Polymer quantization and the saddle point approximation of partition functions
Hugo A. Morales-T\'ecotl, Daniel H. Orozco-Borunda, Saeed Rastgoo

TL;DR
This paper investigates how polymer quantization affects the saddle point approximation of partition functions in a mechanical model related to black hole thermodynamics, comparing it with the counterterm method.
Contribution
It introduces polymer quantization effects into a classical model with boundary issues and contrasts this with the traditional counterterm approach, highlighting new insights for black hole thermodynamics.
Findings
Polymer quantization modifies the Hamilton-Jacobi counterterm.
In the momentum discrete case, no counterterm is needed due to bounded position.
Polymer effects influence the saddle point approximation in black hole models.
Abstract
The saddle point approximation of the path integral partition functions is an important way of deriving the thermodynamical properties of black holes. However, there are certain black hole models and some mathematically analog mechanical models for which this method cannot be applied directly. This is due to the fact that their action evaluated on a classical solution is not finite and its first variation does not vanish for all consistent boundary conditions. These problems can be dealt with by adding a counterterm to the classical action, which is a solution of the corresponding Hamilton-Jacobi equation. In this work we study the effects of polymer quantization on a mechanical model presenting the aforementioned difficulties and contrast it with the above counterterm method. This type of quantization for mechanical models is motivated by the loop quantization of gravity which is…
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