Gauge Theories of Gravitation
Milutin Blagojevi\'c, Friedrich W. Hehl

TL;DR
This paper reviews the development of gauge theories of gravity over the past five decades, highlighting their mathematical structure, physical implications, and connections to general relativity and other gravity models.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive commentary on the evolution and key concepts of gauge theories of gravitation, including Poincaré gauge theory and its extensions.
Findings
Poincaré gauge theory encompasses Einstein's general relativity.
Theories incorporate torsion and fermionic matter naturally.
Explores Hamiltonian formulation and exact solutions.
Abstract
During the last five decades, gravity, as one of the fundamental forces of nature, has been formulated as a gauge theory of the Weyl-Cartan-Yang-Mills type. The present text offers commentaries on the articles from the most prominent proponents of the theory. In the early 1960s, the gauge idea was successfully applied to the Poincar\'e group of spacetime symmetries and to the related conserved energy-momentum and angular momentum currents. The resulting theory, the Poincar\'e gauge theory, encompasses Einstein's general relativity as well as the teleparallel theory of gravity as subcases. The spacetime structure is enriched by Cartan's torsion, and the new theory can accommodate fermionic matter and its spin in a perfectly natural way. This guided tour starts from special relativity and leads, in its first part, to general relativity and its gauge type extensions \`a la Weyl and Cartan.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory · Computational Physics and Python Applications · Quantum and Classical Electrodynamics
