Lessons from the Mathematics of Two-Dimensional Euclidean Quantum Gravity
Timothy Budd

TL;DR
This paper reviews mathematical developments in two-dimensional Euclidean quantum gravity, focusing on random planar maps, their enumeration, and the continuum limit known as the Brownian sphere, offering insights for higher-dimensional theories.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of the mathematical structures underpinning 2D Euclidean quantum gravity, including discrete models and their continuum limits, guiding future higher-dimensional approaches.
Findings
Enumeration of planar maps via generating functions
Bijections between planar maps and trees
Construction of the Brownian sphere as the universal continuum limit
Abstract
The search for a mathematical foundation for the path integral of Euclidean quantum gravity calls for the construction of random geometry on the spacetime manifold. Following developments in physics on the two-dimensional theory, random geometry on the 2-sphere has in recent years received much attention in the mathematical literature, which has led to a fully rigorous implementation of the path integral formulation of two-dimensional Euclidean quantum gravity. In this chapter we review several important mathematical developments that may serve as guiding principles for approaching Euclidean quantum gravity in dimensions higher than two. Our starting point is the discrete geometry encoded by random planar maps, which realizes a lattice discretization of the path integral. We recap the enumeration of planar maps via their generating functions and show how bijections with trees explain…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNoncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies
