Internal time, test clocks and singularity resolution in dust-filled quantum cosmology
Ian D. Lawrie

TL;DR
This paper investigates the problem of time in quantum cosmology using a dust-filled universe, revealing that different internal time choices lead to contradictory singularity resolutions, and proposes a test clock approach for consistent evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a test clock method within quantum cosmology that offers a more consistent account of time evolution and singularity resolution.
Findings
Different internal time choices yield contradictory singularity outcomes.
The test clock approach provides a consistent framework for observable correlations.
The notion of internal time lacks a satisfactory physical interpretation.
Abstract
The problem of time evolution in quantum cosmology is studied in the context of a dust-filled, spatially flat Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe. In this model, two versions of the commonly-adopted notion of internal time can be implemented in the same quantization, and are found to yield contradictory views of the same quantum state: with one choice, the big-bang singularity appears to be resolved, but with another choice it does not. This and other considerations lead to the conclusion that the notion of internal time as it is usually implemented has no satisfactory physical interpretation. A recently proposed variant of the relational-time construction, using a test clock that is regarded as internal to a specific observer, appears to provide an improved account of time evolution relative to the proper time that elapses along the observer's worldline. This construction permits the…
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