4,674 research outputs found
Quantum Gravitational Contributions to the CMB Anisotropy Spectrum
We derive the primordial power spectrum of density fluctuations in the
framework of quantum cosmology. For this purpose we perform a Born-Oppenheimer
approximation to the Wheeler-DeWitt equation for an inflationary universe with
a scalar field. In this way we first recover the scale-invariant power spectrum
that is found as an approximation in the simplest inflationary models. We then
obtain quantum gravitational corrections to this spectrum and discuss whether
they lead to measurable signatures in the CMB anisotropy spectrum. The
non-observation so far of such corrections translates into an upper bound on
the energy scale of inflation.Comment: 4 pages, v3: sign error in Eq. (5) and its consequences correcte
Remarks on the issue of time and complex numbers in canonical quantum gravity
We develop the idea that, as a result of the arbitrariness of the factor
ordering in Wheeler-DeWitt equation, gauge phases can not, in general, being
completely removed from the wave functional in quantum gravity. The latter may
be conveniently described by means of a remnant complex term in WDW equation
depending of the factor ordering. Taking this equation for granted we can
obtain WKB complex solutions and, therefore, we should be able to derive a
semiclassical time parameter for the Schroedinger equation corresponding to
matter fields in a given classical curved space.Comment: Typewritten using RevTex, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Quantum Gravity Equation In Schroedinger Form In Minisuperspace Description
We start from classical Hamiltonian constraint of general relativity to
obtain the Einstein-Hamiltonian-Jacobi equation. We obtain a time parameter
prescription demanding that geometry itself determines the time, not the matter
field, such that the time so defined being equivalent to the time that enters
into the Schroedinger equation. Without any reference to the Wheeler-DeWitt
equation and without invoking the expansion of exponent in WKB wavefunction in
powers of Planck mass, we obtain an equation for quantum gravity in
Schroedinger form containing time. We restrict ourselves to a minisuperspace
description. Unlike matter field equation our equation is equivalent to the
Wheeler-DeWitt equation in the sense that our solutions reproduce also the
wavefunction of the Wheeler-DeWitt equation provided one evaluates the
normalization constant according to the wormhole dominance proposal recently
proposed by us.Comment: 11 Pages, ReVTeX, no figur
Time in Quantum Gravity
The Wheeler-DeWitt equation in quantum gravity is timeless in character. In
order to discuss quantum to classical transition of the universe, one uses a
time prescription in quantum gravity to obtain a time contained description
starting from Wheeler-DeWitt equation and WKB ansatz for the WD wavefunction.
The approach has some drawbacks. In this work, we obtain the time-contained
Schroedinger-Wheeler-DeWitt equation without using the WD equation and the WKB
ansatz for the wavefunction. We further show that a Gaussian ansatz for SWD
wavefunction is consistent with the Hartle-Hawking or wormhole dominance
proposal boundary condition. We thus find an answer to the small scale boundary
conditions.Comment: 12 Pages, LaTeX, no figur
Solving the Problem of Time in Mini-superspace: Measurement of Dirac Observables
One solution to the so-called problem of time is to construct certain Dirac
observables, sometimes called evolving constants of motion. There has been some
discussion in the literature about the interpretation of such observables, and
in particular whether single Dirac observables can be measured. Here we clarify
the situation by describing a class of interactions that can be said to
implement measurements of such observables. Along the way, we describe a useful
notion of perturbation theory for the rigging map eta of group averaging
(sometimes loosely called the physical state "projector"), which maps states
from the auxiliary Hilbert space to the physical Hilbert space.Comment: 12 pages, ReVTe
Quantum cosmology with big-brake singularity
We investigate a cosmological model with a big-brake singularity in the
future: while the first time derivative of the scale factor goes to zero, its
second time derivative tends to minus infinity. Although we also discuss the
classical version of the model in some detail, our main interest lies in its
quantization. We formulate the Wheeler-DeWitt equation and derive solutions
describing wave packets. We show that all such solutions vanish in the region
of the classical singularity, a behaviour which we interpret as singularity
avoidance. We then discuss the same situation in loop quantum cosmology. While
this leads to a different factor ordering, the singularity is there avoided,
too.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures, figures improved, references added, conceptual
clarifications include
Quantum-to-classical transition for fluctuations in the early Universe
According to the inflationary scenario for the very early Universe, all
inhomogeneities in the Universe are of genuine quantum origin. On the other
hand, looking at these inhomogeneities and measuring them, clearly no specific
quantum mechanical properties are observed. We show how the transition from
their inherent quantum gravitational nature to classical behaviour comes about
-- a transition whereby none of the successful quantitative predictions of the
inflationary scenario for the present-day universe is changed. This is made
possible by two properties. First, the quantum state for the spacetime metric
perturbations produced by quantum gravitational effects in the early Universe
becomes very special (highly squeezed) as a result of the expansion of the
Universe (as long as the wavelength of the perturbations exceeds the Hubble
radius). Second, decoherence through the environment distinguishes the field
amplitude basis as being the pointer basis. This renders the perturbations
presently indistinguishable from stochastic classical inhomogeneities.Comment: 9 pages, LATE
Canonical Quantization of Spherically Symmetric Dust Collapse
Quantum gravity effects are likely to play a crucial role in determining the
outcome of gravitational collapse during its final stages. In this contribution
we will outline a canonical quantization of the LeMaitre-Tolman-Bondi models,
which describe the collapse of spherical, inhomogeneous, non-rotating dust.
Although there are many models of gravitational collapse, this particular class
of models stands out for its simplicity and the fact that both black holes and
naked singularity end states may be realized on the classical level, depending
on the initial conditions. We will obtain the appropriate Wheeler-DeWitt
equation and then solve it exactly, after regularization on a spatial lattice.
The solutions describe Hawking radiation and provide an elegant microcanonical
description of black hole entropy, but they raise other questions, most
importantly concerning the nature of gravity's fundamental degrees of freedom.Comment: 19 pages no figures. Contribution to a festschrift in honor of Joshua
N. Goldber
Thermal conductive connection and method of making same Patent
Thermal conductive, electrically insulated cleavable adhesive connection between electronic module and heat sin
The Coherence of Primordial Fluctuations Produced During Inflation
The behaviour of quantum metric perturbations produced during inflation is
considered at the stage after the second Hubble radius crossing. It is shown
that the classical correlation between amplitude and momentum of a perturbation
mode, previously shown to emerge in the course of an effective
quantum-to-classical transition, is maintained for a sufficiently long time,
and we present the explicit form in which it takes place using the Wigner
function. We further show with a simple diffraction experiment that quantum
interference, non-expressible in terms of a classical stochastic description of
the perturbations, is essentially suppressed. Rescattering of the perturbations
leads to a comparatively slow decay of this correlation and to a complete
stochastization of the system.Comment: LaTeX (7 pages
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