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Canonical quantum gravity

In physics, canonical quantum gravity is an attempt to quantize the canonical formulation of general relativity (or canonical gravity). It is a Hamiltonian formulation of Einstein's general theory of relativity. The basic theory was outlined by Bryce DeWitt[1] in a seminal 1967 paper, and based on earlier work by Peter G. Bergmann[2] using the so-called canonical quantization techniques for constrained Hamiltonian systems invented by Paul Dirac.[3] Dirac's approach allows the quantization of systems that include gauge symmetries using Hamiltonian techniques in a fixed gauge choice. Newer approaches based in part on the work of DeWitt and Dirac include the Hartle–Hawking state, Regge calculus, the Wheeler–DeWitt equation and loop quantum gravity.

Canonical quantization edit

In the Hamiltonian formulation of ordinary classical mechanics the Poisson bracket is an important concept. A "canonical coordinate system" consists of canonical position and momentum variables that satisfy canonical Poisson-bracket relations,

 
where the Poisson bracket is given by
 
for arbitrary phase space functions   and  . With the use of Poisson brackets, the Hamilton's equations can be rewritten as,
 
 

These equations describe a "flow" or orbit in phase space generated by the Hamiltonian  . Given any phase space function  , we have

 

In canonical quantization the phase space variables are promoted to quantum operators on a Hilbert space and the Poisson bracket between phase space variables is replaced by the canonical commutation relation:

 

In the so-called position representation this commutation relation is realized by the choice:

 
and
 

The dynamics are described by Schrödinger equation:

 
where   is the operator formed from the Hamiltonian   with the replacement   and  .

Canonical quantization with constraints edit

Canonical classical general relativity is an example of a fully constrained theory. In constrained theories there are different kinds of phase space: the unrestricted (also called kinematic) phase space on which constraint functions are defined and the reduced phase space on which the constraints have already been solved. For canonical quantization in general terms, phase space is replaced by an appropriate Hilbert space and phase space variables are to be promoted to quantum operators.

In Dirac's approach to quantization the unrestricted phase space is replaced by the so-called kinematic Hilbert space and the constraint functions replaced by constraint operators implemented on the kinematic Hilbert space; solutions are then searched for. These quantum constraint equations are the central equations of canonical quantum general relativity, at least in the Dirac approach which is the approach usually taken.

In theories with constraints there is also the reduced phase space quantization where the constraints are solved at the classical level and the phase space variables of the reduced phase space are then promoted to quantum operators, however this approach was thought to be impossible in General relativity as it seemed to be equivalent to finding a general solution to the classical field equations. However, with the fairly recent development of a systematic approximation scheme for calculating observables of General relativity (for the first time) by Bianca Dittrich, based on ideas introduced by Carlo Rovelli, a viable scheme for a reduced phase space quantization of Gravity has been developed by Thomas Thiemann. However it is not fully equivalent to the Dirac quantization as the `clock-variables' must be taken to be classical in the reduced phase space quantization, as opposed to the case in the Dirac quantization.

A common misunderstanding is that coordinate transformations are the gauge symmetries of general relativity, when actually the true gauge symmetries are diffeomorphisms as defined by a mathematician (see the Hole argument) – which are much more radical. The first class constraints of general relativity are the spatial diffeomorphism constraint and the Hamiltonian constraint (also known as the Wheeler–De Witt equation) and imprint the spatial and temporal diffeomorphism invariance of the theory respectively. Imposing these constraints classically are basically admissibility conditions on the initial data, also they generate the 'evolution' equations (really gauge transformations) via the Poisson bracket. Importantly the Poisson bracket algebra between the constraints fully determines the classical theory – this is something that must in some way be reproduced in the semi-classical limit of canonical quantum gravity for it to be a viable theory of quantum gravity.

In Dirac's approach it turns out that the first class quantum constraints imposed on a wavefunction also generate gauge transformations. Thus the two step process in the classical theory of solving the constraints   (equivalent to solving the admissibility conditions for the initial data) and looking for the gauge orbits (solving the `evolution' equations) is replaced by a one step process in the quantum theory, namely looking for solutions   of the quantum equations  . This is because it obviously solves the constraint at the quantum level and it simultaneously looks for states that are gauge invariant because   is the quantum generator of gauge transformations. At the classical level, solving the admissibility conditions and evolution equations are equivalent to solving all of Einstein's field equations, this underlines the central role of the quantum constraint equations in Dirac's approach to canonical quantum gravity.

Canonical quantization, diffeomorphism invariance and manifest finiteness edit

A diffeomorphism can be thought of as simultaneously 'dragging' the metric (gravitational field) and matter fields over the bare manifold while staying in the same coordinate system, and so are more radical than invariance under a mere coordinate transformation. This symmetry arises from the subtle requirement that the laws of general relativity cannot depend on any a-priori given space-time geometry.

