On Geometry and Symmetries in Classical and Quantum Theories of Gauge Gravity
Vadim Belov

TL;DR
This paper investigates the geometric and symmetry structures in classical and quantum gauge theories of gravity, proposing corrections to spin foam models and emphasizing the role of gauge-theoretic frameworks like Cartan connections.
Contribution
It identifies issues with volume simplicity constraints in current spin foam models and introduces knot invariants and dual constraints to improve their geometric interpretation.
Findings
Corrected semi-classical asymptotics for hypercuboids.
Proposed knot-invariant encoding for boundary geometry reconstruction.
Established the role of gauge-theoretic frameworks in gravity theories.
Abstract
Spin Foam and Loop approaches to Quantum Gravity reformulate Einstein's theory of relativity in terms of connection variables. The metric properties are encoded in face bivectors/conjugate fluxes that are required to satisfy certain conditions, in order to allow for their geometric interpretation. We show that the (sub-)set of the so-called `volume simplicity constraints' is not implemented properly in the current EPRL-FK spinfoam vertex amplitude, if extended to arbitrary polyhedra. We then propose that a certain knot-invariant of the bivector geometry, induced on the boundary graph, encodes the missing conditions, allowing for reconstruction of a polytope from its two-dimensional faces. Implemented in the quantum amplitude, this leads to corrected semi-classical asymptotics for a hypercuboid, and is conjectured to be non-trivial in more general situations. The analysis of linear…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNoncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
