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Hamilton–Jacobi–Einstein equation

In general relativity, the Hamilton–Jacobi–Einstein equation (HJEE) or Einstein–Hamilton–Jacobi equation (EHJE) is an equation in the Hamiltonian formulation of geometrodynamics in superspace, cast in the "geometrodynamics era" around the 1960s, by Asher Peres in 1962 and others.[1] It is an attempt to reformulate general relativity in such a way that it resembles quantum theory within a semiclassical approximation, much like the correspondence between quantum mechanics and classical mechanics.

It is named for Albert Einstein, Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi, and William Rowan Hamilton. The EHJE contains as much information as all ten Einstein field equations (EFEs).[2] It is a modification of the Hamilton–Jacobi equation (HJE) from classical mechanics, and can be derived from the Einstein–Hilbert action using the principle of least action in the ADM formalism.

Background and motivation

Correspondence between classical and quantum physics

In classical analytical mechanics, the dynamics of the system is summarized by the action S. In quantum theory, namely non-relativistic quantum mechanics (QM), relativistic quantum mechanics (RQM), as well as quantum field theory (QFT), with varying interpretations and mathematical formalisms in these theories, the behavior of a system is completely contained in a complex-valued probability amplitude Ψ (more formally as a quantum state ket |Ψ⟩ - an element of a Hilbert space). Using the polar form of the wave function, so making a Madelung transformation:

 

the phase of Ψ is interpreted as the action, and the modulus ρ = Ψ*Ψ = |Ψ| is interpreted according to the Copenhagen interpretation as the probability density function. The reduced Planck constant ħ is the quantum of angular momentum. Substitution of this into the quantum general Schrödinger equation (SE):

 

and taking the limit ħ → 0 yields the classical HJE:

 

which is one aspect of the correspondence principle.

Shortcomings of four-dimensional spacetime

On the other hand, the transition between quantum theory and general relativity (GR) is difficult to make; one reason is the treatment of space and time in these theories. In non-relativistic QM, space and time are not on equal footing; time is a parameter while position is an operator. In RQM and QFT, position returns to the usual spatial coordinates alongside the time coordinate, although these theories are consistent only with SR in four-dimensional flat Minkowski space, and not curved space nor GR. It is possible to formulate quantum field theory in curved spacetime, yet even this still cannot incorporate GR because gravity is not renormalizable in QFT.[3] Additionally, in GR particles move through curved spacetime with a deterministically known position and momentum at every instant, while in quantum theory, the position and momentum of a particle cannot be exactly known simultaneously; space x and momentum p, and energy E and time t, are pairwise subject to the uncertainty principles

 

which imply that small intervals in space and time mean large fluctuations in energy and momentum are possible. Since in GR mass–energy and momentum–energy is the source of spacetime curvature, large fluctuations in energy and momentum mean the spacetime "fabric" could potentially become so distorted that it breaks up at sufficiently small scales.[4] There is theoretical and experimental evidence from QFT that vacuum does have energy since the motion of electrons in atoms is fluctuated, this is related to the Lamb shift.[5] For these reasons and others, at increasingly small scales, space and time are thought to be dynamical up to the Planck length and Planck time scales.[4]

In any case, a four-dimensional curved spacetime continuum is a well-defined and central feature of general relativity, but not in quantum mechanics.

Equation

One attempt to find an equation governing the dynamics of a system, in as close a way as possible to QM and GR, is to reformulate the HJE in three-dimensional curved space understood to be "dynamic" (changing with time), and not four-dimensional spacetime dynamic in all four dimensions, as the EFEs are. The space has a metric (see metric space for details).

The metric tensor in general relativity is an essential object, since proper time, arc length, geodesic motion in curved spacetime, and other things, all depend on the metric. The HJE above is modified to include the metric, although it's only a function of the 3d spatial coordinates r, (for example r = (x, y, z) in Cartesian coordinates) without the coordinate time t:

 

In this context gij is referred to as the "metric field" or simply "field".