This diffeomorphism invariance has an important implication: canonical quantum gravity will be manifestly finite as the ability to `drag' the metric function over the bare manifold means that small and large `distances' between abstractly defined coordinate points are gauge-equivalent! A more rigorous argument has been provided by Lee Smolin:

“A background independent operator must always be finite. This is because the regulator scale and the background metric are always introduced together in the regularization procedure. This is necessary, because the scale that the regularization parameter refers to must be described in terms of a background metric or coordinate chart introduced in the construction of the regulated operator. Because of this the dependence of the regulated operator on the cutoff, or regulator parameter, is related to its dependence on the background metric. When one takes the limit of the regulator parameter going to zero one isolates the non-vanishing terms. If these have any dependence on the regulator parameter (which would be the case if the term is blowing up) then it must also have dependence on the background metric. Conversely, if the terms that are nonvanishing in the limit the regulator is removed have no dependence on the background metric, it must be finite.”

In fact, as mentioned below, Thomas Thiemann has explicitly demonstrated that loop quantum gravity (a well developed version of canonical quantum gravity) is manifestly finite even in the presence of all forms of matter![citation needed] So there is no need for renormalization and the elimination of infinities. However, in other work, Thomas Thiemann admitted the need for renormalization as a way to fix quantization ambiguities.[1]

In perturbative quantum gravity (from which the non-renormalization arguments originate), as with any perturbative scheme, one makes the reasonable assumption that the space time at large scales should be well approximated by flat space; one scatters gravitons on this approximately flat background and one finds that their scattering amplitude has divergences which cannot be absorbed into the redefinition of the Newton constant. Canonical quantum gravity theorists do not accept this argument; however they have not so far provided an alternative calculation of the graviton scattering amplitude which could be used to understand what happens with the terms found non-renormalizable in the perturbative treatment. A long-held expectation is that in a theory of quantum geometry such as canonical quantum gravity, geometric quantities such as area and volume become quantum observables and take non-zero discrete values, providing a natural regulator which eliminates infinities from the theory including those coming from matter contributions. This `quantization' of geometric observables is in fact realized in loop quantum gravity (LQG).

Canonical quantization in metric variables edit

The quantization is based on decomposing the metric tensor as follows,

 
where the summation over repeated indices is implied, the index 0 denotes time  , Greek indices run over all values 0, . . . ,3 and Latin indices run over spatial values 1, . . ., 3. The function   is called the lapse function and the functions   are called the shift functions. The spatial indices are raised and lowered using the spatial metric   and its inverse  :   and  ,  , where   is the Kronecker delta. Under this decomposition the Einstein–Hilbert Lagrangian becomes, up to total derivatives,
 
where   is the spatial scalar curvature computed with respect to the Riemannian metric   and   is the extrinsic curvature,
 
where   denotes Lie-differentiation,   is the unit normal to surfaces of constant   and   denotes covariant differentiation with respect to the metric  . Note that  . DeWitt writes that the Lagrangian "has the classic form 'kinetic energy minus potential energy,' with the extrinsic curvature playing the role of kinetic energy and the negative of the intrinsic curvature that of potential energy." While this form of the Lagrangian is manifestly invariant under redefinition of the spatial coordinates, it makes general covariance opaque.

Since the lapse function and shift functions may be eliminated by a gauge transformation, they do not represent physical degrees of freedom. This is indicated in moving to the Hamiltonian formalism by the fact that their conjugate momenta, respectively   and  , vanish identically (on shell and off shell). These are called primary constraints by Dirac. A popular choice of gauge, called synchronous gauge, is   and  , although they can, in principle, be chosen to be any function of the coordinates. In this case, the Hamiltonian takes the form

 
where
 
and   is the momentum conjugate to  . Einstein's equations may be recovered by taking Poisson brackets with the Hamiltonian. Additional on-shell constraints, called secondary constraints by Dirac, arise from the consistency of the Poisson bracket algebra. These are   and  . This is the theory which is being quantized in approaches to canonical quantum gravity.

It can be shown that six Einstein equations describing time evolution (really a gauge transformation) can be obtained by calculating the Poisson brackets of the three-metric and its conjugate momentum with a linear combination of the spatial diffeomorphism and Hamiltonian constraint. The vanishing of the constraints, giving the physical phase space, are the four other Einstein equations. That is, we have:

Spatial diffeomorphisms constraints

 
of which there are an infinite number – one for value of  , can be smeared by the so-called shift functions   to give an equivalent set of smeared spatial diffeomorphism constraints,
 

These generate spatial diffeomorphisms along orbits defined by the shift function  .

