A nice way to parametrise the 4-velocity u of a small test body moving radially within Schwarzschild spacetime is by the “energy per unit rest mass” e:
      ![Rendered by QuickLaTeX.com \[{u^\mu=\left(e\Schw^{-1},\pm\eroot,0,0\right)\]](http://cmaclaurin.com/cosmos/wp-content/ql-cache/quicklatex.com-18f14260dbcfd3c0686a273a72319a5c_l3.png)
For the “±” term, choose the sign based on whether the motion is inwards or outwards. All components are given in Schwarzschild coordinates 
. The result was derived as follows. In geometric units, the metric is:
      ![Rendered by QuickLaTeX.com \[\Schwmetric\]](http://cmaclaurin.com/cosmos/wp-content/ql-cache/quicklatex.com-c9af12fa8aa92d2f1d3a9a32b73b81fc_l3.png)
By definition 
, where 
 is the Killing vector corresponding to the independence of the metric from t, and has components 
 (Hartle 
 §9.3). For geodesic (freefalling) motion e is invariant, however even for accelerated motion e is well-defined instantaneously and makes a useful parametrisation.
We want to find 
 say. Rearranging the defining equation for e gives 
. Radial motion means 
, so the normalised condition 
 yields the remaining component 
. The resulting formula is valid for all 
, and for e=1 the 4-velocity describes “raindrops” as expected.