78 research outputs found
Unitary Theory of Evaporating 2D Black Holes
We study a manifestly unitary formulation of 2d dilaton quantum gravity based
on the reduced phase space quantization. The spacetime metric can be expanded
in a formal power series of the matter energy-momentum tensor operator. This
expansion can be used for calculating the quantum corrections to the classical
black hole metric by evaluating the expectation value of the metric operator in
an appropriate class of the physical states. When the normal ordering in the
metric operator is chosen to be with respect to Kruskal vacuum, the lowest
order semiclassical metric is exactly the one-loop effective action metric
discovered by Bose, Parker and Peleg. The corresponding semiclassical geometry
describes an evaporating black hole which ends up as a remnant. The calculation
of higher order corrections and implications for the black hole fate are
discussed.Comment: LaTex fil
Spin Foam Models of Yang-Mills Theory Coupled to Gravity
We construct a spin foam model of Yang-Mills theory coupled to gravity by
using a discretized path integral of the BF theory with polynomial interactions
and the Barret-Crane ansatz. In the Euclidian gravity case we obtain a vertex
amplitude which is determined by a vertex operator acting on a simple spin
network function. The Euclidian gravity results can be straightforwardly
extended to the Lorentzian case, so that we propose a Lorentzian spin foam
model of Yang-Mills theory coupled to gravity.Comment: 10 page
Remarks on the Reduced Phase Space of (2+1)-Dimensional Gravity on a Torus in the Ashtekar Formulation
We examine the reduced phase space of the Barbero-Varadarajan solutions of
the Ashtekar formulation of (2+1)-dimensional general relativity on a torus. We
show that it is a finite-dimensional space due to existence of an infinite
dimensional residual gauge invariance which reduces the infinite-dimensional
space of solutions to a finite-dimensional space of gauge-inequivalent
solutions. This is in agreement with general arguments which imply that the
number of physical degrees of freedom for (2+1)-dimensional Ashtekar gravity on
a torus is finite.Comment: 13 pages, Latex. More details have been included and the expression
for the finite residual gauge transformations has been worked ou
Quantum Gravity Vacuum and Invariants of Embedded Spin Networks
We show that the path integral for the three-dimensional SU(2) BF theory with
a Wilson loop or a spin network function inserted can be understood as the
Rovelli-Smolin loop transform of a wavefunction in the Ashtekar connection
representation, where the wavefunction satisfies the constraints of quantum
general relativity with zero cosmological constant. This wavefunction is given
as a product of the delta functions of the SU(2) field strength and therefore
it can be naturally associated to a flat connection spacetime. The loop
transform can be defined rigorously via the quantum SU(2) group, as a spin foam
state sum model, so that one obtains invariants of spin networks embedded in a
three-manifold. These invariants define a flat connection vacuum state in the
q-deformed spin network basis. We then propose a modification of this
construction in order to obtain a vacuum state corresponding to the flat metric
spacetime.Comment: 15 pages, revised version to appear in Class. Quant. Gra
Group field theory formulation of 3d quantum gravity coupled to matter fields
We present a new group field theory describing 3d Riemannian quantum gravity
coupled to matter fields for any choice of spin and mass. The perturbative
expansion of the partition function produces fat graphs colored with SU(2)
algebraic data, from which one can reconstruct at once a 3-dimensional
simplicial complex representing spacetime and its geometry, like in the
Ponzano-Regge formulation of pure 3d quantum gravity, and the Feynman graphs
for the matter fields. The model then assigns quantum amplitudes to these fat
graphs given by spin foam models for gravity coupled to interacting massive
spinning point particles, whose properties we discuss.Comment: RevTeX; 28 pages, 21 figure
Free-Field Realization of D-dimensional Cylindrical Gravitational Waves
We find two-dimensional free-field variables for D-dimensional general
relativity on spacetimes with D-2 commuting spacelike Killing vector fields and
non-compact spatial sections for D>4. We show that there is a canonical
transformation which maps the corresponding two-dimensional dilaton gravity
theory into a two-dimensional diffeomorphism invariant theory of the free-field
variables. We also show that the spacetime metric components can be expressed
as asymptotic series in negative powers of the dilaton, with coefficients which
can be determined in terms of the free fields.Comment: 15 pages, Late
Thermodynamics of Large AdS Black Holes
We consider leading order quantum corrections to the geometry of large AdS
black holes in a spherical reduction of four-dimensional Einstein gravity with
negative cosmological constant. The Hawking temperature grows without bound
with increasing black hole mass, yet the semiclassical back-reaction on the
geometry is relatively mild, indicating that observers in free fall outside a
large AdS black hole never see thermal radiation at the Hawking temperature.
The positive specific heat of large AdS black holes is a statement about the
dual gauge theory rather than an observable property on the gravity side.
Implications for string thermodynamics with an AdS infrared regulator are
briefly discussed.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure, v2. added reference
Observables in 3d spinfoam quantum gravity with fermions
We study expectation values of observables in three-dimensional spinfoam
quantum gravity coupled to Dirac fermions. We revisit the model introduced by
one of the authors and extend it to the case of massless fermionic fields. We
introduce observables, analyse their symmetries and the corresponding proper
gauge fixing. The Berezin integral over the fermionic fields is performed and
the fermionic observables are expanded in open paths and closed loops
associated to pure quantum gravity observables. We obtain the vertex amplitudes
for gauge-invariant observables, while the expectation values of gauge-variant
observables, such as the fermion propagator, are given by the evaluation of
particular spin networks.Comment: 32 pages, many diagrams, uses psfrag
Exact Dirac Quantization of All 2-D Dilaton Gravity Theories
The most general dilaton gravity theory in 2 spacetime dimensions is
considered. A Hamiltonian analysis is performed and the reduced phase space,
which is two dimensional, is explicitly constructed in a suitable
parametrization of the fields. The theory is then quantized via the Dirac
method in a functional Schrodinger representation. The quantum constraints are
solved exactly to yield the (spatial) diffeomorphism invariant quantum wave
functional for all theories considered. This wave function depends explicitly
on the (single) configuration space coordinate as well as on the imbedding of
space into spacetime (i.e. on the choice of time).Comment: 11 pages, LateX, (Equations (36) and (37) have been corrected and the
discussion of them modified.
Spin Foam Models of Matter Coupled to Gravity
We construct a class of spin foam models describing matter coupled to
gravity, such that the gravitational sector is described by the unitary
irreducible representations of the appropriate symmetry group, while the matter
sector is described by the finite-dimensional irreducible representations of
that group. The corresponding spin foam amplitudes in the four-dimensional
gravity case are expressed in terms of the spin network amplitudes for
pentagrams with additional external and internal matter edges. We also give a
quantum field theory formulation of the model, where the matter degrees of
freedom are described by spin network fields carrying the indices from the
appropriate group representation. In the non-topological Lorentzian gravity
case, we argue that the matter representations should be appropriate SO(3) or
SO(2) representations contained in a given Lorentz matter representation,
depending on whether one wants to describe a massive or a massless matter
field. The corresponding spin network amplitudes are given as multiple
integrals of propagators which are matrix spherical functions.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures, further remarks and references added. Version to
appear in Class. Quant. Gra
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