Diffeomorphism Covariance and the Quantum Schwarzschild Interior
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Lewandowski, Okolow, Sahlmann, and Thiemann [10] proved that the requirement of invariance under spatial diffeomorphisms—or, more precisely, the unitary implementation of the action of the diffeomorphism group—establishes the uniqueness of the kinematics of LQG.
- For LQC, Ashtekar and Campiglia [11] showed that, in the case of the Bianchi I model, a unique kinematical representation is achieved through invariance under canonical and, thus, volume-preserving residual diffeomorphisms, i.e., diffeomorphisms that are not frozen by the gauge fixing required by symmetry reduction.
- The works [14,15] demonstrated, for the cases of homogeneous isotropic LQC and Bianchi I models, that a family of dynamics can also be derived from residual diffeomorphism covariance, and, if desired, uniqueness can be achieved by requiring minimality—a form of Occam’s razor requiring the Hamiltonian to have a minimal number of terms, i.e., a minimal number of shift operators—in addition to a further assumption of planar loops for the Bianchi I case.
- Covariance under residual diffeomorphisms. Looking at how the phase-space variables flow under the action of the residual diffeomorphisms (Section 3), we formulate a condition for the covariance of the Hamiltonian, which we quantize, establishing a condition of quantum covariance under such diffeomorphisms. The residual diffeomorphisms are non-canonical, so this requires novel methods (Section 4).
- Covariance under discrete residual automorphisms of the principal fiber bundle (Section 5).
- The correct (naïve) classical limit (Section 6).
2. Background
2.1. Kantowski–Sachs in Ashtekar–Barbero Variables
2.2. Quantum Kinematics
3. Residual Diffeomorphisms
- :
- generates part of the spherical symmetry manifest in Schwarzschild. The other two spatial rotations are not manifest here as symmetries because we are looking at symmetries of —full spherical symmetry can be imposed on at most up to gauge rotations and is manifest only in -gauge-invariant structures constructed from them, such as the 3-metric (3).
- generates translations in x, which corresponds to t in the usual form of the Schwarzschild solution, so this symmetry corresponds to the t-translation symmetry in Schwarzschild.
- generates something more interesting: An exponential flow in the x direction, and the only flow with non-trivial action on .
4. Covariance Equation
4.1. Strategy
4.2. Quantization in the Schrödinger Representation and General Solution for the Matrix Elements
4.3. Operator Form of the Solution
4.4. Preservation of the Bohr Hilbert Space
5. Discrete Symmetries
- ‘b-parity’ is equivalent to an internal gauge rotation of around the 3-axis, with the corresponding quantum map being given by .
- ‘c-parity’ is equivalent to the action of the antipodal map as a diffeomorphism combined with internal parity along the 3-axis, with the corresponding quantum map being given by .
Metric Loop Assumption
6. Classical Asymptotic Behavior
6.1. Naïve Classical Limit and the Limit of Low Curvature
6.2. Equations for Correct Asymptotic Behavior in the Naïve Classical Limit
6.3. Choice of Lapse
7. Minimality
8. Comparison with Prescriptions in the Literature
8.1. : Proper Time Case
8.2. : Harmonic Time Gauge
8.3. AOS Prescription
- at the transition surface that replaces the classical singularity, the regularizing loops enclose a physical area equal to the area gap when the Hamiltonian constraint is satisfied.
8.4. Newer Proposals
- Assanioussi and Mickel [29] proposed an effective Hamiltonian constructed via regularized Thiemann identities in the scheme. Their starting point differs from ours—the Hamiltonian is from the full theory, with a Euclidian and a Lorentzian component, while our approach uses the symmetry-reduced Hamiltonian Equation (5), in which these two terms are not distinguished—so the final result is expected to be different. However, their result does lie in the family in Equation (50) selected by using residual diffeomorphism covariance and discrete symmetries, and our minimal result has the same form as the Euclidian part calculated by them.
- Bodendorfer, Mele, and Munch [28] introduce new pairs of canonical variables,
- Sartini and Geiller [25] consider KS with a cosmological constant incorporated via the unimodular formulation of gravity [35], the main motivation being to solve the problem of time without introducing scalar matter. They propose the change of variablesThe use of the classical lapse Equation (53) for the effective theory means that, if the effective Hamiltonian would arise from a quantum operator, then the discussion of Section 6.3 would apply again. However, when proposing a quantum Hamiltonian operator, the authors make use of a different lapse, the one corresponding to the use of a unimodular clock, matching Equation (6) for . The Hilbert space on which the non-cosmological constant part of their operator acts is the usual Bohr Hilbert space. That being said, the polymerization of the connection variables in their operator remains the same as in their effective theory and, thus, is again not covariant under active residual diffeomorphisms, so the non-cosmological constant part of the operator is not in the family in Equation (50) that we selected.
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Bornhoeft, I.W.; Dias, R.G.; Engle, J.S. Diffeomorphism Covariance and the Quantum Schwarzschild Interior. Universe 2024, 10, 89. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe10020089
Bornhoeft IW, Dias RG, Engle JS. Diffeomorphism Covariance and the Quantum Schwarzschild Interior. Universe. 2024; 10(2):89. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe10020089
Chicago/Turabian StyleBornhoeft, I. W., R. G. Dias, and J. S. Engle. 2024. "Diffeomorphism Covariance and the Quantum Schwarzschild Interior" Universe 10, no. 2: 89. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe10020089
APA StyleBornhoeft, I. W., Dias, R. G., & Engle, J. S. (2024). Diffeomorphism Covariance and the Quantum Schwarzschild Interior. Universe, 10(2), 89. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe10020089