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Wikipedia

Causal sets

The causal sets program is an approach to quantum gravity. Its founding principles are that spacetime is fundamentally discrete (a collection of discrete spacetime points, called the elements of the causal set) and that spacetime events are related by a partial order. This partial order has the physical meaning of the causality relations between spacetime events.

History edit

For some decades after the formulation of General Relativity, the attitude towards Lorentzian geometry was mostly dedicated to understanding its physical implications and not concerned with theoretical issues.[1] However, early attempts to use causality as a starting point have been provided by Weyl and Lorentz.[2] Alfred Robb in two books in 1914 and 1936 suggested an axiomatic framework where the causal precedence played a critical role.[1] The first explicit proposal of quantising the causal structure of spacetime is attributed by S. Surya[1] to Kronheimer and Penrose,[3] who invented Causal spaces in order to admit structures which can be very different from a manifold. Causal spaces are defined axiomatically, by considering not only causal precedence, but also chronological precedence.

The program of causal sets is based on a theorem[4] by David Malament, extending former results by E.C. Zeeman[5] and Hawking, King, McCarthy.[6][1] Malament Theorem states that if there is a bijective map between two past and future distinguishing space times that preserves their causal structure then the map is a conformal isomorphism. The conformal factor that is left undetermined is related to the volume of regions in the spacetime. This volume factor can be recovered by specifying a volume element for each space time point. The volume of a space time region could then be found by counting the number of points in that region.

Causal sets was initiated by Rafael Sorkin who continues to be the main proponent of the program. He has coined the slogan "Order + Number = Geometry" to characterize the above argument. The program provides a theory in which space time is fundamentally discrete while retaining local Lorentz invariance.

Definition edit

A causal set (or causet) is a set   with a partial order relation   that is

  • Reflexive: For all  , we have  .
  • Antisymmetric: For all  , we have   and   implies  .
  • Transitive: For all  , we have   and   implies  .
  • Locally finite: For all  , we have   is a finite set.

We'll write   if   and  .

The set   represents the set of spacetime events and the order relation   represents the causal relationship between events (see causal structure for the analogous idea in a Lorentzian manifold).

Although this definition uses the reflexive convention we could have chosen the irreflexive convention in which the order relation is irreflexive and asymmetric.

The causal relation of a Lorentzian manifold (without closed causal curves) satisfies the first three conditions. It is the local finiteness condition that introduces spacetime discreteness.

Comparison to the continuum edit

Given a causal set we may ask whether it can be embedded into a Lorentzian manifold. An embedding would be a map taking elements of the causal set into points in the manifold such that the order relation of the causal set matches the causal ordering of the manifold. A further criterion is needed however before the embedding is suitable. If, on average, the number of causal set elements mapped into a region of the manifold is proportional to the volume of the region then the embedding is said to be faithful. In this case we can consider the causal set to be 'manifold-like'.

A central conjecture of the causal set program, called the Hauptvermutung ('fundamental conjecture'), is that the same causal set cannot be faithfully embedded into two spacetimes that are not similar on large scales.

It is difficult to define this conjecture precisely because it is difficult to decide when two spacetimes are 'similar on large scales'. Modelling spacetime as a causal set would require us to restrict attention to those causal sets that are 'manifold-like'. Given a causal set this is a difficult property to determine.

Sprinkling edit

 
A plot of 1000 sprinkled points in 1+1 dimensions

The difficulty of determining whether a causal set can be embedded into a manifold can be approached from the other direction. We can create a causal set by sprinkling points into a Lorentzian manifold. By sprinkling points in proportion to the volume of the spacetime regions and using the causal order relations in the manifold to induce order relations between the sprinkled points, we can produce a causal set that (by construction) can be faithfully embedded into the manifold.

To maintain Lorentz invariance this sprinkling of points must be done randomly using a Poisson process. Thus the probability of sprinkling   points into a region of volume   is

 

where   is the density of the sprinkling.

Sprinkling points as a regular lattice would not keep the number of points proportional to the region volume.

Geometry edit

Some geometrical constructions in manifolds carry over to causal sets. When defining these we must remember to rely only on the causal set itself, not on any background spacetime into which it might be embedded. For an overview of these constructions, see.[7]

Geodesics edit

 
A plot of geodesics between two points in a 180-point causal set made by sprinkling into 1+1 dimensions

A link in a causal set is a pair of elements   such that   but with no   such that  .

A chain is a sequence of elements   such that   for  . The length of a chain is  . If every   in the chain form a link, then the chain is called a path.

We can use this to define the notion of a geodesic between two causal set elements, provided they are order comparable, that is, causally connected (physically, this means they are time-like). A geodesic between two elements   is a chain consisting only of links such that

  1.   and  
  2. The length of the chain,  , is maximal over all chains from   to  .

In general there can be more than one geodesic between two comparable elements.

Myrheim[8] first suggested that the length of such a geodesic should be directly proportional to the proper time along a timelike geodesic joining the two spacetime points. Tests of this conjecture have been made using causal sets generated from sprinklings into flat spacetimes. The proportionality has been shown to hold and is conjectured to hold for sprinklings in curved spacetimes too.

Dimension estimators edit

Much work has been done in estimating the manifold dimension of a causal set. This involves algorithms using the causal set aiming to give the dimension of the manifold into which it can be faithfully embedded. The algorithms developed so far are based on finding the dimension of a Minkowski spacetime into which the causal set can be faithfully embedded.

  • Myrheim–Meyer dimension

This approach relies on estimating the number of  -length chains present in a sprinkling into  -dimensional Minkowski spacetime. Counting the number of  -length chains in the causal set then allows an estimate for   to be made.

  • Midpoint-scaling dimension

This approach relies on the relationship between the proper time between two points in Minkowski spacetime and the volume of the spacetime interval between them. By computing the maximal chain length (to estimate the proper time) between two points   and   and counting the number of elements   such that   (to estimate the volume of the spacetime interval) the dimension of the spacetime can be calculated.

These estimators should give the correct dimension for causal sets generated by high-density sprinklings into  -dimensional Minkowski spacetime. Tests in conformally-flat spacetimes[9] have shown these two methods to be accurate.

Dynamics edit

An ongoing task is to develop the correct dynamics for causal sets. These would provide a set of rules that determine which causal sets correspond to physically realistic spacetimes. The most popular approach to developing causal set dynamics is based on the sum-over-histories version of quantum mechanics. This approach would perform a "sum-over-causal sets" by growing a causal set one element at a time. Elements would be added according to quantum mechanical rules and interference would ensure a large manifold-like spacetime would dominate the contributions. The best model for dynamics at the moment is a classical model in which elements are added according to probabilities. This model, due to David Rideout and Rafael Sorkin, is known as classical sequential growth (CSG) dynamics.[10] The classical sequential growth model is a way to generate causal sets by adding new elements one after another. Rules for how new elements are added are specified and, depending on the parameters in the model, different causal sets result.

