I'm trying to calculate the proper volume of a portion of the alcubierre spacetime to see how it compares to the euclidean volume element. As I understand it, the proper volume element in cartesian coordinates is usually found with:
$dV=\sqrt{det\gamma}dxdydz$
Where I'm confused is that $det\gamma$ in this case is just $1$, yet I feel like a hypersurface $\Sigma$ of constant $t$ would have larger volume elements behind the spaceship than in front.
The metric, written in terms of $c=1$:
$ds^2=(v^2f^2-1)dt^2-2vfdxdt+dx^2+dy^2+dz^2$
Comoving local tetrad:
$e_{(t)}^t=1$, $e_{(t)}^x=vf$, $e_{(y)}^y=e_{(z)}^z=1$
Static local tetrad:
$e_{(t)}^t=\frac{1}{\sqrt{1-v^2f^2}}$, $e_{(x)}^t=\frac{vf}{\sqrt{1-v^2f^2}}$, $e_{(x)}^x=\sqrt{1-v^2f^2}$, $e_{(y)}^y=e_{(z)}^z=1$
Is it possible to find the proper volume with the above objects?