A Brief Introduction Into Quantum Gravity and Quantum Cosmology
A Brief Introduction Into Quantum Gravity and Quantum Cosmology
Claus Kiefer
String theory
Black holes
Quantum Cosmology
Why quantum gravity?
! Problem of time
! Absence of viable alternatives
Wolfgang Pauli (1955):
Es scheint mir . . . , daß nicht so sehr die Linearität oder
Nichtlinearität Kern der Sache ist, sondern eben der Umstand,
daß hier eine allgemeinere Gruppe als die Lorentzgruppe
vorhanden ist . . . .
∂ψ
i! = Ĥψ
∂t
! Dynamical time in general relativity:
1 8πG
Rµν − gµν R + Λgµν = 4 Tµν
2 c
QUANTUM GRAVITY?
Planck units
!
!G
lP = ≈ 1.62 × 10−33 cm
c3
!
lP !G
tP = = ≈ 5.40 × 10−44 s
c c5
!
! !c
mP = = ≈ 2.17 × 10−5 g ≈ 1.22 × 1019 GeV/c2
lP c G
" #2
Gm2pr mpr
αg = = ≈ 5.91 × 10−39
!c mP
Steps towards quantum gravity
Experimente:
! Neutron interferometry in the field of the Earth
(Colella, Overhauser, and Werner (”‘COW”’) 1975)
! Neutron interferometry in accelerated systems
(Bonse and Wroblewski 1983)
! Discrete neutron states in the field of the Earth
(Nesvizhevsky et al. 2002)
! Atom interferometry
(z. B. Peters, Chung, Chu 2001: measurement of g with accuracy ∆g/g ∼ 10−10 )
Non-relativistic expansion of the Dirac equation yields
∂ψ
i! ≈ HFW ψ
∂t
mit
β 2 β
HFW = βmc2 + p − 3 c2
p4 + βm(a x)
$ %& '
rest mass
$2m%& ' 8m
$ %& ' $ %& '
COW
kinetic energy SR correction
− ωL
$%&' − ωS
$%&'
Sagnac effect Mashhoon effect
" #
β ax β! & 1
+ p 2 p+ Σ(a × p) + O
2m c 4mc2 c3
Black-hole radiation
Black holes radiate with a temperature proportional to !:
!κ
TBH =
2πkB c
Schwarzschild case:
!c3
TBH =
8πkB GM
" #
−8 M"
≈ 6.17 × 10 K
M
Beschl.-
II Horizont
III
X
stan
t I
con
τ= ρ = constant
IV
! String theory
! Other approaches
(Quantization of topology, causal sets . . . )
Covariant quantum gravity
Perturbation theory:
!
32πG
gµν = ḡµν + fµν
c4
Perturbative non-renormalizability
Effective field theory
Example:
Quantum gravitational correction to the Newtonian potential
1 + 3 G(m1 + m2 ) + 41 G!
Gm1 m2
V (r) = − 2 2 3
r
$ rc
%& ' $10π%&r c '
GR−correction QG−correction
Q2
m(() = m0 + ,
2(
which diverges for ( → 0. But the inclusion of gravity leads to
Q2 Gm2 (()
m(() = m0 + − ,
2( 2(
which leads for ( → 0 to a finite result,
"→0 |Q|
m(() −→ √ .
G
The sigma model
0
Non-linear σ model: N -component field φa satisfying a φ2a = 1
! is non-renormalizable for D > 2
! exhibits a non-trivial UV fixed point at some coupling gc
(‘phase transition’)
! an expansion in D − 2 and use of renormalization-group (RG)
techniques gives information about the behaviour in the vicinity
of the non-trivial fixed point
1
Z[g] = Dgµν (x) eiS[gµν (x)]/!
t+1
(4,1) (3,2)
Preliminary results:
! Hausdorff dimension H = 3.10 ± 0.15
! Spacetime two-dimensional on smallest scales
(cf. asymptotic-safety approach)
! positive cosmological constant needed
! continuum limit?
ĤΨ = 0
1
wir wissen doch heute, daß unsere klassische Mechanik bei sehr kleinen
Bahndimensionen und sehr starken Bahnkrümmungen versagt. Vielleicht ist
dieses Versagen eine volle Analogie zum Versagen der geometrischen Optik
. . . , das bekanntlich eintritt, sobald die ‘Hindernisse’ oder ‘Öffnungen’ nicht
mehr groß sind gegen die wirkliche, endliche Wellenlänge. . . . Dann gilt es,
eine ‘undulatorische Mechanik’ zu suchen – und der nächstliegende Weg
dazu ist wohl die wellentheoretische Ausgestaltung des Hamiltonschen
Bildes.