In analogy to the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics, one approach to developing a quantum dynamics for causal sets has been to apply an action principle in the sum-over-causal sets approach. Sorkin has proposed a discrete analogue for the d'Alembertian, which can in turn be used to define the Ricci curvature scalar and thereby the Benincasa–Dowker action on a causal set.[11][12] Monte-Carlo simulations have provided evidence for a continuum phase in 2D using the Benincasa–Dowker action.[13]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Surya, S. The causal set approach to quantum gravity. Living Rev Relativ 22, 5 (2019), p. 7-9. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41114-019-0023-1
  2. ^ Bell JL, Korté H (2016) Hermann Weyl. In: Zalta EN (ed) The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy, winter 2016 edn. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University [1]
  3. ^ Kronheimer E, Penrose R (1967) On the structure of causal spaces. Proc Camb Phil Soc 63:481
  4. ^ Malament, David B. (July 1977). "The class of continuous timelike curves determines the topology of spacetime" (PDF). Journal of Mathematical Physics. 18 (7): 1399–1404. Bibcode:1977JMP....18.1399M. doi:10.1063/1.523436.
  5. ^ E.C. Zeeman, Causality Implies the Lorentz Group, J. Math. Phys. 5: 490-493.
  6. ^ Hawking S, King A, McCarthy P (1976) A new topology for curved space-time which incorporates the causal, differential, and conformal structures. J Math Phys 17:174–181.
  7. ^ Brightwell, Graham; Gregory, Ruth (21 January 1991). "Structure of random discrete spacetime". Physical Review Letters. 66 (3): 260–263. Bibcode:1991PhRvL..66..260B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.66.260. hdl:2060/19900019113. PMID 10043761. S2CID 32109929.
  8. ^ J. Myrheim, CERN preprint TH-2538 (1978)
  9. ^ Reid, David D. (30 January 2003). "Manifold dimension of a causal set: Tests in conformally flat spacetimes". Physical Review D. 67 (2): 024034. arXiv:gr-qc/0207103. Bibcode:2003PhRvD..67b4034R. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.67.024034. S2CID 12748458.
  10. ^ Rideout, D. P.; Sorkin, R. D. (2000). "Classical sequential growth dynamics for causal sets". Physical Review D. 61 (2): 024002. arXiv:gr-qc/9904062. Bibcode:1999PhRvD..61b4002R. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.61.024002. S2CID 14652530.
  11. ^ Sorkin, D. P. (20 March 2007). "Does Locality Fail at Intermediate Length-Scales". arXiv:gr-qc/0703099.
  12. ^ Benincasa, D. M. T.; Dowker, F. (May 2010). "The Scalar Curvature of a Causal Set". Phys. Rev. Lett. 104 (18): 181301. arXiv:1001.2725. Bibcode:2010PhRvL.104r1301B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.181301. PMID 20482164. S2CID 4560654.
  13. ^ Surya, S. (July 2012). "Evidence for the continuum in 2D causal set quantum gravity". Classical and Quantum Gravity. 29 (13): 132001. arXiv:1110.6244. Bibcode:2012CQGra..29m2001S. doi:10.1088/0264-9381/29/13/132001. S2CID 118376808.