General equation (free curved space)

For a free particle in curved "empty space" or "free space", i.e. in the absence of matter other than the particle itself, the equation can be written:[6][7][8]

 

where g is the determinant of the metric tensor and R the Ricci scalar curvature of the 3d geometry (not including time), and the "δ" instead of "d" denotes the variational derivative rather than the ordinary derivative. These derivatives correspond to the field momenta "conjugate to the metric field":

 

the rate of change of action with respect to the field coordinates gij(r). The g and π here are analogous to q and p = ∂S/∂q, respectively, in classical Hamiltonian mechanics. See canonical coordinates for more background.

The equation describes how wavefronts of constant action propagate in superspace - as the dynamics of matter waves of a free particle unfolds in curved space. Additional source terms are needed to account for the presence of extra influences on the particle, which include the presence of other particles or distributions of matter (which contribute to space curvature), and sources of electromagnetic fields affecting particles with electric charge or spin. Like the Einstein field equations, it is non-linear in the metric because of the products of the metric components, and like the HJE it is non-linear in the action due to the product of variational derivatives in the action.

The quantum mechanical concept, that action is the phase of the wavefunction, can be interpreted from this equation as follows. The phase has to satisfy the principle of least action; it must be stationary for a small change in the configuration of the system, in other words for a slight change in the position of the particle, which corresponds to a slight change in the metric components;

 

the slight change in phase is zero:

 

(where d3r is the volume element of the volume integral). So the constructive interference of the matter waves is a maximum. This can be expressed by the superposition principle; applied to many non-localized wavefunctions spread throughout the curved space to form a localized wavefunction:

 

for some coefficients cn, and additionally the action (phase) Sn for each ψn must satisfy:

 

for all n, or equivalently,

 

Regions where Ψ is maximal or minimal occur at points where there is a probability of finding the particle there, and where the action (phase) change is zero. So in the EHJE above, each wavefront of constant action is where the particle could be found.

This equation still does not "unify" quantum mechanics and general relativity, because the semiclassical Eikonal approximation in the context of quantum theory and general relativity has been applied, to provide a transition between these theories.

Applications

The equation takes various complicated forms in:

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ A. Peres (1962). "On Cauchy's problem in general relativity - II". Nuovo Cimento. Springer. 26 (1): 53–62. Bibcode:1962NCim...26...53P. doi:10.1007/BF02754342. S2CID 189781412.
  2. ^ U.H. Gerlach (1968). "Derivation of the Ten Einstein Field Equations from the Semiclassical Approximation to Quantum Geometrodynamics". Physical Review. 177 (5): 1929–1941. Bibcode:1969PhRv..177.1929G. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.177.1929.
  3. ^ A. Shomer (2007). "A pedagogical explanation for the non-renormalizability of gravity". arXiv:0709.3555 [hep-th].
  4. ^ a b R.G. Lerner; G.L. Trigg (1991). Encyclopaedia of Physics (2nd ed.). VHC Publishers. p. 1285. ISBN 978-0-89573-752-6.
  5. ^ J.A. Wheeler, C. Misner, K.S. Thorne (1973). Gravitation. W.H. Freeman & Co. p. 1190. ISBN 978-0-7167-0344-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ J.A. Wheeler, C. Misner, K.S. Thorne (1973). Gravitation. W.H. Freeman & Co. p. 1188. ISBN 978-0-7167-0344-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ J. Mehra (1973). The Physicist's Conception of Nature. Springer. p. 224. ISBN 978-90-277-0345-3.
  8. ^ J.J. Halliwell; J. Pérez-Mercader; W.H. Zurek (1996). Physical Origins of Time Asymmetry. Cambridge University Press. p. 429. ISBN 978-0-521-56837-1.