Hamiltonian constraints

 
of which there are an infinite number, can be smeared by the so-called lapse functions   to give an equivalent set of smeared Hamiltonian constraints,
 

as mentioned above, the Poisson bracket structure between the (smeared) constraints is important because they fully determine the classical theory, and must be reproduced in the semi-classical limit of any theory of quantum gravity.

The Wheeler–DeWitt equation edit

The Wheeler–DeWitt equation (sometimes called the Hamiltonian constraint, sometimes the Einstein–Schrödinger equation) is rather central as it encodes the dynamics at the quantum level. It is analogous to Schrödinger's equation, except as the time coordinate,  , is unphysical, a physical wavefunction can't depend on   and hence Schrödinger's equation reduces to a constraint:

 

Using metric variables lead to seemingly unsurmountable mathematical difficulties when trying to promote the classical expression to a well-defined quantum operator, and as such decades went by without making progress via this approach. This problem was circumvented and the formulation of a well-defined Wheeler–De-Witt equation was first accomplished with the introduction of Ashtekar–Barbero variables and the loop representation, this well defined operator formulated by Thomas Thiemann[4].

Before this development the Wheeler–De-Witt equation had only been formulated in symmetry-reduced models, such as quantum cosmology.

Canonical quantization in Ashtekar–Barbero variables and LQG edit

Many of the technical problems in canonical quantum gravity revolve around the constraints. Canonical general relativity was originally formulated in terms of metric variables, but there seemed to be insurmountable mathematical difficulties in promoting the constraints to quantum operators because of their highly non-linear dependence on the canonical variables. The equations were much simplified with the introduction of Ashtekars new variables. Ashtekar variables describe canonical general relativity in terms of a new pair canonical variables closer to that of gauge theories. In doing so it introduced an additional constraint, on top of the spatial diffeomorphism and Hamiltonian constraint, the Gauss gauge constraint.

The loop representation is a quantum hamiltonian representation of gauge theories in terms of loops. The aim of the loop representation, in the context of Yang–Mills theories is to avoid the redundancy introduced by Gauss gauge symmetries allowing to work directly in the space of Gauss gauge invariant states. The use of this representation arose naturally from the Ashtekar–Barbero representation as it provides an exact non-perturbative description and also because the spatial diffeomorphism constraint is easily dealt with within this representation.

Within the loop representation Thiemann has provided a well defined canonical theory in the presence of all forms of matter and explicitly demonstrated it to be manifestly finite! So there is no need for renormalization. However, as LQG approach is well suited to describe physics at the Planck scale, there are difficulties in making contact with familiar low energy physics and establishing it has the correct semi-classical limit.

The problem of time edit

All canonical theories of general relativity have to deal with the problem of time. In quantum gravity, the problem of time is a conceptual conflict between general relativity and quantum mechanics. In canonical general relativity, time is just another coordinate as a result of general covariance. In quantum field theories, especially in the Hamiltonian formulation, the formulation is split between three dimensions of space, and one dimension of time. Roughly speaking, the problem of time is that there is none in general relativity. This is because in general relativity the Hamiltonian is a constraint that must vanish. However, in any canonical theory, the Hamiltonian generates time translations. Therefore, we arrive at the conclusion that "nothing moves" ("there is no time") in general relativity. Since "there is no time", the usual interpretation of quantum mechanics measurements at given moments of time breaks down. This problem of time is the broad banner for all interpretational problems of the formalism.

A canonical formalism of James York's conformal decomposition of geometrodynamics,[2] leading to the "York time"[3] of general relativity, has been developed by Charles Wang.[4][5] This work has later been further developed by him and his collaborators to an approach of identifying and quantizing time amenable to a large class of scale-invariant dilaton gravity-matter theories.[6][7]

The problem of quantum cosmology edit

The problem of quantum cosmology is that the physical states that solve the constraints of canonical quantum gravity represent quantum states of the entire universe and as such exclude an outside observer, however an outside observer is a crucial element in most interpretations of quantum mechanics.[clarification needed]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bergmann, P. (1966). "Hamilton–Jacobi and Schrödinger Theory in Theories with First-Class Hamiltonian Constraints". Physical Review. 144 (4): 1078–1080. Bibcode:1966PhRv..144.1078B. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.144.1078.
  2. ^ Dewitt, B. (1967). "Quantum Theory of Gravity. I. The Canonical Theory". Physical Review. 160 (5): 1113–1148. Bibcode:1967PhRv..160.1113D. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.160.1113.
  3. ^ Dirac, P. A. M. (1958). "Generalized Hamiltonian Dynamics". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A. 246 (1246): 326–332. Bibcode:1958RSPSA.246..326D. doi:10.1098/rspa.1958.0141. JSTOR 100496.
  4. ^ Thiemann, T. (1996). "Anomaly-free formulation of non-perturbative, four-dimensional Lorentzian quantum gravity". Physics Letters B. 380 (3–4): 257–264. arXiv:gr-qc/9606088. Bibcode:1996PhLB..380..257T. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(96)00532-1. S2CID 8691449.