Further reading edit

Introduction and reviews
  • L. Bombelli. Causal Set reference page (Overview)
  • L. Bombelli. Causal Sets: Overview and Status, Talk given at Quantum Gravity in the Americas III, August 24–26, 2006; (Introduction, Overview)
  • F. Dowker, Causal sets and the deep structure of spacetime, arXiv:gr-qc/0508109; (Introduction)
  • F. Dowker, Causal sets as discrete spacetime, Contemporary Physics, vol. 47, Issue 1, p. 1-9; (Overview, Introduction)
  • F. Dowker, Introduction to causal sets and their phenomenology, Gen Relativ Gravit (2013) 45:1651–1667 doi:10.1007/s10714-013-1569-y (Overview of recent research)
  • J. Henson, The causal set approach to quantum gravity, arXiv:gr-qc/0601121; (Introduction, Overview)
  • D.D. Reid; Introduction to causal sets: an alternate view of spacetime structure; Canadian Journal of Physics 79, 1-16 (2001); arXiv:gr-qc/9909075; (General);
  • R.D. Sorkin; Causal set glossary and bibliography (20 November 2001); (Glossary and bibliography);
  • R.D. Sorkin, Causal Sets: Discrete Gravity (Notes for the Valdivia Summer School), In Proceedings of the Valdivia Summer School, edited by A. Gomberoff and D. Marolf; arXiv:gr-qc/0309009; (Introduction, Glossary)
Foundations
  • L. Bombelli, J. Lee, D. Meyer, R.D. Sorkin, Spacetime as a causal set, Phys. Rev. Lett. 59:521-524 (1987); (Introduction, Foundations)
  • C. Moore, Comment on "Space-time as a causal set", Phys. Rev. Lett. 60, 655 (1988); (Foundations)
  • L. Bombelli, J. Lee, D. Meyer, R.D. Sorkin, Bombelli et al. Reply, Phys. Rev. Lett. 60, 656 (1988); (Foundations)
  • A. Einstein, Letter to H.S. Joachim, August 14, 1954; Item 13-453 cited in J. Stachel,"Einstein and the Quantum: Fifty Years of Struggle", in From Quarks to Quasars, Philosophical Problems of Modern Physics, edited by R.G. Colodny (U. Pittsburgh Press, 1986), pages 380-381; (Historical)
  • D. Finkelstein, Space-time code, Phys. Rev. 184:1261 (1969); (Foundations)
  • D. Finkelstein, "Superconducting" Causal Nets, Int. J. Th. Phys 27:473(1988); (Foundations)
  • G. Hemion, A quantum theory of space and time; Found. Phys. 10 (1980), p. 819 (Similar proposal)
  • J. Myrheim, Statistical geometry, CERN preprint TH-2538 (1978); (Foundations, Historical)
  • B. Riemann, , The Collected Works of B. Riemann (Dover NY 1953); (Historical)
  • R.D. Sorkin; A Finitary Substitute for Continuous Topology, Int. J. Theor. Phys. 30 7: 923-947 (1991); (Foundational)
  • R.D. Sorkin, Does a Discrete Order underly Spacetime and its Metric?, Proceedings of the Third Canadian Conference on General Relativity and Relativistic Astrophysics, (Victoria, Canada, May, 1989), edited by A. Coley, F. Cooperstock, B.Tupper, pp. 82–86, (World Scientific, 1990); (Introduction)
  • R.D. Sorkin, First Steps with Causal Sets 2013-09-30 at the Wayback Machine, General Relativity and Gravitational Physics, (Proceedings of the Ninth Italian Conference of the same name, held Capri, Italy, September, 1990), 68-90, (World Scientific, Singapore), (1991), R. Cianci, R. de Ritis, M. Francaviglia, G. Marmo, C. Rubano, P. Scudellaro (eds.); (Introduction)
  • R.D. Sorkin, Spacetime and Causal Sets 2013-09-30 at the Wayback Machine, Relativity and Gravitation: Classical and Quantum, (Proceedings of the SILARG VII Conference, held Cocoyoc, Mexico, December, 1990), pages 150-173, (World Scientific, Singapore, 1991), J.C. D'Olivo, E. Nahmad-Achar, M.Rosenbaum, M.P. Ryan, L.F. Urrutia and F. Zertuche (eds.); (Introduction)
  • R.D. Sorkin, Forks in the Road, on the Way to Quantum Gravity, Talk given at the conference entitled "Directions in General Relativity", held at College Park, Maryland, May, 1993, Int. J. Th. Phys. 36: 2759–2781 (1997); arXiv:gr-qc/9706002; (Philosophical, Introduction)
  • G.'t Hooft, Quantum gravity: a fundamental problem and some radical ideas, Recent Developments in Gravitation (Proceedings of the 1978 Cargese Summer Institute) edited by M. Levy and S. Deser (Plenum, 1979); (Introduction, Foundations, Historical)
  • E.C. Zeeman, Causality Implies the Lorentz Group, J. Math. Phys. 5: 490-493; (Historical, Foundations)
PhD theses
Talks
  • Joe Henson, An Invitation to Causal Sets; Talk given at Perimeter Institute, 14 September 2010, Waterloo ON (Introduction)
  • F. Dowker, Causal Set Phenomenology; Talk given at Loops 05, 10–14 October 2005, Potsdam, Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Swerves)
  • S. Johnston; Particle Propagators from Discrete Spacetime; Talk given at Perimeter Institute 14 April 2008 (Quantum field theory)
  • D.A. Meyer; Talk given at the 1997 Santa Fe workshop: ; Presented at "New Directions in Simplicial Quantum Gravity" July 28 - August 8, 1997; (Feynman diagrams, Quantum Dynamics)
  • D.P. Rideout; Spatial Hypersurfaces in Causal Set Cosmology; Talk given at Loops 05, 10–14 October 2005, Potsdam, Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Spatial hyper-surfaces, Dynamics)
  • J. Scargle, Testing Quantum Gravity Theories with GLAST; Talk given at Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics, April 24, 2007. (Lorentz invariance, Phenomenology)
  • R.D. Sorkin; Two Talks given at the 1997 Santa Fe workshop: and '; Presented at "New Directions in Simplicial Quantum Gravity" July 28 - August 8, 1997
  • R.D. Sorkin; Does quantum gravity give rise to an observable nonlocality?; Talk given at Perimeter Institute 17/01/2007 (d'Alembertian, Locality)
  • R.D. Sorkin, Some Insights for Quantum Gravity Derived from Work on Causal Sets; Talk given at Loops 05, 10–14 October 2005, Potsdam, Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Overview)
  • R.D. Sorkin Is a past-finite causal order the inner basis of spacetime? Talk given at Perimeter Institute 07/09/2005
  • S. Surya, Recovering spacetime topology from a causet; Talk given at Loops 05, 10–14 October 2005, Potsdam, Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Topology)
  • R. Sverdlov; Introduction of bosonic fields into causal set theory; Talk given at Perimeter Institute 19/02/2008 (Quantum field theory)
Manifoldness
  • L. Bombelli, D.A. Meyer; The origin of Lorentzian geometry; Phys. Lett. A 141:226-228 (1989); (Manifoldness)
  • L. Bombelli, R.D. Sorkin, When are Two Lorentzian Metrics close?, General Relativity and Gravitation, proceedings of the 12th International Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation, held July 2–8, 1989, in Boulder, Colorado, USA, under the auspices of the International Society on General Relativity and Gravitation, 1989, p. 220; (Closeness of Lorentzian manifolds)
