In Choquet-Bruhat's solution to the Cauchy problem for Einstein's equation, one reduces the Einstein equations to a quasidiagonal quasilinear hyperbolic system on $ M := [0, T] \times \bar M$ where $T > 0$ and $\bar M$ is some initial spacelike 3-manifold for unknowns $g_{\alpha\beta}$ on $M$. Hyperbolic PDE theory then shows that one can, given first-order initial data, solve these equations forward in time to find smooth solutions $g_{\alpha\beta}$. Thus we get a metric $g$ on $M$.
- How do we know that the resulting metric $g = (g_{\alpha\beta})$ is Lorentzian? Is there a reason why the signature cannot change, or that it cannot become degenerate?
At first I thought continuity of the metric would solve this problem - if it is Lorentzian at $t = 0$ then it should be Lorentzian shortly afterwards. However if $\bar M$ is noncompact (i.e. in the natural case of $\bar M = \mathbb{R}^3$) then we may not get a uniform $T > 0$ on which $g$ is Lorentzian, as given $x \in \bar M$ the time interval $I_x$ on which $g(\cdot, x)$ is Lorentzian could get small as $x$ varies, making $|I_x| \to 0$ as $x \to \infty$. But from what I can tell, the results on this problem do give us a uniform $T > 0$, so I am guessing that this is not the reason.
I have not studied carefully the proof of well-posedness to hyperbolic systems of this form; perhaps the answer is part of this theorem. Any help is much appreciated.