Emergent Lorentzian Geometries from Spin-Foams and Group Field Theories
Alexander F. Jercher

TL;DR
This paper explores how Lorentzian geometries emerge from spin-foam and group field theories, analyzing spectral dimensions, causal structures, and cosmological models, revealing phase transitions and quantum effects in quantum gravity frameworks.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of Lorentzian geometry emergence, including spectral dimension flow, causal regularity conditions, and a causal completion of the Barrett-Crane GFT model, advancing quantum gravity research.
Findings
Spectral dimension flows from 4 at large scales to non-trivial at small scales.
Causal regularity requires timelike connecting cells in Lorentzian Regge calculus.
Complete Barrett-Crane GFT model exhibits self-consistent mean-field behavior.
Abstract
The emergence of Lorentzian geometries in spin-foams and group field theories is investigated. The spectral dimension of periodic Euclidean spin-foam frusta is studied. At large scales, the spectral dimension is generically four. At lower scales, a non-trivial flow of the spectral dimension is observed, sensitive to quantum effects, curvature induced oscillations and the parameters of the theory. The removal of numerical cutoffs and a thermodynamic limit is discussed, suggesting a phase transition from zero to four large-scale dimensions. Lorentzian Regge calculus for (3+1) cosmology, modelled with Lorentzian 4-frusta, coupled to a massless free scalar field is studied. It is shown that causal regularity, solutions to the Regge equations and a continuum limit only exist if the cells connecting neighboring slices are timelike. The dynamics can be expressed relationally only in the small…
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