General relativity as an extended canonical gauge theory
J\"urgen Struckmeier

TL;DR
This paper develops a Hamiltonian formulation of general relativity using extended canonical transformations, deriving a quadratic curvature-based Hamiltonian that is invariant, scale-invariant, and renormalizable from fundamental principles.
Contribution
It introduces an extended canonical gauge theory framework for gravity, deriving a quadratic curvature Hamiltonian consistent with the principle of relativity.
Findings
Hamiltonian is quadratic in the curvature tensor
The theory is scale-invariant and renormalizable
Provides a unique Lagrangian from first principles
Abstract
It is widely accepted that the fundamental geometrical law of nature should follow from an action principle. The particular subset of transformations of a system's dynamical variables that maintain the form of the action principle comprises the group of canonical transformations. In the context of canonical field theory, the adjective "extended" signifies that not only the fields but also the space-time geometry is subject to transformation. Thus, in order to be physical, the transition to another, possibly noninertial frame of reference must necessarily constitute an extended canonical transformation that defines the general mapping of the connection coefficients, hence the quantities that determine the space-time curvature and torsion of the respective reference frame. The canonical transformation formalism defines simultaneously the transformation rules for the conjugates of the…
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