14 research outputs found
The kernel and the injectivity of the EPRL map
In this paper we prove injectivity of the EPRL map for |\gamma|<1, filling
the gap of our previous paper.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
The EPRL intertwiners and corrected partition function
Do the SU(2) intertwiners parametrize the space of the EPRL solutions to the
simplicity constraint? What is a complete form of the partition function
written in terms of this parametrization? We prove that the EPRL map is
injective for n-valent vertex in case when it is a map from SO(3) into
SO(3)xSO(3) representations. We find, however, that the EPRL map is not
isometric. In the consequence, in order to be written in a SU(2) amplitude
form, the formula for the partition function has to be rederived. We do it and
obtain a new, complete formula for the partition function. The result goes
beyond the SU(2) spin-foam models framework.Comment: RevTex4, 15 pages, 5 figures; theorem of injectivity of EPRL map
correcte
Background independent quantizations: the scalar field II
We are concerned with the issue of quantization of a scalar field in a
diffeomorphism invariant manner. We apply the method used in Loop Quantum
Gravity. It relies on the specific choice of scalar field variables referred to
as the polymer variables. The quantization, in our formulation, amounts to
introducing the `quantum' polymer *-star algebra and looking for positive
linear functionals, called states. Assumed in our paper homeomorphism
invariance allows to derive the complete class of the states. They are
determined by the homeomorphism invariant states defined on the CW-complex
*-algebra. The corresponding GNS representations of the polymer *-algebra and
their self-adjoint extensions are derived, the equivalence classes are found
and invariant subspaces characterized. In the preceding letter (the part I) we
outlined those results. Here, we present the technical details.Comment: 51 pages, LaTeX, no figures, revised versio
Background independent quantizations: the scalar field I
We are concerned with the issue of quantization of a scalar field in a
diffeomorphism invariant manner. We apply the method used in Loop Quantum
Gravity. It relies on the specific choice of scalar field variables referred to
as the polymer variables. The quantization, in our formulation, amounts to
introducing the `quantum' polymer *-star algebra and looking for positive
linear functionals, called states. The assumed in our paper homeomorphism
invariance allows to determine a complete class of the states. Except one, all
of them are new. In this letter we outline the main steps and conclusions, and
present the results: the GNS representations, characterization of those states
which lead to essentially self adjoint momentum operators (unbounded),
identification of the equivalence classes of the representations as well as of
the irreducible ones. The algebra and topology of the problem, the derivation,
all the technical details and more are contained in the paper-part II.Comment: 13 pages, minor corrections were made in the revised versio
The status of Quantum Geometry in the dynamical sector of Loop Quantum Cosmology
This letter is motivated by the recent papers by Dittrich and Thiemann and,
respectively, by Rovelli discussing the status of Quantum Geometry in the
dynamical sector of Loop Quantum Gravity. Since the papers consider model
examples, we also study the issue in the case of an example, namely on the Loop
Quantum Cosmology model of space-isotropic universe. We derive the
Rovelli-Thiemann-Ditrich partial observables corresponding to the quantum
geometry operators of LQC in both Hilbert spaces: the kinematical one and,
respectively, the physical Hilbert space of solutions to the quantum
constraints. We find, that Quantum Geometry can be used to characterize the
physical solutions, and the operators of quantum geometry preserve many of
their kinematical properties.Comment: Latex, 12 page
Representations of the Weyl Algebra in Quantum Geometry
The Weyl algebra A of continuous functions and exponentiated fluxes,
introduced by Ashtekar, Lewandowski and others, in quantum geometry is studied.
It is shown that, in the piecewise analytic category, every regular
representation of A having a cyclic and diffeomorphism invariant vector, is
already unitarily equivalent to the fundamental representation. Additional
assumptions concern the dimension of the underlying analytic manifold (at least
three), the finite wide triangulizability of surfaces in it to be used for the
fluxes and the naturality of the action of diffeomorphisms -- but neither any
domain properties of the represented Weyl operators nor the requirement that
the diffeomorphisms act by pull-backs. For this, the general behaviour of
C*-algebras generated by continuous functions and pull-backs of homeomorphisms,
as well as the properties of stratified analytic diffeomorphisms are studied.
