Foliation-Based Approach to Quantum Gravity and Applications to Astrophysics
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Overview of “What Has Been Done Differently”
3. Foliation-Based Quantization
3.1. Einstein Gravity Case
3.2. Einstein–Maxwell Case
3.3. Mathematical Foundations for Reduction
4. Boundary Conditions and Dynamics
4.1. Actively-Transformed Metric
4.2. Dirichlet Boundary Condition
4.3. Neumann Boundary Conditions and Generalization
4.4. Reduced Action and Boundary Dynamics
Static Backgrounds
General Backgrounds
4.5. Ramifications of Boundary Dynamics
4.5.1. Symmetry Aspects of the 3D Theory
BMS Symmetry in the Context of Boundary Dynamics
Noether Charge Non-Conservation
4.5.2. Implications for Black Hole Information
5. One-Loop Renormalization
5.1. Gravity Sector
5.2. Refined BFM-Based Loop Computation Setup
5.3. Flat Space Analysis
5.3.1. Two-Point Diagrams
5.3.2. On Restoring Gauge-Choice Independence
5.4. Renormalization Procedure
5.4.1. Renormalization of Coupling Constants
5.4.2. Renormalization through Metric Field Redefinition
5.5. Beta Function Analysis
6. Future Astrophysical Applications
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
LQG | Loop quantum gravity |
BFM | Background field method |
ADM | Arnowitt Deser Misner |
LGT | Large gauge transformation |
BMS | Bondi Metzner Sachs |
GHY | Gibbons–Hawking–York |
AGN | Active galactic nuclei |
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1. | More on this in Section 2. |
2. | As stressed in [19], the reduced theory is not a genuine 3D theory, but still a 4D theory whose dynamics can be described through the hypersurface. |
3. | Such a direct calculation is normally done in non-gravitational theories. However, it appears that the same procedure has not been implemented in a gravitational theory. The reason is presumably that such an attempt would have run into non-covariance, as we will review below. |
4. | Although the present scheme of the “holographic quantization" may sound similar to the well-known idea of holographic renormalization [37], the two ideas are not directly related. While in the holographic renormalization one usually studies the renormalization of the composite operators of the boundary theory (assisted by the classical bulk theory), the focus of the present holographic quantization is the renormalizability and renormalization of the bulk theory. |
5. | A careful treatment of the boundary term can be found in [41]. |
6. | For the perturbative quantization one needs to compute the propagator. However, it was noticed long ago [42,43,44] that the path integral is not well defined due to the trace mode of the fluctuation metric . The problematic trace piece must be gauge-fixed. (The need for gauge-fixing of the trace piece is already revealed at the classical level, as we will note in Section 4.) In fact, the set of the gauge-fixings just mentioned leads to natural gauge-fixing of the trace piece as well. To see this let us consider the first equation of the de Donder gauge in (10), which we quote here for convenience:
Since the lapse function n has been gauge-fixed to its classical value, this equation implies the trace piece of the second fundamental form is also gauge-fixed to its classical value [41,49]:
|
7. | As for a curved background such as a Schwarzschild or Kerr black hole, the constraint can be satisfied by choosing the fluctuation part of the vector field to be independent of r. (For this see the analysis in [50]—which is reviewed below.) The leading order part is just the classical field equation. |
8. | |
9. | |
10. | We have essentially checked this before by using the 4D covariant setup in Section 4.1. |
11. | As we will show, the direct analysis requires several crucial steps. In retrospect, those steps must have obstructed one’s attempts to calculate directly in the past. |
12. | To carry out renormalization, one starts with the renormalized form of the action:
|
13. | This is so at two- and higher- loops. At one-loop, the problematic Riemann tensor square term can be expressed in terms of other terms through the topological identity as discussed in Section 2. |
14. | The analysis can also be viewed as the computation of the divergences in a curved background; the flat space analysis captures them since the ultraviolet divergence is a short-distance phenomenon. |
15. | The linear terms are removed by appropriate counterterms (see, e.g., [81] for the comments on this point). |
16. | The first-layer perturbation should be particularly useful for two- and higher-loop analyses. |
17. | |
18. | These ghost terms correspond to the following transformations of the fluctuation fields [80]:
|
19. | The vector coupling constant is often suppressed. |
20. | The discussion here is for a flat spacetime, but the divergence will be quite generically produced for an arbitrary background. |
21. | For instance, the identities in (194) and (199) often obscure cancellations between the bosonic and fermionic amplitudes in a supersymmetric field theory, making them vanish separately. |
22. | Note that in [85] is twice here. |
23. | In a schematic notation, the formula reads
|
24. | Incidentally it also turns out that the result (230) remains the same even if one employs the traceful propagator, which should be a coincidence. |
25. | The precise forms of the required boundary condition with the corresponding GHY-type terms will not be pursued in the present work. We will assume that such a boundary condition exists, and examine the implications of the series solution given in (243) and (244). |
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Park, I. Foliation-Based Approach to Quantum Gravity and Applications to Astrophysics. Universe 2019, 5, 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe5030071
Park I. Foliation-Based Approach to Quantum Gravity and Applications to Astrophysics. Universe. 2019; 5(3):71. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe5030071
Chicago/Turabian StylePark, Inyong. 2019. "Foliation-Based Approach to Quantum Gravity and Applications to Astrophysics" Universe 5, no. 3: 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe5030071
APA StylePark, I. (2019). Foliation-Based Approach to Quantum Gravity and Applications to Astrophysics. Universe, 5(3), 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe5030071