Hamilton–Jacobi equation
Hamilton–Jacobi equation −→ guess a wave equation
! δΨ
D̂ a Ψ ≡ −2∇b =0
i δhab
quantum diffeomorphism (momentum) constraint
Problem of time
! Problem of observables
The semiclassical approximation
Wheeler–DeWitt equation and momentum constraints in the
presence of matter (e.g. a scalar field):
4 5
1 δ2 2
√ (3) m
− 2 Gabcd − 2mP h R + Ĥ⊥ |Ψ[hab ]) = 0 ,
2mP δhab δhcd
4 5
2 δ
− hab Dc + Ĥm
a |Ψ[hab ]) = 0
i δhbc
1 ∂2 1 δ2
− ↔ − 2 Gabcd ,
2M ∂Q2 2mP δhab δhcd
√
V (Q) ↔ −2m2P h (3)R ,
h(q, Q) ↔ Ĥm
⊥ ,
Ψ(q, Q) ↔ |Ψ[hab ]) .
A quantum-mechanical model
HΨ(q, Q) = EΨ(q, Q)
with
!2 ∂ 2
H=− + V (Q) + h(q, Q)
2M ∂Q2
6
Ansatz : Ψ(q, Q) = χn (Q)ψn (q, Q)
n
Pn2
Hcl ≡ + V (Q) + En (Q) = E
2M
(in gravity: semiclassical Einstein equations)
One can now introduce a time coordinate tn
(“WKB time”) via the Hamilton equations of
motion for the “heavy” part,
d ∂ ∂
Pn = − Hcl = − (V (Q) + En (Q)) ,
dtn ∂Q ∂Q
d ∂ Pn
Q = Hcl =
dtn ∂Pn M
2
! Neglect ∂∂Qχ2n
(assume slow variation of ψn with respect to Q);
! use the definition of WKB time in the last term:
!2 ∂χn ∂ψn ∂Sn ∂ψn ∂ψn
− ≈ −i! ≡ −i!
M χn ∂Q ∂Q ∂Q ∂Q ∂tn
∂ψ
i! = hψ
∂t
cf. Mott (1931)
Back to quantum gravity
Ansatz:
2
|Ψ[hab ]) = C[hab ]eimP S[hab] |ψ[hab ])
∂
i! |ψ(t)) = Ĥ m |ψ(t))
∂t 1 > ?
m
Ĥ ≡ d3 x N (x)Ĥm a m
⊥ (x) + N (x)Ĥ a (x)
2G!2 HdS
6
δ( ≈ −
3(1440)2 π 3 c8
(C. K. 1996)
Observations
P3
P1
S P2 P4
Quantization of area:
6 @
2
Â(S)ΨS [A] = 8πβlP jP (jP + 1)ΨS [A]
P ∈S∩S
String theory
Important properties:
1
Z= DXDh e−S/!
! l2
∆x ≥ + s ∆p
∆p !
Problems
SBH = kB 4lA2
P
CMS detector
" #
∂2 ∂2 2 2
Ĥψ(a, χ) ≡ (−Ha + Hχ )ψ ≡ − − a + χ ψ=0
∂a2 ∂χ2
C. K. (1990)
Validity of Semiclassical Approximation?
a→∞
Closed universe: ‘Final condition’ ψ −→ 0
∂ψn
i! ≈ Hn ψn
∂t
with
∂
≡ ∇S0 · ∇
∂t
t: ‘WKB time’ – controls the dynamics in this approximation
Decoherence
Irreversible emergence of classical properties through the
unavoidable interaction with the environment (irrelevant
degrees of freedom)
t t t
(a)
(b) (c)
1 4
V(z)
2 3
|1>
3 2
1 |2>
4
The modes for the inflaton field and the gravitons evolve into a
‘squeezed quantum state’ during inflation (r > 100)
td ∼ HI−1 ∼ 10−34 s
B. S. DeWitt 1967:
Everett’s view of the world is a very natural one to adopt in the
quantum theory of gravity, where one is accustomed to speak
without embarassment of the ‘wave function of the universe.’ It
is possible that Everett’s view is not only natural but essential.
No-boundary proposal
Time t
Imaginary
Time τ
τ=0
6 1
Ψ[hab , Φ, Σ] = ν(M) DgDΦ e−SE [gµν ,Φ]
M M
Problems with the no-boundary proposal
E F
! The wave function should obey Ψ (3)G = 0 for all singular
three-geometries (3)G (DeWitt 1967)
! Tunnelling Condition: Only outgoing modes near singular
boundaries of superspace (Vilenkin 1982); e.g.
„ « „ «
1 i
ψT ∝ (a2 V (φ)−1)−1/4 exp − exp − (a2 V (φ) − 1)3/2
3V (φ) 3V (φ)
prediction of inflation?
Criteria for quantum avoidance of singularities
No general agreement!
0.8
10
0.7
0.6
5
0.5
0.4
φ
0 0.3
0.2
-5 0.1
0
2
-10 4
6 10
τ 5
8
-15
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 10 -5
a 12 -10
φ
Penrose (1981):
Entropy of the observed part of the Universe is maximal if all its
mass is in one black hole; the probability for our Universe would
then be (updated version from C.K. arXiv:0910.5836)
G H
exp kSB
2 3
exp 3.1 × 10104 2 3
G H∼ 121
≈ exp −1.8 × 10121
exp Smax exp (1.8 × 10 )
kB
Arrow of time from quantum cosmology
Hawking radiation
black
holes
Big Bang
Radius zero
black holes
Hawking radiation
maximal extension
Hawking radiation
Radius zero