  • L. Bombelli, Causal sets and the closeness of Lorentzian manifolds, Relativity in General: proceedings of the Relativity Meeting "93, held September 7–10, 1993, in Salas, Asturias, Spain. Edited by J. Diaz Alonso, M. Lorente Paramo. ISBN 2-86332-168-4. Published by Editions Frontieres, 91192 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France, 1994, p. 249; (Closeness of Lorentzian manifolds)
  • L. Bombelli, Statistical Lorentzian geometry and the closeness of Lorentzian manifolds, J. Math. Phys.41:6944-6958 (2000); arXiv:gr-qc/0002053 (Closeness of Lorentzian manifolds, Manifoldness)
  • A.R. Daughton, An investigation of the symmetric case of when causal sets can embed into manifolds, Class. Quantum Grav.15(11):3427-3434 (Nov., 1998) (Manifoldness)
  • J. Henson, Constructing an interval of Minkowski space from a causal set, Class. Quantum Grav. 23 (2006) L29-L35; arXiv:gr-qc/0601069; (Continuum limit, Sprinkling)
  • S. Major, D.P. Rideout, S. Surya, On Recovering Continuum Topology from a Causal Set, J.Math.Phys.48:032501, 2007; arXiv:gr-qc/0604124 (Continuum Topology)
  • S. Major, D.P. Rideout, S. Surya; Spatial Hypersurfaces in Causal Set Cosmology; Class. Quantum Grav. 23 (2006) 4743-4752; arXiv:gr-qc/0506133v2; (Observables, Continuum topology)
  • S. Major, D.P. Rideout, S. Surya, Stable Homology as an Indicator of Manifoldlikeness in Causal Set Theory, arXiv:0902.0434 (Continuum topology and homology)
  • D.A. Meyer, The Dimension of Causal Sets I: Minkowski dimension, Syracuse University preprint (1988); (Dimension theory)
  • D.A. Meyer, The Dimension of Causal Sets II: Hausdorff dimension, Syracuse University preprint (1988); (Dimension theory)
  • D.A. Meyer, Spherical containment and the Minkowski dimension of partial orders, Order 10: 227-237 (1993); (Dimension theory)
  • J. Noldus, A new topology on the space of Lorentzian metrics on a fixed manifold, Class. Quant. Grav 19: 6075-6107 (2002); (Closeness of Lorentzian manifolds)
  • J. Noldus, A Lorentzian Gromov–Hausdorff notion of distance, Class. Quantum Grav. 21, 839-850, (2004); (Closeness of Lorentzian manifolds)
  • D.D. Reid, Manifold dimension of a causal set: Tests in conformally flat spacetimes, Phys. Rev. D67 (2003) 024034; arXiv:gr-qc/0207103v2 (Dimension theory)
  • S. Surya, Causal Set Topology; arXiv:0712.1648
Geometry
  • E. Bachmat; Discrete spacetime and its applications; arXiv:gr-qc/0702140; (Geodesics, Antichains)
  • G. Brightwell, R. Gregory; The Structure of Random Discrete Spacetime; Phys. Rev. Lett. 66:260-263 (1991); (Geodesic Length)
  • G. W. Gibbons, S. N. Solodukhin; The Geometry of Small Causal Diamonds arXiv:hep-th/0703098 (Causal intervals)
  • S.W. Hawking, A.R. King, P.J. McCarthy; A new topology for curved space–time which incorporates the causal, differential, and conformal structures; J. Math. Phys. 17 2:174-181 (1976); (Geometry, Causal Structure)
  • S. He, D.P. Rideout; A Causal Set Black Hole; arXiv:0811.4235 (Causal structure of Schwarzschild spacetime, Sprinklings)
  • R. Ilie, G.B. Thompson, D.D. Reid; A numerical study of the correspondence between paths in a causal set and geodesics in the continuum; 2006 Class. Quantum Grav. 23 3275-3285 arXiv:gr-qc/0512073(Geodesic length)
  • A.V. Levichev; Prescribing the conformal geometry of a lorentz manifold by means of its causal structure; Soviet Math. Dokl. 35:452-455, (1987); (Geometry, Causal Structure)
  • Malament, David B. (July 1977). "The class of continuous timelike curves determines the topology of spacetime". Journal of Mathematical Physics. 18 (7): 1399–1404. Bibcode:1977JMP....18.1399M. doi:10.1063/1.523436.
  • D.P. Rideout, P. Wallden; Spacelike distance from discrete causal order; arXiv:0810.1768 (Spatial distances)
Cosmological constant prediction
  • M. Ahmed, S. Dodelson, P.B. Greene, R.D. Sorkin, Everpresent lambda; Phys. Rev. D69, 103523, (2004) arXiv:astro-ph/0209274v1; (Cosmological Constant)
  • Y. Jack Ng and H. van Dam, A small but nonzero cosmological constant; Int. J. Mod. Phys D. 10 : 49 (2001) arXiv:hep-th/9911102v3; (PreObservation Cosmological Constant)
  • Y. Kuznetsov, On cosmological constant in Causal Set theory; arXiv:0706.0041
  • R.D. Sorkin, A Modified Sum-Over-Histories for Gravity; reported in Highlights in gravitation and cosmology: Proceedings of the International Conference on Gravitation and Cosmology, Goa, India, 14–19 December 1987, edited by B. R. Iyer, Ajit Kembhavi, Jayant V. Narlikar, and C. V. Vishveshwara, see pages 184-186 in the article by D. Brill and L. Smolin: "Workshop on quantum gravity and new directions", pp 183–191 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1988); (PreObservation Cosmological Constant)
  • R.D. Sorkin; On the Role of Time in the Sum-over-histories Framework for Gravity, paper presented to the conference on The History of Modern Gauge Theories, held Logan, Utah, July 1987; Int. J. Theor. Phys. 33 : 523-534 (1994); (PreObservation Cosmological Constant)
  • R.D. Sorkin, First Steps with Causal Sets 2013-09-30 at the Wayback Machine, in R. Cianci, R. de Ritis, M. Francaviglia, G. Marmo, C. Rubano, P. Scudellaro (eds.), General Relativity and Gravitational Physics (Proceedings of the Ninth Italian Conference of the same name, held Capri, Italy, September, 1990), pp. 68–90 (World Scientific, Singapore, 1991); (PreObservation Cosmological Constant)
  • R.D. Sorkin; Forks in the Road, on the Way to Quantum Gravity, talk given at the conference entitled "Directions in General Relativity", held at College Park, Maryland, May, 1993; Int. J. Th. Phys. 36 : 2759–2781 (1997) arXiv:gr-qc/9706002; (PreObservation Cosmological Constant)
  • R.D. Sorkin, Discrete Gravity; a series of lectures to the First Workshop on Mathematical Physics and Gravitation, held Oaxtepec, Mexico, Dec. 1995 (unpublished); (PreObservation Cosmological Constant)
  • R.D. Sorkin, Big extra dimensions make Lambda too small; arXiv:gr-qc/0503057v1; (Cosmological Constant)
  • R.D. Sorkin, Is the cosmological "constant" a nonlocal quantum residue of discreteness of the causal set type?; Proceedings of the PASCOS-07 Conference, July 2007, Imperial College London; arXiv:0710.1675; (Cosmological Constant)
  • J. Zuntz, The CMB in a Causal Set Universe, arXiv:0711.2904 (CMB)
Lorentz and Poincaré invariance, phenomenology
  • L. Bombelli, J. Henson, R.D. Sorkin; Discreteness without symmetry breaking: a theorem; arXiv:gr-qc/0605006v1; (Lorentz invariance, Sprinkling)
  • F. Dowker, J. Henson, R.D. Sorkin, Quantum gravity phenomenology, Lorentz invariance and discreteness; Mod. Phys. Lett. A19, 1829–1840, (2004) arXiv:gr-qc/0311055v3; (Lorentz invariance, Phenomenology, Swerves)
