{s}, only on the interior region r or their disjoint union. However, the metric is actually non-singular across the event horizon, as one sees in suitable coordinates (see below). For {{tmath|1= r \gg r_\text{s} }}, the Schwarzschild metric is asymptotic to the standard Lorentz metric on Minkowski space. For almost all astrophysical objects, the ratio \frac{r_\text{s}}{R} is extremely small. For example, the Schwarzschild radius r_\text{s}^{(\text{Earth})} of the Earth is roughly , while the Sun, which is times as massive has a Schwarzschild radius r_\text{s}^{(\text{Sun})} of approximately 3.0 km. The ratio becomes large only in close proximity to
black holes and other ultra-dense objects such as
neutron stars. The radial coordinate turns out to have physical significance as the "proper distance between two events that occur simultaneously relative to the radially moving geodesic clocks, the two events lying on the same radial coordinate line". The Schwarzschild solution is analogous to a classical Newtonian theory of gravity that corresponds to the gravitational field around a point particle. Even at the surface of the Earth, the corrections to Newtonian gravity are only one part in a billion. However, this is enough for the metric to be used to correct for
gravitational time dilation in the
Global Positioning System. == History ==