References edit

  1. ^ Thiemann, Thomas (2020-03-30). "Canonical Quantum Gravity, Constructive QFT and Renormalisation". Frontiers in Physics. 8: 457. arXiv:2003.13622. Bibcode:2020FrP.....8..457T. doi:10.3389/fphy.2020.548232.
  2. ^ York, James W. (1971-06-28). "Gravitational Degrees of Freedom and the Initial-Value Problem". Physical Review Letters. 26 (26): 1656–1658. Bibcode:1971PhRvL..26.1656Y. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.26.1656.
  3. ^ Choquet-Bruhat, Y.; York, J. W. (1980). Held, A. (ed.). General Relativity and Gravitation. New York: Plenum Press. doi:10.1002/asna.2103020310.
  4. ^ Wang, Charles H.-T. (2005-06-15). "Conformal geometrodynamics: True degrees of freedom in a truly canonical structure". Physical Review D. 71 (12): 124026. arXiv:gr-qc/0501024. Bibcode:2005PhRvD..71l4026W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.71.124026. S2CID 118968025.
  5. ^ Wang, Charles H.-T. (2005-10-06). "Unambiguous spin-gauge formulation of canonical general relativity with conformorphism invariance". Physical Review D. 72 (8): 087501. arXiv:gr-qc/0507044. Bibcode:2005PhRvD..72h7501W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.72.087501. S2CID 34995566.
  6. ^ Wang, Charles; Stankiewicz, Marcin (2020-01-10). "Quantization of time and the big bang via scale-invariant loop gravity". Physics Letters B. 800: 135106. arXiv:1910.03300. Bibcode:2020PhLB..80035106W. doi:10.1016/j.physletb.2019.135106. ISSN 0370-2693.
  7. ^ Wang, Charles H.-T.; Rodrigues, Daniel P. F. (2018-12-28). "Closing the gaps in quantum space and time: Conformally augmented gauge structure of gravitation". Physical Review D. 98 (12): 124041. arXiv:1810.01232. Bibcode:2018PhRvD..98l4041W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.98.124041. hdl:2164/11713. S2CID 118961037.