Additionally, the paper includes also a short and direct proof of the
irreducibility of A.Comment: 71 pages, 1 figure, LaTeX. Changes v2 to v3: previous results
unchanged; some addings: inclusion of gauge transforms, several comments,
Subsects. 1.5, 3.7, 3.8; comparison with LOST paper moved to Introduction;
Def. 2.5 modified; some typos corrected; Refs. updated. Article now as
accepted by Commun. Math. Phy
One vertex spin-foams with the Dipole Cosmology boundary
We find all the spin-foams contributing in the first order of the vertex
expansion to the transition amplitude of the Bianchi-Rovelli-Vidotto Dipole
Cosmology model. Our algorithm is general and provides spin-foams of
arbitrarily given, fixed: boundary and, respectively, a number of internal
vertices. We use the recently introduced Operator Spin-Network Diagrams
framework.Comment: 23 pages, 30 figure
Feynman diagrammatic approach to spin foams
"The Spin Foams for People Without the 3d/4d Imagination" could be an
alternative title of our work. We derive spin foams from operator spin network
diagrams} we introduce. Our diagrams are the spin network analogy of the
Feynman diagrams. Their framework is compatible with the framework of Loop
Quantum Gravity. For every operator spin network diagram we construct a
corresponding operator spin foam. Admitting all the spin networks of LQG and
all possible diagrams leads to a clearly defined large class of operator spin
foams. In this way our framework provides a proposal for a class of 2-cell
complexes that should be used in the spin foam theories of LQG. Within this
class, our diagrams are just equivalent to the spin foams. The advantage,
however, in the diagram framework is, that it is self contained, all the
amplitudes can be calculated directly from the diagrams without explicit
visualization of the corresponding spin foams. The spin network diagram
operators and amplitudes are consistently defined on their own. Each diagram
encodes all the combinatorial information. We illustrate applications of our
diagrams: we introduce a diagram definition of Rovelli's surface amplitudes as
well as of the canonical transition amplitudes. Importantly, our operator spin
network diagrams are defined in a sufficiently general way to accommodate all
the versions of the EPRL or the FK model, as well as other possible models. The
diagrams are also compatible with the structure of the LQG Hamiltonian
operators, what is an additional advantage. Finally, a scheme for a complete
definition of a spin foam theory by declaring a set of interaction vertices
emerges from the examples presented at the end of the paper.Comment: 36 pages, 23 figure
Operator Spin Foam Models
The goal of this paper is to introduce a systematic approach to spin foams.
We define operator spin foams, that is foams labelled by group representations
and operators, as the main tool. An equivalence relation we impose in the set
of the operator spin foams allows to split the faces and the edges of the
foams. The consistency with that relation requires introduction of the
(familiar for the BF theory) face amplitude. The operator spin foam models are
defined quite generally. Imposing a maximal symmetry leads to a family we call
natural operator spin foam models. This symmetry, combined with demanding
consistency with splitting the edges, determines a complete characterization of
a general natural model. It can be obtained by applying arbitrary (quantum)
constraints on an arbitrary BF spin foam model. In particular, imposing
suitable constraints on Spin(4) BF spin foam model is exactly the way we tend
to view 4d quantum gravity, starting with the BC model and continuing with the
EPRL or FK models. That makes our framework directly applicable to those
models. Specifically, our operator spin foam framework can be translated into
the language of spin foams and partition functions. We discuss the examples: BF
spin foam model, the BC model, and the model obtained by application of our
framework to the EPRL intertwiners.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, RevTex4.
Closed FRW model in Loop Quantum Cosmology
The basic idea of the LQC applies to every spatially homogeneous cosmological
model, however only the spatially flat (so called ) case has been
understood in detail in the literature thus far. In the closed (so called: k=1)
case certain technical difficulties have been the obstacle that stopped the
development. In this work the difficulties are overcome, and a new LQC model of
the spatially closed, homogeneous, isotropic universe is constructed. The
topology of the spacelike section of the universe is assumed to be that of
SU(2) or SO(3). Surprisingly, according to the results achieved in this work,
the two cases can be distinguished from each other just by the local properties
of the quantum geometry of the universe. The quantum hamiltonian operator of
the gravitational field takes the form of a difference operator, where the
elementary step is the quantum of the 3-volume derived in the flat case by
Ashtekar, Pawlowski and Singh. The mathematical properties of the operator are
studied: it is essentially self-adjoint, bounded from above by 0, the 0 itself
is not an eigenvalue, the eigenvectors form a basis. An estimate on the
dimension of the spectral projection on any finite interval is provided.Comment: 19 pages, latex, no figures, high quality, nea