Quantum amplitudes for s=2 gravitational-wave perturbations of
Einstein/scalar collapse to a black hole are treated by analogy with s=1
Maxwell perturbations. The spin-2 perturbations split into parts with odd and
even parity. We use the Regge-Wheeler gauge; at a certain point we make a gauge
transformation to an asymptotically-flat gauge, such that the metric
perturbations have the expected falloff behaviour at large radii. By analogy
with s=1, for s=2 natural 'coordinate' variables are given by the magnetic
part Hij(i,j=1,2,3) of the Weyl tensor, which can be taken as boundary
data on a final space-like hypersurface ΣF. For simplicity, we take the
data on the initial surface ΣI to be exactly spherically-symmetric. The
(large) Lorentzian proper-time interval between ΣI and ΣF,
measured at spatial infinity, is denoted by T. We follow Feynman's
+iϵ prescription and rotate T into the complex: T→∣T∣exp(−iθ), for 0<θ≤π/2. The corresponding complexified {\it
classical} boundary-value problem is expected to be well-posed. The Lorentzian
quantum amplitude is recovered by taking the limit as θ→0+. For
boundary data well below the Planck scale, and for a locally supersymmetric
theory, this involves only the semi-classical amplitude exp(iSclass(2), where Sclass(2) denotes the second-variation classical
action. The relations between the s=1 and s=2 natural boundary data,
involving supersymmetry, are investigated using 2-component spinor language in
terms of the Maxwell field strength ϕAB=ϕ(AB) and the Weyl spinor
ΨABCD=Ψ(ABCD)