Further reading

Books

Selected papers

  • T. Banks (1984). "TCP, Quantum Gravity, The Cosmological Constant and all that ..." (PDF). Stanford, USA. (Equation A.3 in the appendix).
  • B. K. Darian (1997). "Solving the Hamilton-Jacobi equation for gravitationally interacting electromagnetic and scalar fields". Classical and Quantum Gravity. Canada, USA. 15 (1): 143–152. arXiv:gr-qc/9707046v2. Bibcode:1998CQGra..15..143D. doi:10.1088/0264-9381/15/1/010. S2CID 250879669.
  • J. R. Bond; D. S. Salopek (1990). "Nonlinear evolution of long-wavelength metric fluctuations in inflationary models". Phys. Rev. D. Canada (USA), Illinois (USA).
  • Sang Pyo Kim (1996). "Classical spacetime from quantum gravity". Classical and Quantum Gravity. Kunsan, Korea: IoP. 13 (6): 1377–1382. arXiv:gr-qc/9601049. Bibcode:1996CQGra..13.1377K. doi:10.1088/0264-9381/13/6/011. S2CID 250877590.
  • S.R. Berbena; A.V. Berrocal; J. Socorro; L.O. Pimentel (2006). "The Einstein-Hamilton-Jacobi equation: Searching the classical solution for barotropic FRW". Guanajuato and Autónoma Metropolitana (Mexico). arXiv:gr-qc/0607123. Bibcode:2007RMxFS..53b.115B.

hamilton, jacobi, einstein, equation, further, information, formalism, general, relativity, hjee, einstein, hamilton, jacobi, equation, ehje, equation, hamiltonian, formulation, geometrodynamics, superspace, cast, geometrodynamics, around, 1960s, asher, peres,. Further information ADM formalism In general relativity the Hamilton Jacobi Einstein equation HJEE or Einstein Hamilton Jacobi equation EHJE is an equation in the Hamiltonian formulation of geometrodynamics in superspace cast in the geometrodynamics era around the 1960s by Asher Peres in 1962 and others 1 It is an attempt to reformulate general relativity in such a way that it resembles quantum theory within a semiclassical approximation much like the correspondence between quantum mechanics and classical mechanics It is named for Albert Einstein Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi and William Rowan Hamilton The EHJE contains as much information as all ten Einstein field equations EFEs 2 It is a modification of the Hamilton Jacobi equation HJE from classical mechanics and can be derived from the Einstein Hilbert action using the principle of least action in the ADM formalism Contents 1 Background and motivation 1 1 Correspondence between classical and quantum physics 1 2 Shortcomings of four dimensional spacetime 2 Equation 2 1 General equation free curved space 3 Applications 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Further reading 5 2 1 Books 5 2 2 Selected papersBackground and motivation EditCorrespondence between classical and quantum physics Edit In classical analytical mechanics the dynamics of the system is summarized by the action S In quantum theory namely non relativistic quantum mechanics QM relativistic quantum mechanics RQM as well as quantum field theory QFT with varying interpretations and mathematical formalisms in these theories the behavior of a system is completely contained in a complex valued probability amplitude PS more formally as a quantum state ket PS an element of a Hilbert space Using the polar form of the wave function so making a Madelung transformation PS r e i S ℏ displaystyle Psi sqrt rho e iS hbar the phase of PS is interpreted as the action and the modulus r PS PS PS is interpreted according to the Copenhagen interpretation as the probability density function The reduced Planck constant ħ is the quantum of angular momentum Substitution of this into the quantum general Schrodinger equation SE i ℏ PS t H PS displaystyle i hbar frac partial Psi partial t hat H Psi and taking the limit ħ 0 yields the classical HJE S t H displaystyle frac partial S partial t H which is one aspect of the correspondence principle Shortcomings of four dimensional spacetime Edit On the other hand the transition between quantum theory and general relativity GR is difficult to make one reason is the treatment of space and time in these theories In non relativistic QM space and time are not on equal footing time is a parameter while position is an operator In RQM and QFT position returns to the usual spatial coordinates alongside the time coordinate although these theories are consistent only with SR in four dimensional flat Minkowski space and not curved space nor GR It is possible to formulate quantum field theory in curved spacetime yet even this still cannot incorporate GR because gravity is not renormalizable in QFT 3 Additionally in GR particles move through curved spacetime with a deterministically known position and momentum at every instant while in quantum theory the position and momentum of a particle cannot be exactly known simultaneously space x and momentum p and energy E and time t are pairwise subject to the uncertainty principles D x D p ℏ 2 D E D t ℏ 2 displaystyle Delta x Delta p geq frac hbar 2 quad Delta E Delta t geq frac hbar 2 which imply that small intervals in space and time mean large fluctuations in energy and momentum are possible Since in GR mass energy and momentum energy is the source of spacetime curvature large fluctuations in energy and momentum mean the spacetime fabric could potentially become so distorted that it breaks up at sufficiently small scales 4 There is theoretical and experimental evidence from QFT that vacuum does have energy since the motion of electrons in atoms is fluctuated this is related to the Lamb shift 5 For these reasons and others at increasingly small scales space and time are thought to be dynamical up to the Planck length and Planck time scales 4 In any case a four dimensional curved spacetime continuum is a well defined and central feature of general relativity but not in quantum mechanics Equation EditOne attempt to find an equation governing the dynamics of a system in as close a way as possible to QM and GR is to reformulate the HJE in three dimensional curved space understood to be dynamic changing with time and not four dimensional spacetime dynamic in all four dimensions as the EFEs are The space has a metric see metric space for details The metric tensor in general relativity is an essential object since proper time arc length geodesic motion in curved spacetime and other things all depend on the metric The HJE above is modified to include the metric although it s only a function of the 3d spatial coordinates r for example r x y z in Cartesian coordinates without the coordinate time t g i j g i j r displaystyle g ij g ij mathbf r In this context gij is referred to as the metric field or simply field General equation free curved space Edit For a free particle in curved empty space or free space i e in the absence of matter other than the particle itself the equation can be written 6 7 8 1 g 1 2 g p q g r s g p r g q s d S d g p q d S d g r s g R 0 displaystyle frac 1 sqrt g left frac 1 2 g pq g rs g pr g qs right frac delta S delta g pq frac delta S delta g rs sqrt g R 0 where g is the determinant of the metric tensor and R the Ricci scalar curvature of the 3d geometry not including time and the d instead of d denotes the variational derivative rather than the ordinary