  • F. Dowker, J. Henson, R.D. Sorkin, Discreteness and the transmission of light from distant sources; arXiv:1009.3058 (Coherence of light, Phenomenology)
  • J. Henson, Macroscopic observables and Lorentz violation in discrete quantum gravity; arXiv:gr-qc/0604040v1; (Lorentz invariance, Phenomenology)
  • N. Kaloper, D. Mattingly, Low energy bounds on Poincaré violation in causal set theory; Phys. Rev. D 74, 106001 (2006) arXiv:astro-ph/0607485 (Poincaré invariance, Phenomenology)
  • D. Mattingly, Causal sets and conservation laws in tests of Lorentz symmetry; Phys. Rev. D 77, 125021 (2008) arXiv:0709.0539 (Lorentz invariance, Phenomenology)
  • L. Philpott, F. Dowker, R.D. Sorkin, Energy-momentum diffusion from spacetime discreteness; arXiv:0810.5591 (Phenomenology, Swerves)
Black hole entropy in causal set theory
  • D. Dou, Black Hole Entropy as Causal Links; Fnd. of Phys, 33 2:279-296(18) (2003); arXiv:gr-qc/0302009v1 (Black hole entropy)
  • D.P. Rideout, S. Zohren, Counting entropy in causal set quantum gravity; arXiv:gr-qc/0612074v1; (Black hole entropy)
  • D.P. Rideout, S. Zohren, Evidence for an entropy bound from fundamentally discrete gravity; Class. Quantum Grav. 23 (2006) 6195-6213; arXiv:gr-qc/0606065v2 (Black hole entropy)
Locality and quantum field theory
  • G. Hemion, A discrete geometry: speculations on a new framework for classical electrodynamics; Int. J. Theor. Phys. 27 (1988), p. 1145 (Classical electrodynamics)
  • S. Johnston; Particle propagators on discrete spacetime; 2008 Class. Quantum Grav. 25 202001; arXiv:0806.3083 (Quantum Field Theory)
  • S. Johnston; The Feynman propagator for a Free Scalar Field on a Causal Set; Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 180401 (2009); arXiv:0909.0944 (Quantum Field Theory)
  • R.D. Sorkin; Does Locality Fail at Intermediate Length-Scales; Towards Quantum Gravity, Daniele Oriti (ed.) (Cambridge University Press, 2007); arXiv:gr-qc/0703099v1; (d'Alembertian, Locality)
  • R. Sverdlov, L. Bombelli; Gravity and Matter in Causal Set Theory; arXiv:0801.0240
  • R. Sverdlov; A Geometrical Description of Spinor Fields; arXiv:0802.1914
  • R. Sverdlov; Bosonic Fields in Causal Set Theory; arXiv:0807.4709
  • R. Sverdlov; Gauge Fields in Causal Set Theory; arXiv:0807.2066
  • R. Sverdlov; Spinor fields in Causal Set Theory; arXiv:0808.2956
Causal set dynamics
  • M. Ahmed, D. Rideout, Indications of de Sitter Spacetime from Classical Sequential Growth Dynamics of Causal Sets; arXiv:0909.4771
  • A.Ash, P. McDonald, Moment Problems and the Causal Set Approach to Quantum Gravity; J.Math.Phys. 44 (2003) 1666-1678; arXiv:gr-qc/0209020
  • A.Ash, P. McDonald, Random partial orders, posts, and the causal set approach to discrete quantum gravity; J.Math.Phys. 46 (2005) 062502 (Analysis of number of posts in growth processes)
  • D.M.T. Benincasa, F. Dowker, The Scalar Curvature of a Causal Set; arXiv:1001.2725; (Scalar curvature, actions)
  • G. Brightwell; M. Luczak; Order-invariant Measures on Causal Sets; arXiv:0901.0240; (Measures on causal sets)
  • G. Brightwell; M. Luczak; Order-invariant Measures on Fixed Causal Sets; arXiv:0901.0242; (Measures on causal sets)
  • G. Brightwell, H.F. Dowker, R.S. Garcia, J. Henson, R.D. Sorkin; General covariance and the "problem of time" in a discrete cosmology; In ed. K. Bowden, Correlations:Proceedings of the ANPA 23 conference, August 16–21, 2001, Cambridge, England, pp. 1–17. Alternative Natural Philosophy Association, (2002).;arXiv:gr-qc/0202097; (Cosmology, Dynamics, Observables)
  • G. Brightwell, H.F. Dowker, R.S. Garcia, J. Henson, R.D. Sorkin; "Observables" in causal set cosmology; Phys. Rev. D67, 084031, (2003); arXiv:gr-qc/0210061; (Cosmology, Dynamics, Observables)
  • G. Brightwell, J. Henson, S. Surya; A 2D model of Causal Set Quantum Gravity: The emergence of the continuum; arXiv:0706.0375; (Quantum Dynamics, Toy Model)
  • G.Brightwell, N. Georgiou; University of Bristol preprint. (Dynamics)
  • A. Criscuolo, H. Waelbroeck; Causal Set Dynamics: A Toy Model; Class. Quantum Grav.16:1817-1832 (1999); arXiv:gr-qc/9811088; (Quantum Dynamics, Toy Model)
  • F. Dowker, S. Surya; Observables in extended percolation models of causal set cosmology;Class. Quantum Grav. 23, 1381-1390 (2006); arXiv:gr-qc/0504069v1; (Cosmology, Dynamics, Observables)
  • M. Droste, Universal homogeneous causal sets, J. Math. Phys. 46, 122503 (2005); arXiv:gr-qc/0510118; (Past-finite causal sets)
  • J. Henson, D. Rideout, R.D. Sorkin, S. Surya; Onset of the Asymptotic Regime for (Uniformly Random) Finite Orders; Experimental Mathematics 26, 3:253-266 (2017); (Cosmology, Dynamics)
  • A.L. Krugly; Causal Set Dynamics and Elementary Particles; Int. J. Theo. Phys 41 1:1-37(2004);; (Quantum Dynamics)
  • X. Martin, D. O'Connor, D.P. Rideout, R.D. Sorkin; On the "renormalization" transformations induced by cycles of expansion and contraction in causal set cosmology; Phys. Rev. D 63, 084026 (2001); arXiv:gr-qc/0009063 (Cosmology, Dynamics)
  • D.A. Meyer; Spacetime Ising models; (UCSD preprint May 1993); (Quantum Dynamics)
  • D.A. Meyer; Why do clocks tick?; General Relativity and Gravitation 25 9:893-900;; (Quantum Dynamics)
  • I. Raptis; Quantum Space-Time as a Quantum Causal Set, arXiv:gr-qc/0201004v8
  • D.P. Rideout, R.D. Sorkin; A classical sequential growth dynamics for causal sets, Phys. Rev. D, 6, 024002 (2000);arXiv:gr-qc/9904062 (Cosmology, Dynamics)
  • D.P. Rideout, R.D. Sorkin; Evidence for a continuum limit in causal set dynamics Phys. Rev. D 63:104011, 2001; arXiv:gr-qc/0003117(Cosmology, Dynamics)
  • R.D. Sorkin; Indications of causal set cosmology; Int. J. Theor. Ph. 39(7):1731-1736 (2000); arXiv:gr-qc/0003043; (Cosmology, Dynamics)
  • R.D. Sorkin; Relativity theory does not imply that the future already exists: a counterexample; Relativity and the Dimensionality of the World, Vesselin Petkov (ed.) (Springer 2007, in press); arXiv:gr-qc/0703098v1; (Dynamics, Philosophy)
  • M. Varadarajan, D.P. Rideout; A general solution for classical sequential growth dynamics of Causal Sets; Phys. Rev. D 73 (2006) 104021; arXiv:gr-qc/0504066v3; (Cosmology, Dynamics)
  • M.R., Khoshbin-e-Khoshnazar (2013). "Binding Energy of the Very Early Universe: Abandoning Einstein for a Discretized Three–Torus Poset.A Proposal on the Origin of Dark Energy". Gravitation and Cosmology. 19 (2): 106–113. Bibcode:2013GrCo...19..106K. doi:10.1134/s0202289313020059. S2CID 121288092.;(Dynamics, Poset)