Sources edit

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In physics canonical quantum gravity is an attempt to quantize the canonical formulation of general relativity or canonical gravity It is a Hamiltonian formulation of Einstein s general theory of relativity The basic theory was outlined by Bryce DeWitt 1 in a seminal 1967 paper and based on earlier work by Peter G Bergmann 2 using the so called canonical quantization techniques for constrained Hamiltonian systems invented by Paul Dirac 3 Dirac s approach allows the quantization of systems that include gauge symmetries using Hamiltonian techniques in a fixed gauge choice Newer approaches based in part on the work of DeWitt and Dirac include the Hartle Hawking state Regge calculus the Wheeler DeWitt equation and loop quantum gravity Contents 1 Canonical quantization 2 Canonical quantization with constraints 3 Canonical quantization diffeomorphism invariance and manifest finiteness 4 Canonical quantization in metric variables 5 The Wheeler DeWitt equation 6 Canonical quantization in Ashtekar Barbero variables and LQG 7 The problem of time 8 The problem of quantum cosmology 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 SourcesCanonical quantization editMain articles Phase space Poisson brackets Hilbert space canonical commutation relation and Schrodinger equation In the Hamiltonian formulation of ordinary classical mechanics the Poisson bracket is an important concept A canonical coordinate system consists of canonical position and momentum variables that satisfy canonical Poisson bracket relations q i p j d i j displaystyle q i p j delta ij nbsp where the Poisson bracket is given by f g i 1 N f q i g p i f p i g q i displaystyle f g sum i 1 N left frac partial f partial q i frac partial g partial p i frac partial f partial p i frac partial g partial q i right nbsp for arbitrary phase space functions f q i p j displaystyle f q i p j nbsp and g q i p j displaystyle g q i p j nbsp With the use of Poisson brackets the Hamilton s equations can be rewritten as q i q i H displaystyle dot q i q i H nbsp p i p i H displaystyle dot p i p i H nbsp These equations describe a flow or orbit in phase space generated by the Hamiltonian H displaystyle H nbsp Given any phase space function F q p displaystyle F q p nbsp we haved d t F q i p i F H displaystyle d over dt F q i p i F H nbsp In canonical quantization the phase space variables are promoted to quantum operators on a Hilbert space and the Poisson bracket between phase space variables is replaced by the canonical commutation relation q p i ℏ displaystyle hat q hat p i hbar nbsp In the so called position representation this commutation relation is realized by the choice q ps q q ps q displaystyle hat q psi q q psi q nbsp and p ps q i ℏ d d q ps q displaystyle hat p psi q i hbar d over dq psi q nbsp The dynamics are described by Schrodinger equation i ℏ t ps H ps displaystyle i hbar partial over partial t psi hat H psi nbsp where H displaystyle hat H nbsp is the operator formed from the Hamiltonian H q p displaystyle H q p nbsp with the replacement q q displaystyle q mapsto q nbsp and p i ℏ d d q displaystyle p mapsto i hbar d over dq nbsp Canonical quantization with constraints editMain articles Gauge symmetry Hole argument and Diffeomorphism Canonical classical general relativity is an example of a fully constrained theory In constrained theories there are different kinds of phase space the unrestricted also called kinematic phase space on which constraint functions are defined and the reduced phase space on which the constraints have already been solved For canonical quantization in general terms phase space is replaced by an appropriate Hilbert space and phase space variables are to be promoted to quantum operators In Dirac s approach to quantization the unrestricted phase space is replaced by the so called kinematic Hilbert space and the constraint functions replaced by constraint operators implemented on the kinematic Hilbert space solutions are then searched for These quantum constraint equations are the central equations of canonical quantum general relativity at least in the Dirac approach which is the approach usually taken In theories with constraints there is also the reduced phase space quantization where the constraints are solved at the classical level and the phase space variables of the reduced phase space are then promoted to quantum operators however this approach was thought to be impossible in General relativity as it seemed to be equivalent to finding a general solution to the classical field equations However with the fairly recent development of a systematic approximation scheme for calculating observables of General relativity for the first time by Bianca Dittrich based on ideas introduced by Carlo Rovelli a viable scheme for a reduced phase space quantization of Gravity has been developed by Thomas Thiemann However it is not fully equivalent to the Dirac quantization as the clock variables must be taken to be classical in the reduced phase space quantization as opposed to the case in the Dirac quantization A common misunderstanding is that coordinate transformations are the gauge symmetries of general relativity when actually the true gauge symmetries are diffeomorphisms as defined by a mathematician see the Hole argument which are much more radical The first class constraints of general relativity are the spatial diffeomorphism constraint and the Hamiltonian constraint also known as the Wheeler De Witt equation and imprint the spatial and temporal diffeomorphism invariance of the theory respectively Imposing these constraints classically are basically admissibility conditions on the initial data also they generate the evolution equations really gauge transformations via the Poisson bracket Importantly the Poisson bracket algebra between the constraints fully determines the classical theory this is something that must in some way be reproduced in the semi classical limit of canonical