derivative These derivatives correspond to the field momenta conjugate to the metric field p i j r p i j d S d g i j displaystyle pi ij mathbf r pi ij frac delta S delta g ij the rate of change of action with respect to the field coordinates gij r The g and p here are analogous to q and p S q respectively in classical Hamiltonian mechanics See canonical coordinates for more background The equation describes how wavefronts of constant action propagate in superspace as the dynamics of matter waves of a free particle unfolds in curved space Additional source terms are needed to account for the presence of extra influences on the particle which include the presence of other particles or distributions of matter which contribute to space curvature and sources of electromagnetic fields affecting particles with electric charge or spin Like the Einstein field equations it is non linear in the metric because of the products of the metric components and like the HJE it is non linear in the action due to the product of variational derivatives in the action The quantum mechanical concept that action is the phase of the wavefunction can be interpreted from this equation as follows The phase has to satisfy the principle of least action it must be stationary for a small change in the configuration of the system in other words for a slight change in the position of the particle which corresponds to a slight change in the metric components g i j g i j d g i j displaystyle g ij rightarrow g ij delta g ij the slight change in phase is zero d S d S d g i j r d g i j r d 3 r 0 displaystyle delta S int frac delta S delta g ij mathbf r delta g ij mathbf r mathrm d 3 mathbf r 0 where d3r is the volume element of the volume integral So the constructive interference of the matter waves is a maximum This can be expressed by the superposition principle applied to many non localized wavefunctions spread throughout the curved space to form a localized wavefunction PS n c n ps n displaystyle Psi sum n c n psi n for some coefficients cn and additionally the action phase Sn for each psn must satisfy d S S n 1 S n 0 displaystyle delta S S n 1 S n 0 for all n or equivalently S 1 S 2 S n displaystyle S 1 S 2 cdots S n cdots Regions where PS is maximal or minimal occur at points where there is a probability of finding the particle there and where the action phase change is zero So in the EHJE above each wavefront of constant action is where the particle could be found This equation still does not unify quantum mechanics and general relativity because the semiclassical Eikonal approximation in the context of quantum theory and general relativity has been applied to provide a transition between these theories Applications EditThe equation takes various complicated forms in Quantum gravity Quantum cosmologySee also EditFoliation Quantum geometry Quantum spacetime Calculus of variations The equation is also related to the Wheeler DeWitt equation Peres metricReferences EditNotes Edit A Peres 1962 On Cauchy s problem in general relativity II Nuovo Cimento Springer 26 1 53 62 Bibcode 1962NCim 26 53P doi 10 1007 BF02754342 S2CID 189781412 U H Gerlach 1968 Derivation of the Ten Einstein Field Equations from the Semiclassical Approximation to Quantum Geometrodynamics Physical Review 177 5 1929 1941 Bibcode 1969PhRv 177 1929G doi 10 1103 PhysRev 177 1929 A Shomer 2007 A pedagogical explanation for the non renormalizability of gravity arXiv 0709 3555 hep th a b R G Lerner G L Trigg 1991 Encyclopaedia of Physics 2nd ed VHC Publishers p 1285 ISBN 978 0 89573 752 6 J A Wheeler C Misner K S Thorne 1973 Gravitation W H Freeman amp Co p 1190 ISBN 978 0 7167 0344 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link J A Wheeler C Misner K S Thorne 1973 Gravitation W H Freeman amp Co p 1188 ISBN 978 0 7167 0344 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link J Mehra 1973 The Physicist s Conception of Nature Springer p 224 ISBN 978 90 277 0345 3 J J Halliwell J Perez Mercader W H Zurek 1996 Physical Origins of Time Asymmetry Cambridge University Press p 429 ISBN 978 0 521 56837 1 Further reading Edit Books Edit J L Lopes 1977 Quantum mechanics a half century later Papers of a Colloquium on Fifty Years of Quantum Mechanics Strasbourg France Springer Kluwer Academic Publishers ISBN 978 90 277 0784 0 C Rovelli 2004 Quantum Gravity Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83733 0 C Kiefer 2012 Quantum Gravity 3rd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 958520 5 J K Glikman 1999 Towards Quantum Gravity Proceedings of the XXXV International Winter School on Theoretical Physics Polanica Poland Springer p 224 ISBN 978 3 540 66910 4 L Z Fang R Ruffini 1987 Quantum cosmology Advanced Series in Astrophysics and Cosmology Vol 3 World Scientific ISBN 978 9971 5 0312 3 Selected papers Edit T Banks 1984 TCP Quantum Gravity The Cosmological Constant and all that PDF Stanford USA Equation A 3 in the appendix B K Darian 1997 Solving the Hamilton Jacobi equation for gravitationally interacting electromagnetic and scalar fields Classical and Quantum Gravity Canada USA 15 1 143 152 arXiv gr qc 9707046v2 Bibcode 1998CQGra 15 143D doi 10 1088 0264 9381 15 1 010 S2CID 250879669 J R Bond D S Salopek 1990 Nonlinear evolution of long wavelength metric fluctuations in inflationary models Phys Rev D Canada USA Illinois USA Sang Pyo Kim 1996 Classical spacetime from quantum gravity Classical and Quantum Gravity Kunsan Korea IoP 13 6 1377 1382 arXiv gr qc 9601049 Bibcode 1996CQGra 13 1377K doi 10 1088 0264 9381 13 6 011 S2CID 250877590 S R Berbena A V Berrocal J Socorro L O Pimentel 2006 The Einstein Hamilton Jacobi equation Searching the classical solution for barotropic FRW Guanajuato and Autonoma Metropolitana Mexico arXiv gr qc 0607123 Bibcode 2007RMxFS 53b 115B Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hamilton Jacobi Einstein equation amp oldid 1160195698, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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