External links edit

  • The causal set approach to quantum gravity a review article by Joe Henson on causal sets
  • Space-time as a causal set - one of the first papers by Luca Bombelli, Joohan Lee, David Meyer, and Rafael D. Sorkin
  • - non-technical article by Rafael D. Sorkin on Einstein Online
  • Focus Issue: The causal set approach to quantum gravity Classical and Quantum Gravity Vol. 35, 2018

causal, sets, causal, sets, program, approach, quantum, gravity, founding, principles, that, spacetime, fundamentally, discrete, collection, discrete, spacetime, points, called, elements, causal, that, spacetime, events, related, partial, order, this, partial,. The causal sets program is an approach to quantum gravity Its founding principles are that spacetime is fundamentally discrete a collection of discrete spacetime points called the elements of the causal set and that spacetime events are related by a partial order This partial order has the physical meaning of the causality relations between spacetime events Contents 1 History 2 Definition 3 Comparison to the continuum 3 1 Sprinkling 4 Geometry 4 1 Geodesics 4 2 Dimension estimators 5 Dynamics 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editFor some decades after the formulation of General Relativity the attitude towards Lorentzian geometry was mostly dedicated to understanding its physical implications and not concerned with theoretical issues 1 However early attempts to use causality as a starting point have been provided by Weyl and Lorentz 2 Alfred Robb in two books in 1914 and 1936 suggested an axiomatic framework where the causal precedence played a critical role 1 The first explicit proposal of quantising the causal structure of spacetime is attributed by S Surya 1 to Kronheimer and Penrose 3 who invented Causal spaces in order to admit structures which can be very different from a manifold Causal spaces are defined axiomatically by considering not only causal precedence but also chronological precedence The program of causal sets is based on a theorem 4 by David Malament extending former results by E C Zeeman 5 and Hawking King McCarthy 6 1 Malament Theorem states that if there is a bijective map between two past and future distinguishing space times that preserves their causal structure then the map is a conformal isomorphism The conformal factor that is left undetermined is related to the volume of regions in the spacetime This volume factor can be recovered by specifying a volume element for each space time point The volume of a space time region could then be found by counting the number of points in that region Causal sets was initiated by Rafael Sorkin who continues to be the main proponent of the program He has coined the slogan Order Number Geometry to characterize the above argument The program provides a theory in which space time is fundamentally discrete while retaining local Lorentz invariance Definition editA causal set or causet is a set C displaystyle C nbsp with a partial order relation displaystyle preceq nbsp that is Reflexive For all x C displaystyle x in C nbsp we have x x displaystyle x preceq x nbsp Antisymmetric For all x y C displaystyle x y in C nbsp we have x y displaystyle x preceq y nbsp and y x displaystyle y preceq x nbsp implies x y displaystyle x y nbsp Transitive For all x y z C displaystyle x y z in C nbsp we have x y displaystyle x preceq y nbsp and y z displaystyle y preceq z nbsp implies x z displaystyle x preceq z nbsp Locally finite For all x z C displaystyle x z in C nbsp we have y C x y z displaystyle y in C x preceq y preceq z nbsp is a finite set We ll write x y displaystyle x prec y nbsp if x y displaystyle x preceq y nbsp and x y displaystyle x neq y nbsp The set C displaystyle C nbsp represents the set of spacetime events and the order relation displaystyle preceq nbsp represents the causal relationship between events see causal structure for the analogous idea in a Lorentzian manifold Although this definition uses the reflexive convention we could have chosen the irreflexive convention in which the order relation is irreflexive and asymmetric The causal relation of a Lorentzian manifold without closed causal curves satisfies the first three conditions It is the local finiteness condition that introduces spacetime discreteness Comparison to the continuum editGiven a causal set we may ask whether it can be embedded into a Lorentzian manifold An embedding would be a map taking elements of the causal set into points in the manifold such that the order relation of the causal set matches the causal ordering of the manifold A further criterion is needed however before the embedding is suitable If on average the number of causal set elements mapped into a region of the manifold is proportional to the volume of the region then the embedding is said to be faithful In this case we can consider the causal set to be manifold like A central conjecture of the causal set program called the Hauptvermutung fundamental conjecture is that the same causal set cannot be faithfully embedded into two spacetimes that are not similar on large scales It is difficult to define this conjecture precisely because it is difficult to decide when two spacetimes are similar on large scales Modelling spacetime as a causal set would require us to restrict attention to those causal sets that are manifold like Given a causal set this is a difficult property to determine Sprinkling edit nbsp A plot of 1000 sprinkled points in 1 1 dimensionsThe difficulty of determining whether a causal set can be embedded into a manifold can be approached from the other direction We can create a causal set by sprinkling points into a Lorentzian manifold By sprinkling points in proportion to the volume of the spacetime regions and using the causal order relations in the manifold to induce order relations between the sprinkled points we can produce a causal set that by construction can be faithfully embedded into the manifold To maintain Lorentz invariance this sprinkling of points must be done randomly using a Poisson process Thus the probability of sprinkling n displaystyle n nbsp points into a region of volume V displaystyle V nbsp isP n rV ne rVn displaystyle P n frac rho V n e rho V n nbsp where r displaystyle rho nbsp is the density of the sprinkling Sprinkling points as a regular lattice would not keep the number of points proportional to the region volume Geometry editSome geometrical constructions in manifolds carry over to causal sets When defining these we must remember to rely only on the causal set itself not on any background spacetime into which it might be embedded For an overview of these constructions see 7 Geodesics edit nbsp A plot of geodesics between two points in a 180 point causal set made by sprinkling into 1 1 dimensionsA link in a causal set is a pair of elements x y C displaystyle x y in C nbsp such that x y displaystyle x prec y nbsp but with no z C displaystyle z in C nbsp such that x z y displaystyle x prec z prec y nbsp A chain is a sequence of elements x0 x1 xn displaystyle x 0 x 1 ldots x n nbsp such that xi xi 1 displaystyle x i prec x i 1 nbsp for i 0 n 1 displaystyle i 0 ldots n 1 nbsp The length of a chain is n displaystyle n nbsp If every xi xi 1 displaystyle x i x i 1 nbsp in the chain form a link then the chain is called a path We can use this to define the notion of a geodesic between two causal set elements provided they are order comparable that is causally connected physically this means they are time like A geodesic between two elements x y C displaystyle x preceq y in C nbsp is a chain consisting only of links such that x0 x displaystyle x 0 x nbsp and xn y displaystyle x n y nbsp The length of the chain n displaystyle n nbsp is maximal over all chains from x displaystyle x nbsp to y displaystyle y nbsp In general there can be more than one geodesic between two comparable elements Myrheim 8 first suggested that the length of such a geodesic should be directly proportional to the proper time along a timelike geodesic joining the two spacetime points Tests of this conjecture have been made using causal sets generated from sprinklings into flat spacetimes The proportionality has been shown to hold and is conjectured to hold for sprinklings in curved spacetimes too Dimension estimators edit Much work has been done in estimating the manifold dimension of a causal set This involves algorithms using the causal set aiming to give the dimension of the manifold into which it can be faithfully embedded The algorithms developed so far are based on finding the dimension of a Minkowski spacetime into which the causal set can be faithfully embedded Myrheim Meyer dimensionThis approach relies on estimating the number of k displaystyle k nbsp length chains present in a sprinkling into d displaystyle d nbsp dimensional Minkowski spacetime Counting the number of k displaystyle k nbsp length chains in the causal set then allows an estimate for d displaystyle d nbsp to be made Midpoint scaling dimensionThis approach relies on the relationship between the proper time between two points in Minkowski spacetime and the volume of the spacetime interval between them By computing the maximal chain length to estimate the proper time between two points x displaystyle x nbsp and y displaystyle y nbsp and counting the number of elements z displaystyle z nbsp such that x z y displaystyle x prec z prec y nbsp to estimate the volume of the spacetime interval the dimension of the spacetime can be calculated These estimators should give the correct dimension for causal sets generated by high density sprinklings into d displaystyle d nbsp dimensional Minkowski spacetime Tests in conformally flat spacetimes 9 have shown these two methods to be accurate Dynamics editAn ongoing task is to develop the correct dynamics for causal sets These would provide a set of rules that determine which causal sets correspond to physically realistic spacetimes The most popular approach to developing causal set dynamics is based on the sum over histories version of quantum mechanics This approach would perform a sum over causal sets by growing a causal set one element at a time Elements would be added according to quantum mechanical rules and interference would ensure a large manifold like spacetime would dominate the contributions The best model for dynamics at the moment is a classical model in which elements are added according to probabilities This model due to David Rideout and Rafael Sorkin is known as classical sequential growth CSG dynamics 10 The classical sequential growth model is a way to generate causal sets by adding new elements one after another Rules for how new elements are added are specified and depending on the parameters in the model different causal sets result In analogy to the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics one approach to developing a quantum dynamics for causal sets has been to apply an action principle in the sum over causal sets approach Sorkin has proposed a discrete analogue for the d Alembertian which can in turn be used to define the Ricci curvature scalar and thereby the Benincasa Dowker action on a causal set 11 12 Monte Carlo simulations have provided evidence for a continuum phase in 2D using the Benincasa Dowker action 13 See also editCausal dynamical triangulation CDT Causal structure General relativity Order theoryReferences edit a b c d Surya S The causal set approach to quantum gravity Living Rev Relativ 22 5 2019 p 7 9 https doi org 10 1007 s41114 019 0023 1 Bell JL Korte H 2016 Hermann Weyl In Zalta EN ed The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy winter 2016 edn Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University 1 Kronheimer E Penrose R 1967 On the structure of causal spaces Proc Camb Phil Soc 63 481 Malament David B July 1977 The class of continuous timelike curves determines the topology of spacetime PDF Journal of Mathematical Physics 18 7 1399 1404 Bibcode 1977JMP 18 1399M doi 10 1063 1 523436 E C Zeeman Causality Implies the Lorentz Group J Math Phys 5 490 493 Hawking S King A McCarthy P 1976 A new topology for curved space time which incorporates the causal differential and conformal structures J Math Phys 17 174 181 Brightwell Graham Gregory Ruth 21 January 1991 Structure of random discrete spacetime Physical Review Letters 66 3 260 263 Bibcode 1991PhRvL 66 260B doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 66 260 hdl 2060 19900019113 PMID 10043761 S2CID 32109929 J Myrheim CERN preprint TH 2538 1978 Reid David D 30 January 2003 Manifold dimension of a causal set Tests in conformally flat spacetimes Physical Review D 67 2 024034 arXiv gr qc 0207103 Bibcode 2003PhRvD 67b4034R doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 67 024034 S2CID 12748458 Rideout D P Sorkin R D 2000 Classical sequential growth dynamics for causal sets Physical Review D 61 2 024002 arXiv gr qc 9904062 Bibcode 1999PhRvD 61b4002R doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 61 024002 S2CID 14652530 Sorkin D P 20 March 2007 Does Locality Fail at Intermediate Length Scales arXiv gr qc 0703099 Benincasa D M T Dowker F May 2010 The Scalar Curvature of a Causal Set Phys Rev Lett 104 18 181301 arXiv 1001 2725 Bibcode 2010PhRvL 104r1301B doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 104 181301 PMID 20482164 S2CID 4560654 Surya S July 2012 Evidence for the continuum in 2D causal set quantum gravity Classical and Quantum Gravity 29 13 132001 arXiv 1110 6244 Bibcode 2012CQGra 29m2001S doi 10 1088 0264 9381 29 13 132001 S2CID 118376808 Further reading editIntroduction and reviewsL Bombelli Causal Set reference page Overview L Bombelli Causal Sets Overview and Status Talk given at Quantum Gravity in the Americas III August 24 26 2006 Introduction Overview F Dowker Causal sets and the deep structure of spacetime arXiv gr qc 0508109 Introduction F Dowker Causal sets as discrete spacetime Contemporary Physics vol 47 Issue 1 p 1 9 Overview Introduction F Dowker Introduction to causal sets and their phenomenology Gen Relativ Gravit 2013 45 1651 1667 doi 10 1007 s10714 013 1569 y Overview of recent research J Henson The causal set approach to quantum gravity arXiv gr qc 0601121 Introduction Overview D D Reid Introduction to causal sets an alternate view of spacetime structure Canadian Journal of Physics 79 1 16 2001 arXiv gr qc 9909075 General R D Sorkin Causal set glossary and bibliography 20 November 2001 Glossary and bibliography R D Sorkin Causal Sets Discrete Gravity Notes for the Valdivia Summer School In Proceedings of the Valdivia Summer School edited by A Gomberoff and D Marolf arXiv gr qc 0309009 Introduction Glossary FoundationsL Bombelli J Lee D Meyer R D Sorkin Spacetime as a causal set Phys Rev Lett 59 521 524 1987 Introduction Foundations C Moore Comment on Space time as a causal set Phys Rev Lett 60 655 1988 Foundations L Bombelli J Lee D Meyer R D Sorkin Bombelli et al Reply Phys Rev Lett 60 656 1988 Foundations A Einstein Letter to H S Joachim August 14 1954 Item 13 453 cited in J Stachel Einstein and the Quantum Fifty Years of Struggle in From Quarks to Quasars Philosophical Problems of Modern Physics edited by R G Colodny U Pittsburgh Press 1986 pages 380 381 Historical D Finkelstein Space time code Phys Rev 184 1261 1969 Foundations D Finkelstein Superconducting Causal Nets Int J Th Phys 27 473 1988 Foundations G Hemion A quantum theory of space and time Found Phys 10 1980 p 819 Similar proposal J Myrheim Statistical geometry CERN preprint TH 2538 1978 Foundations Historical B Riemann Uber die Hypothesen welche der Geometrie zu Grunde liegen The Collected Works of B Riemann Dover NY 1953 Historical R D Sorkin A Finitary Substitute for Continuous Topology Int J Theor Phys 30 7 923 947 1991 Foundational R D Sorkin Does a Discrete Order underly Spacetime and its Metric Proceedings of the Third Canadian Conference on General Relativity and Relativistic Astrophysics Victoria Canada May 1989 edited by A Coley F Cooperstock B Tupper pp 82 86 World Scientific 1990 Introduction R D Sorkin First Steps with Causal Sets Archived 2013 09 30 at the Wayback Machine General Relativity and Gravitational Physics Proceedings of the Ninth Italian Conference of the same name held Capri Italy September 1990 68 90 World Scientific Singapore 1991 R Cianci R de Ritis M Francaviglia G Marmo C Rubano P Scudellaro eds Introduction R D Sorkin Spacetime and Causal Sets Archived 2013 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Relativity and Gravitation Classical and Quantum Proceedings of the SILARG VII Conference held Cocoyoc Mexico December 1990 pages 150 173 World Scientific Singapore 1991 J C D Olivo E Nahmad Achar M Rosenbaum M P Ryan L F Urrutia and F Zertuche eds Introduction R D Sorkin Forks in the Road on the Way to Quantum Gravity Talk given at the conference entitled Directions in General Relativity held at College Park Maryland May 1993 Int J Th Phys 36 2759 2781 1997 arXiv gr qc 9706002 Philosophical Introduction G t Hooft Quantum gravity a fundamental problem and some radical ideas Recent Developments in Gravitation Proceedings of the 1978 Cargese Summer Institute edited by M Levy and S Deser Plenum 1979 Introduction Foundations Historical E C Zeeman Causality Implies the Lorentz Group J Math Phys 5 490 493 Historical Foundations PhD thesesL Bombelli Space time as a Causal Set PhD thesis Syracuse University 1987 Introduction Kinematics A R Daughton The Recovery of Locality for Causal Sets and Related Topics PhD thesis Syracuse University 1993 Locality D Dou Causal Sets a Possible Interpretation for the Black Hole Entropy and Related Topics PhD thesis SISSA Trieste 1999 arXiv gr qc 0106024 Black hole entropy S Johnston Quantum Fields on Causal Sets PhD Thesis Imperial College London 2010 arXiv 1010 5514 Quantum Field Theory D A Meyer The Dimension of Causal Sets PhD thesis M I T 1988 Dimension theory L Philpott Causal Set Phenomenology PhD Thesis Imperial College London 2010 arXiv 1009 1593 Swerves Phenomenology D P Rideout Dynamics of Causal Sets PhD Thesis Syracuse University 2001 arXiv gr qc 0212064 Cosmology Dynamics R B Salgado Toward a Quantum Dynamics for Causal Sets PhD Thesis Syracuse University 2008 Scalar field theory Quantum Measure Theory R Sverdlov Quantum Field Theory and Gravity in Causal Sets PhD Thesis University of Michigan 2009 arXiv 0905 2263 Quantum Field Theory and Gravity TalksJoe Henson An Invitation to Causal Sets Talk given at Perimeter Institute 14 September 2010 Waterloo ON Introduction F Dowker Causal Set Phenomenology Talk given at Loops 05 10 14 October 2005 Potsdam Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics Swerves S Johnston Particle Propagators from Discrete Spacetime Talk given at Perimeter Institute 14 April 2008 Quantum field theory D A Meyer Talk given at the 1997 Santa Fe workshop Causal Sets and Feynman diagrams Presented at New Directions in Simplicial Quantum Gravity July 28 August 8 1997 Feynman diagrams Quantum Dynamics D P Rideout Spatial Hypersurfaces in Causal Set Cosmology Talk given at Loops 05 10 14 October 2005 Potsdam Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics Spatial hyper surfaces Dynamics J Scargle Testing Quantum Gravity Theories with GLAST Talk given at Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics April 24 2007 Lorentz invariance Phenomenology R D Sorkin Two Talks given at the 1997 Santa Fe workshop A Review of the Causal Set Approach to Quantum Gravity and Presented at New Directions in Simplicial Quantum Gravity July 28 August 8 1997 R D Sorkin Does quantum gravity give rise to an observable nonlocality Talk given at Perimeter Institute 17 01 2007 d Alembertian Locality R D Sorkin Some Insights for Quantum Gravity Derived from Work on Causal Sets Talk given at Loops 05 10 14 October 2005 Potsdam Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics Overview R D Sorkin Is a past finite causal order the inner basis of spacetime Talk given at Perimeter Institute 07 09 2005 S Surya Recovering spacetime topology from a causet Talk given at Loops 05 10 14 October 2005 Potsdam Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics Topology R Sverdlov Introduction of bosonic fields into causal set theory Talk given at Perimeter Institute 19 02 2008 Quantum field theory ManifoldnessL Bombelli D A Meyer The origin of Lorentzian geometry Phys Lett A 141 226 228 1989 Manifoldness L Bombelli R D Sorkin When are Two Lorentzian Metrics close General Relativity and Gravitation proceedings of the 12th International Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation held July 2 8 1989 in Boulder Colorado USA under the auspices of the International Society on General Relativity and Gravitation 1989 p 220 Closeness of Lorentzian manifolds L Bombelli Causal sets and the closeness of Lorentzian manifolds Relativity in General proceedings of the Relativity Meeting 93 held September 7 10 1993 in Salas Asturias Spain Edited by J Diaz Alonso M Lorente Paramo ISBN 2 86332 168 4 Published by Editions Frontieres 91192 Gif sur Yvette Cedex France 1994 p 249 Closeness of Lorentzian manifolds L Bombelli Statistical Lorentzian geometry and the closeness of Lorentzian manifolds J Math Phys 41 6944 6958 2000 arXiv gr qc 0002053 Closeness of Lorentzian manifolds Manifoldness A R Daughton An investigation of the symmetric case of when causal sets can embed into manifolds Class Quantum Grav 15 11 3427 3434 Nov 1998 Manifoldness J Henson Constructing an interval of Minkowski space from a causal set Class Quantum Grav 23 2006 L29 L35 arXiv gr qc 0601069 Continuum limit Sprinkling S Major D P Rideout S Surya On Recovering Continuum Topology from a Causal Set J Math Phys 48 032501 2007 arXiv gr qc 0604124 Continuum Topology S Major D P Rideout S Surya Spatial Hypersurfaces in Causal Set Cosmology Class Quantum Grav 23 2006 4743 4752 arXiv gr qc 0506133v2 Observables Continuum topology S Major D P Rideout S Surya Stable Homology as an Indicator of Manifoldlikeness in Causal Set Theory arXiv 0902 0434 Continuum topology and homology D A Meyer The Dimension of Causal Sets I Minkowski dimension Syracuse University preprint 1988 Dimension theory D A Meyer The Dimension of Causal Sets II Hausdorff dimension Syracuse University preprint 1988 Dimension theory D A Meyer Spherical containment and the Minkowski dimension of partial orders Order 10 227 237 1993 Dimension theory J Noldus A new topology on the space of Lorentzian metrics on a fixed manifold Class Quant Grav 19 6075 6107 2002 Closeness of Lorentzian manifolds J Noldus A Lorentzian Gromov Hausdorff notion of distance Class Quantum Grav 21 839 850 2004 Closeness of Lorentzian manifolds D D Reid Manifold dimension of a causal set Tests in conformally flat spacetimes Phys Rev D67 2003 024034 arXiv gr qc 0207103v2 Dimension theory S Surya Causal Set Topology arXiv 0712 1648GeometryE Bachmat Discrete spacetime and its applications arXiv gr qc 0702140 Geodesics Antichains G Brightwell R Gregory The Structure of Random Discrete Spacetime Phys Rev Lett 66 260 263 1991 Geodesic Length G W Gibbons S N Solodukhin The Geometry of Small Causal Diamonds arXiv hep th 0703098 Causal intervals S W Hawking A R King P J McCarthy A new topology for curved space time which incorporates the causal differential and conformal structures J Math Phys 17 2 174 181 1976 Geometry Causal Structure S He D P Rideout A Causal Set Black Hole arXiv 0811 4235 Causal structure of Schwarzschild spacetime Sprinklings R Ilie G B Thompson D D Reid A numerical study of the correspondence between paths in a causal set and geodesics in the continuum 2006 Class Quantum Grav 23 3275 3285 arXiv gr qc 0512073 Geodesic length A V Levichev Prescribing the conformal geometry of a lorentz manifold by means of its causal structure Soviet Math Dokl 35 452 455 1987 Geometry Causal Structure Malament David B July 1977 The class of continuous timelike curves determines the topology of spacetime Journal of Mathematical Physics 18 7 1399 1404 Bibcode 1977JMP 18 1399M doi 10 1063 1 523436 D P Rideout P Wallden Spacelike distance from discrete causal order arXiv 0810 1768 Spatial distances Cosmological constant predictionM Ahmed S Dodelson P B Greene R D Sorkin Everpresent lambda Phys Rev D69 103523 2004 arXiv astro ph 0209274v1 Cosmological Constant Y Jack Ng and H van Dam A small but nonzero cosmological constant Int J Mod Phys D 10 49 2001 arXiv hep th 9911102v3 PreObservation Cosmological Constant Y Kuznetsov On cosmological constant in Causal Set theory arXiv 0706 0041 R D Sorkin A Modified Sum Over Histories for Gravity reported in Highlights in gravitation and cosmology Proceedings of the International Conference on Gravitation and Cosmology Goa India 14 19 December 1987 edited by B R Iyer Ajit Kembhavi Jayant V Narlikar and C V Vishveshwara see pages 184 186 in the article by D Brill and L Smolin Workshop on quantum gravity and new directions pp 183 191 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1988 PreObservation Cosmological Constant R D Sorkin On the Role of Time in the Sum over histories Framework for Gravity paper presented to the conference on The History of Modern Gauge Theories held Logan Utah July 1987 Int J Theor Phys 33 523 534 1994 PreObservation Cosmological Constant R D Sorkin First Steps with Causal Sets Archived 2013 09 30 at the Wayback Machine in R Cianci R de Ritis M Francaviglia G Marmo C Rubano P Scudellaro eds General Relativity and Gravitational Physics Proceedings of the Ninth Italian Conference of the same name held Capri Italy September 1990 pp 68 90 World Scientific Singapore 1991 PreObservation Cosmological Constant R D Sorkin Forks in the Road on the Way to Quantum Gravity talk given at the conference entitled Directions in General Relativity held at College Park Maryland May 1993 Int J Th Phys 36 2759 2781 1997 arXiv gr qc 9706002 PreObservation Cosmological Constant R D Sorkin Discrete Gravity a series of lectures to the First Workshop on Mathematical Physics and Gravitation held Oaxtepec Mexico Dec 1995 unpublished PreObservation Cosmological Constant R D Sorkin Big extra dimensions make Lambda too small arXiv gr qc 0503057v1 Cosmological Constant R D Sorkin Is the cosmological constant a nonlocal quantum residue of discreteness of the causal set type Proceedings of the PASCOS 07 Conference July 2007 Imperial College London arXiv 0710 1675 Cosmological Constant J Zuntz The CMB in a Causal Set Universe arXiv 0711 2904 CMB Lorentz and Poincare invariance phenomenologyL Bombelli J Henson R D Sorkin Discreteness without symmetry breaking a theorem arXiv gr qc 0605006v1 Lorentz invariance Sprinkling F Dowker J Henson R D Sorkin Quantum gravity phenomenology Lorentz invariance and 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External links editThe causal set approach to quantum gravity a review article by Joe Henson on causal sets Space time as a causal set one of the first papers by Luca Bombelli Joohan Lee David Meyer and Rafael D Sorkin Geometry from order causal sets non technical article by Rafael D Sorkin on Einstein Online Focus Issue The causal set approach to quantum gravity Classical and Quantum Gravity Vol 35 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Causal sets amp oldid 1196094435, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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