745 research outputs found
Latticing quantum gravity
I discuss some aspects of a lattice approach to canonical quantum gravity in
a connection formulation, discuss how it differs from the continuum
construction, and compare the spectra of geometric operators - encoding
information about components of the spatial metric - for some simple lattice
quantum states.Comment: 7 pages, TeX, 1 figure (epsf); contribution to Santa Margherita
Conference on Constrained Dynamics and Quantum Gravit
Spectrum of the Volume Operator in Quantum Gravity
The volume operator is an important kinematical quantity in the
non-perturbative approach to four-dimensional quantum gravity in the connection
formulation. We give a general algorithm for computing its spectrum when acting
on four-valent spin network states, evaluate some of the eigenvalue formulae
explicitly, and discuss the role played by the Mandelstam constraints.Comment: 14 pages, plain tex, 4 figures (postscript, compressed and
uu-encoded
Imposing det E > 0 in discrete quantum gravity
We point out that the inequality det E > 0 distinguishes the kinematical
phase space of canonical connection gravity from that of a gauge field theory,
and characterize the eigenvectors with positive, negative and zero-eigenvalue
of the corresponding quantum operator in a lattice-discretized version of the
theory. The diagonalization of the operator det E is simplified by classifying
its eigenvectors according to the irreducible representations of the octagonal
group.Comment: 10 pages, plain Te
A real alternative to quantum gravity in loop space
We show that the Hamiltonian of four-dimensional Lorentzian gravity, defined
on a space of real, SU(2)-valued connections, in spite of its non-polynomiality
possesses a natural quantum analogue in a lattice-discretized formulation of
the theory. This opens the way for a systematic investigation of its spectrum.
The unambiguous and well-defined scalar product is that of the SU(2)-gauge
theory. We also comment on various aspects of the continuum theory.Comment: 11 pages, plain TeX, Feb 9
Still on the way to quantizing gravity
I review and discuss some recent developments in non-perturbative approaches
to quantum gravity, with an emphasis on discrete formulations, and those coming
from a classical connection description.Comment: 15 pages, TeX; Invited talk at the 12th Italian Conference on General
Relativity and Gravitational Physics, Roma, September 23-27, 199
Quantum Gravity from Causal Dynamical Triangulations: A Review
This topical review gives a comprehensive overview and assessment of recent
results in Causal Dynamical Triangulations (CDT), a modern formulation of
lattice gravity, whose aim is to obtain a theory of quantum gravity
nonperturbatively from a scaling limit of the lattice-regularized theory. In
this manifestly diffeomorphism-invariant approach one has direct, computational
access to a Planckian spacetime regime, which is explored with the help of
invariant quantum observables. During the last few years, there have been
numerous new and important developments and insights concerning the theory's
phase structure, the roles of time, causality, diffeomorphisms and global
topology, the application of renormalization group methods and new observables.
We will focus on these new results, primarily in four spacetime dimensions, and
discuss some of their geometric and physical implications.Comment: 64 pages, 28 figure
A discrete history of the Lorentzian path integral
In these lecture notes, I describe the motivation behind a recent formulation
of a non-perturbative gravitational path integral for Lorentzian (instead of
the usual Euclidean) space-times, and give a pedagogical introduction to its
main features. At the regularized, discrete level this approach solves the
problems of (i) having a well-defined Wick rotation, (ii) possessing a
coordinate-invariant cutoff, and (iii) leading to_convergent_ sums over
geometries. Although little is known as yet about the existence and nature of
an underlying continuum theory of quantum gravity in four dimensions, there are
already a number of beautiful results in d=2 and d=3 where continuum limits
have been found. They include an explicit example of the inequivalence of the
Euclidean and Lorentzian path integrals, a non-perturbative mechanism for the
cancellation of the conformal factor, and the discovery that causality can act
as an effective regulator of quantum geometry.Comment: 38 pages, 16 figures, typos corrected, some comments and references
adde
Discrete Lorentzian Quantum Gravity
Just as for non-abelian gauge theories at strong coupling, discrete lattice
methods are a natural tool in the study of non-perturbative quantum gravity.
They have to reflect the fact that the geometric degrees of freedom are
dynamical, and that therefore also the lattice theory must be formulated in a
background-independent way. After summarizing the status quo of discrete
covariant lattice models for four-dimensional quantum gravity, I describe a new
class of discrete gravity models whose starting point is a path integral over
Lorentzian (rather than Euclidean) space-time geometries. A number of
interesting and unexpected results that have been obtained for these
dynamically triangulated models in two and three dimensions make discrete
Lorentzian gravity a promising candidate for a non-trivial theory of quantum
gravity.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, uses espcrc2.sty; Lattice 2000 (Plenary
Simplifying the spectral analysis of the volume operator
The volume operator plays a central role in both the kinematics and dynamics
of canonical approaches to quantum gravity which are based on algebras of
generalized Wilson loops. We introduce a method for simplifying its spectral
analysis, for quantum states that can be realized on a cubic three-dimensional
lattice. This involves a decomposition of Hilbert space into sectors
transforming according to the irreducible representations of a subgroup of the
cubic group. As an application, we determine the complete spectrum for a class
of states with six-valent intersections.Comment: 19 pages, TeX, to be published in Nucl. Phys.
Loop Variable Inequalities in Gravity and Gauge Theory
We point out an incompleteness of formulations of gravitational and gauge
theories that use traces of holonomies around closed curves as their basic
variables. It is shown that in general such loop variables have to satisfy
certain inequalities if they are to give a description equivalent to the usual
one in terms of local gauge potentials.Comment: 10pp., TeX, Syracuse SU-GP-93/3-
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