quantum gravity for it to be a viable theory of quantum gravity In Dirac s approach it turns out that the first class quantum constraints imposed on a wavefunction also generate gauge transformations Thus the two step process in the classical theory of solving the constraints C I 0 displaystyle C I 0 nbsp equivalent to solving the admissibility conditions for the initial data and looking for the gauge orbits solving the evolution equations is replaced by a one step process in the quantum theory namely looking for solutions PS displaystyle Psi nbsp of the quantum equations C I PS 0 displaystyle hat C I Psi 0 nbsp This is because it obviously solves the constraint at the quantum level and it simultaneously looks for states that are gauge invariant because C I displaystyle hat C I nbsp is the quantum generator of gauge transformations At the classical level solving the admissibility conditions and evolution equations are equivalent to solving all of Einstein s field equations this underlines the central role of the quantum constraint equations in Dirac s approach to canonical quantum gravity Canonical quantization diffeomorphism invariance and manifest finiteness editMain articles Hole argument Diffeomorphism and Renormalization A diffeomorphism can be thought of as simultaneously dragging the metric gravitational field and matter fields over the bare manifold while staying in the same coordinate system and so are more radical than invariance under a mere coordinate transformation This symmetry arises from the subtle requirement that the laws of general relativity cannot depend on any a priori given space time geometry This diffeomorphism invariance has an important implication canonical quantum gravity will be manifestly finite as the ability to drag the metric function over the bare manifold means that small and large distances between abstractly defined coordinate points are gauge equivalent A more rigorous argument has been provided by Lee Smolin A background independent operator must always be finite This is because the regulator scale and the background metric are always introduced together in the regularization procedure This is necessary because the scale that the regularization parameter refers to must be described in terms of a background metric or coordinate chart introduced in the construction of the regulated operator Because of this the dependence of the regulated operator on the cutoff or regulator parameter is related to its dependence on the background metric When one takes the limit of the regulator parameter going to zero one isolates the non vanishing terms If these have any dependence on the regulator parameter which would be the case if the term is blowing up then it must also have dependence on the background metric Conversely if the terms that are nonvanishing in the limit the regulator is removed have no dependence on the background metric it must be finite In fact as mentioned below Thomas Thiemann has explicitly demonstrated that loop quantum gravity a well developed version of canonical quantum gravity is manifestly finite even in the presence of all forms of matter citation needed So there is no need for renormalization and the elimination of infinities However in other work Thomas Thiemann admitted the need for renormalization as a way to fix quantization ambiguities 1 In perturbative quantum gravity from which the non renormalization arguments originate as with any perturbative scheme one makes the reasonable assumption that the space time at large scales should be well approximated by flat space one scatters gravitons on this approximately flat background and one finds that their scattering amplitude has divergences which cannot be absorbed into the redefinition of the Newton constant Canonical quantum gravity theorists do not accept this argument however they have not so far provided an alternative calculation of the graviton scattering amplitude which could be used to understand what happens with the terms found non renormalizable in the perturbative treatment A long held expectation is that in a theory of quantum geometry such as canonical quantum gravity geometric quantities such as area and volume become quantum observables and take non zero discrete values providing a natural regulator which eliminates infinities from the theory including those coming from matter contributions This quantization of geometric observables is in fact realized in loop quantum gravity LQG Canonical quantization in metric variables editMain article Diffeomorphism The quantization is based on decomposing the metric tensor as follows g m n d x m d x n N 2 b k b k d t 2 2 b k d x k d t g i j d x i d x j displaystyle g mu nu dx mu dx nu N 2 beta k beta k dt 2 2 beta k dx k dt gamma ij dx i dx j nbsp where the summation over repeated indices is implied the index 0 denotes time t x 0 displaystyle tau x 0 nbsp Greek indices run over all values 0 3 and Latin indices run over spatial values 1 3 The function N displaystyle N nbsp is called the lapse function and the functions b k displaystyle beta k nbsp are called the shift functions The spatial indices are raised and lowered using the spatial metric g i j displaystyle gamma ij nbsp and its inverse g i j displaystyle gamma ij nbsp g i j g j k d i k displaystyle gamma ij gamma jk delta i k nbsp and b i g i j b j displaystyle beta i gamma ij beta j nbsp g det g i j displaystyle gamma det gamma ij nbsp where d displaystyle delta nbsp is the Kronecker delta Under this decomposition the Einstein Hilbert Lagrangian becomes up to total derivatives L d 3 x N g 1 2 K i j K i j K 2 3 R displaystyle L int d 3 x N gamma 1 2 K ij K ij K 2 3 R nbsp where 3 R displaystyle 3 R nbsp is the spatial scalar curvature computed with respect to the Riemannian metric g i j displaystyle gamma ij nbsp and K i j displaystyle K ij nbsp is the extrinsic curvature K i j 1 2 L n g i j 1 2 N 1 j b i i b j g i j t displaystyle K ij frac 1 2 mathcal L n gamma ij frac 1 2 N 1 left nabla j beta i nabla i beta j frac partial gamma ij partial t right nbsp where L displaystyle mathcal L nbsp denotes Lie differentiation n displaystyle n nbsp is the unit normal to surfaces of constant t displaystyle t nbsp and i displaystyle nabla i nbsp denotes covariant differentiation with respect to the metric g i j displaystyle gamma ij nbsp Note that g m n g m n n m n n displaystyle gamma mu nu g mu nu n mu n nu nbsp DeWitt writes that the Lagrangian has the classic form kinetic energy minus potential energy with the extrinsic curvature playing the role of kinetic energy and the negative of the intrinsic curvature that of potential energy While this form of the Lagrangian is manifestly invariant under redefinition of the spatial coordinates it makes general covariance opaque Since the lapse function and shift functions may be eliminated by a gauge transformation they do not represent physical degrees of freedom This is indicated in moving to the Hamiltonian formalism by the fact that their conjugate momenta respectively p displaystyle pi nbsp and p i displaystyle pi i nbsp vanish identically on shell and off shell These are called primary constraints by Dirac A popular choice of gauge called synchronous gauge is N 1 displaystyle N 1 nbsp and b i 0 displaystyle beta i 0 nbsp although they can in principle be chosen to be any function of the coordinates In this case the Hamiltonian takes the formH d 3 x H displaystyle H int d 3 x mathcal H nbsp where H 1 2 g 1 2 g i k g j l g i l g j k g i j g k l p i j p k l g 1 2 3 R displaystyle mathcal H frac 1 2 gamma 1 2 gamma ik gamma jl gamma il gamma jk gamma ij gamma kl pi ij pi kl gamma 1 2 3 R nbsp and p i j displaystyle pi ij nbsp is the momentum conjugate to g i j displaystyle gamma ij nbsp Einstein s equations may be recovered by taking Poisson brackets with the Hamiltonian Additional on shell constraints called secondary constraints by Dirac arise from the consistency of the Poisson bracket algebra These are H 0 displaystyle mathcal H 0 nbsp and j p i j 0 displaystyle nabla j pi ij 0 nbsp This is the theory which is being quantized in approaches to canonical quantum gravity It can be shown that six Einstein equations describing time evolution really a gauge transformation can be obtained by calculating the Poisson brackets of the three metric and its conjugate momentum with a linear combination of the spatial diffeomorphism and Hamiltonian constraint The vanishing of the constraints giving the physical phase space are the four other Einstein equations That is we have Spatial diffeomorphisms constraintsC a x 0 displaystyle C a x 0 nbsp of which there are an infinite number one for value of x displaystyle x nbsp can be smeared by the so called shift functions N x displaystyle vec N x nbsp to give an equivalent set of smeared spatial diffeomorphism constraints C N d 3 x C a x N a x displaystyle C vec N int d 3 x C a x N a x nbsp These generate spatial diffeomorphisms along orbits defined by the shift function N a x displaystyle N a x nbsp Hamiltonian constraintsH x 0 displaystyle H x 0 nbsp of which there are an infinite number can be smeared by the so called lapse functions N x displaystyle N x nbsp to give an equivalent set of smeared Hamiltonian constraints H N d 3 x H x N x displaystyle H N int d 3 x H x N x nbsp as mentioned above the Poisson bracket structure between the smeared constraints is important because they fully determine the classical theory and must be reproduced in the semi classical limit of any theory of quantum gravity The Wheeler DeWitt equation editMain article Wheeler DeWitt equation See also Hamiltonian constraint of LQG The Wheeler DeWitt equation sometimes called the Hamiltonian constraint sometimes the Einstein Schrodinger equation is rather central as it encodes the dynamics at the quantum level It is analogous to Schrodinger s equation except as the time coordinate t displaystyle t nbsp is unphysical a physical wavefunction can t depend on t displaystyle t nbsp and hence Schrodinger s equation reduces to a constraint H PS 0 displaystyle hat H Psi 0 nbsp Using metric variables lead to seemingly unsurmountable mathematical difficulties when trying to promote the classical expression to a well defined quantum operator and as such decades went by without making progress via this approach This problem was circumvented and the formulation of a well defined Wheeler De Witt equation was first accomplished with the introduction of Ashtekar Barbero variables and the loop representation this well defined operator formulated by Thomas Thiemann 4 Before this development the Wheeler De Witt equation had only been formulated in symmetry reduced models such as quantum cosmology Canonical quantization in Ashtekar Barbero variables and LQG editMain articles Ashtekar variables holonomy Wilson loop and Loop quantum gravity Many of the technical problems in canonical quantum gravity revolve around the constraints Canonical general relativity was originally formulated in terms of metric variables but there seemed to be insurmountable mathematical difficulties in promoting the constraints to quantum operators because of their highly non linear dependence on the canonical variables The equations were much simplified with the introduction of Ashtekars new variables Ashtekar variables describe canonical general relativity in terms of a new pair canonical variables closer to that of gauge theories In doing so it introduced an additional constraint on top of the spatial diffeomorphism and Hamiltonian constraint the Gauss gauge constraint The loop representation is a quantum hamiltonian representation of gauge theories in terms of loops The aim of the loop representation in the context of Yang Mills theories is to avoid the redundancy introduced by Gauss gauge symmetries allowing to work directly in the space of Gauss gauge invariant states The use of this representation arose naturally from the Ashtekar Barbero representation as it provides an exact non perturbative description and also because the spatial diffeomorphism constraint is easily dealt with within this representation Within the loop representation Thiemann has provided a well defined canonical theory in the presence of all forms of matter and explicitly demonstrated it to be manifestly finite So there is no need for renormalization However as LQG approach is well suited to describe physics at the Planck scale there are difficulties in making contact with familiar low energy physics and establishing it has the correct semi classical limit The problem of time editAll canonical theories of general relativity have to deal with the problem of time In quantum gravity the problem of time is a conceptual conflict between general relativity and quantum mechanics In canonical general relativity time is just another coordinate as a result of general covariance In quantum field theories especially in the Hamiltonian formulation the formulation is split between three dimensions of space and one dimension of time Roughly speaking the problem of time is that there is none in general relativity This is because in general relativity the Hamiltonian is a constraint that must vanish However in any canonical theory the Hamiltonian generates time translations Therefore we arrive at the conclusion that nothing moves there is no time in general relativity Since there is no time the usual interpretation of quantum mechanics measurements at given moments of time breaks down This problem of time is the broad banner for all interpretational problems of the formalism A canonical formalism of James York s conformal decomposition of geometrodynamics 2 leading to the York time 3 of general relativity has been developed by Charles Wang 4 5 This work has later been further developed by him and his collaborators to an approach of identifying and quantizing time amenable to a large class of scale invariant dilaton gravity matter theories 6 7 The problem of quantum cosmology editThe problem of quantum cosmology is that the physical states that solve the constraints of canonical quantum gravity represent quantum states of the entire universe and as such exclude an outside observer however an outside observer is a crucial element in most interpretations of quantum mechanics clarification needed See also editADM formalism Ashtekar variables Canonical quantization Canonical coordinates Diffeomorphism Hole argument Regge Calculus Loop quantum gravity is one of this family of theories Loop quantum cosmology LQC is a finite symmetry reduced model of loop quantum gravity Problem of timeNotes edit Bergmann P 1966 Hamilton Jacobi and Schrodinger Theory in Theories with First Class Hamiltonian Constraints Physical Review 144 4 1078 1080 Bibcode 1966PhRv 144 1078B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 144 1078 Dewitt B 1967 Quantum Theory of Gravity I The Canonical Theory Physical Review 160 5 1113 1148 Bibcode 1967PhRv 160 1113D doi 10 1103 PhysRev 160 1113 Dirac P A M 1958 Generalized Hamiltonian Dynamics Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A 246 1246 326 332 Bibcode 1958RSPSA 246 326D doi 10 1098 rspa 1958 0141 JSTOR 100496 Thiemann T 1996 Anomaly free formulation of non perturbative four dimensional Lorentzian quantum gravity Physics Letters B 380 3 4 257 264 arXiv gr qc 9606088 Bibcode 1996PhLB 380 257T doi 10 1016 0370 2693 96 00532 1 S2CID 8691449 References edit Thiemann Thomas 2020 03 30 Canonical Quantum Gravity Constructive QFT and Renormalisation Frontiers in Physics 8 457 arXiv 2003 13622 Bibcode 2020FrP 8 457T doi 10 3389 fphy 2020 548232 York James W 1971 06 28 Gravitational Degrees of Freedom and the Initial Value Problem Physical Review Letters 26 26 1656 1658 Bibcode 1971PhRvL 26 1656Y doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 26 1656 Choquet Bruhat Y York J W 1980 Held A ed General Relativity and Gravitation New York Plenum Press doi 10 1002 asna 2103020310 Wang Charles H T 2005 06 15 Conformal geometrodynamics True degrees of freedom in a truly canonical structure Physical Review D 71 12 124026 arXiv gr qc 0501024 Bibcode 2005PhRvD 71l4026W doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 71 124026 S2CID 118968025 Wang Charles H T 2005 10 06 Unambiguous spin gauge formulation of canonical general relativity with conformorphism invariance Physical Review D 72 8 087501 arXiv gr qc 0507044 Bibcode 2005PhRvD 72h7501W doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 72 087501 S2CID 34995566 Wang Charles Stankiewicz Marcin 2020 01 10 Quantization of time and the big bang via scale invariant loop gravity Physics Letters B 800 135106 arXiv 1910 03300 Bibcode 2020PhLB 80035106W doi 10 1016 j physletb 2019 135106 ISSN 0370 2693 Wang Charles H T Rodrigues Daniel P F 2018 12 28 Closing the gaps in quantum space and time Conformally augmented gauge structure of gravitation Physical Review D 98 12 124041 arXiv 1810 01232 Bibcode 2018PhRvD 98l4041W doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 98 124041 hdl 2164 11713 S2CID 118961037 Sources editArnowitt R Deser S Misner C W 2008 The Dynamics of General Relativity General Relativity and Gravitation 40 9 1997 2027 arXiv gr qc 0405109 Bibcode 2008GReGr 40 1997A doi 10 1007 s10714 008 0661 1 S2CID 14054267 Witten L 1962 Gravitation An Introduction to Current Research John Wiley amp Sons pp 227 265 Dirac P A M 1958 The Theory of Gravitation in Hamiltonian Form Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A 246 1246 333 343 Bibcode 1958RSPSA 246 333D doi 10 1098 rspa 1958 0142 JSTOR 100497 S2CID 122053391 Dirac P A M 1959 Fixation of Coordinates in the Hamiltonian Theory of Gravitation Physical Review 114 3 924 930 Bibcode 1959PhRv 114 924D doi 10 1103 PhysRev 114 924 Dirac P A M 1964 Lectures on quantum mechanics Yeshiva University ISBN 0 387 51916 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canonical quantum gravity amp oldid 1204022002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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