- #1
- 24,775
- 792
I'll risk some projections, so if I'm wrong if anyone wants they can fish up this thread 10 months down the road and say "hah hah it didn't happen".
Anyway it can help to have an idea of what changes to expect----some rough idea of the recent past and the near future. So here' what I think will happen in LQG in 2009.
In 2007 we got a new LQG which is Lorentz covariant and as Rovelli says amounts to a rederivation of the old canonical LQG.
Significant results and features carry over, enough so that it looks to me as if one can pretty much discard old LQG if one wants. For some years the more significant research has been in the area of spinfoam and group field theory. Now there's a new LQG vertex that reproduces all that matters from the old version.
The new LQG is manifestly background independent in the sense that LQG people use this term. It's formulation does not require assuming any background spacetime metric. In fact it is not clear to me that it even requires assuming much if anything about spacetime topology. You seem able to set up the theory without any background continuum at all. A spinfoam is a relational structure defined in a purely combinatorial way. That's my view, maybe someone who knows better will want to correct me on this.
There is an obvious way to add matter fields (to spin networks and spinfoam) which has always been known. The matter fields live on the state of geometry, e.g. the network, and do not need to be defined on a continuum. The best introductory overview talk I know is Rovelli's invited presentation to the Strings 2008 conference. Here's the video and the slides.
http://cdsweb.cern.ch/record/1121957?ln=en
http://indico.cern.ch/getFile.py/access?contribId=30&resId=0&materialId=slides&confId=21917
At this point most of the research effort is focused on showing that the low-energy limit of the new LQG is right. There've been a lot of papers on this advancing piece by piece and case by case. Here's my expectation:
They will have a substantial chunk of that done by September.
The next major agenda item is testability, and to achieve that they need to connect LQG and LQC. That's actually the main thing I'm interested in watching this year. I think the low energy limit is a done deal. So I'm especially on the look-out for papers that bridge the gap between LQG and LQC.
Here's a fore-runner of the effort to do that---a paper by Jon Engle. My expectation is there will be a bunch more papers this year along this line.
Relating loop quantum cosmology to loop quantum gravity: Symmetric sectors and embeddings.
Jonathan Engle (Marseille, CPT & Provence U. & Marseille U., Luminy) . 20pp.
Published in Class.Quant.Grav.24:5777-5802,2007.
e-Print: gr-qc/0701132
Anyway it can help to have an idea of what changes to expect----some rough idea of the recent past and the near future. So here' what I think will happen in LQG in 2009.
In 2007 we got a new LQG which is Lorentz covariant and as Rovelli says amounts to a rederivation of the old canonical LQG.
Significant results and features carry over, enough so that it looks to me as if one can pretty much discard old LQG if one wants. For some years the more significant research has been in the area of spinfoam and group field theory. Now there's a new LQG vertex that reproduces all that matters from the old version.
The new LQG is manifestly background independent in the sense that LQG people use this term. It's formulation does not require assuming any background spacetime metric. In fact it is not clear to me that it even requires assuming much if anything about spacetime topology. You seem able to set up the theory without any background continuum at all. A spinfoam is a relational structure defined in a purely combinatorial way. That's my view, maybe someone who knows better will want to correct me on this.
There is an obvious way to add matter fields (to spin networks and spinfoam) which has always been known. The matter fields live on the state of geometry, e.g. the network, and do not need to be defined on a continuum. The best introductory overview talk I know is Rovelli's invited presentation to the Strings 2008 conference. Here's the video and the slides.
http://cdsweb.cern.ch/record/1121957?ln=en
http://indico.cern.ch/getFile.py/access?contribId=30&resId=0&materialId=slides&confId=21917
At this point most of the research effort is focused on showing that the low-energy limit of the new LQG is right. There've been a lot of papers on this advancing piece by piece and case by case. Here's my expectation:
They will have a substantial chunk of that done by September.
The next major agenda item is testability, and to achieve that they need to connect LQG and LQC. That's actually the main thing I'm interested in watching this year. I think the low energy limit is a done deal. So I'm especially on the look-out for papers that bridge the gap between LQG and LQC.
Here's a fore-runner of the effort to do that---a paper by Jon Engle. My expectation is there will be a bunch more papers this year along this line.
Relating loop quantum cosmology to loop quantum gravity: Symmetric sectors and embeddings.
Jonathan Engle (Marseille, CPT & Provence U. & Marseille U., Luminy) . 20pp.
Published in Class.Quant.Grav.24:5777-5802,2007.
e-Print: gr-qc/0701132
Last edited: