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E-raamat: Quantum Gravity

(Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of Cologne, Germany)
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The search for a quantum theory of the gravitational field is one of the great open problems in theoretical physics. This book presents a self-contained discussion of the concepts, methods and applications that can be expected in such a theory. The two main approaches to its construction -- the direct quantisation of Einstein's general theory of relativity and string theory -- are covered. Whereas the first attempts to construct a viable theory for the gravitational field alone, string theory assumes that a quantum theory of gravity will be achieved only through a unification of all the interactions. However, both employ the general method of quantization of constrained systems, which is described together with illustrative examples relevant for quantum gravity. There is a detailed presentation of the main approaches employed in quantum general relativity: path-integral quantization, the background-field method and canonical quantum gravity in the metric, connection and loop formulations. The discussion of string theory centres around its quantum-gravitational aspects and the comparison with quantum general relativity. Physical applications discussed at length include the quantization of black holes, quantum cosmology, the indications of a discrete structure of spacetime, and the origin of irreversibility.

This third edition contains new chapters or sections on quantum gravity phenomenology, Horava-Lifshitz quantum gravity, analogue gravity, the holographic principle, and affine quantum gravity. It will present updates on loop quantum cosmology, the LTB model, asymptotic safety, and various discrete approaches. The third edition also contains pedagogical extensions throughout the text.

This book will be of interest to researchers and students working in relativity and gravitation, cosmology, quantum field theory and related topics. It will also be of interest to mathematicians and philosophers of science.

Arvustused

The authors own work on the quantisation of black holes and collapsing dust shells is extensively presented. Overall the presentation is balanced and without any exaggerated claims for any one particular approach * David H. Coule, University of Zurich, Contemporary Science *

1 Why quantum gravity?
1(27)
1.1 Quantum theory and the gravitational field
1(14)
1.2 Problems of a fundamentally semiclassical theory
15(9)
1.3 Approaches to quantum gravity
24(4)
2 Covariant approaches to quantum gravity
28(50)
2.1 The concept of a graviton
28(14)
2.2 Path-integral quantization
42(32)
2.3 Quantum supergravity
74(4)
3 Parametrized and relational systems
78(28)
3.1 Particle systems
78(6)
3.2 The free bosonic string
84(6)
3.3 Parametrized field theories
90(6)
3.4 Relational dynamical systems
96(4)
3.5 General remarks on constrained systems
100(6)
4 Hamiltonian formulation of general relativity
106(35)
4.1 The seventh route to geometrodynamics
106(7)
4.2 The 3+1 decomposition of general relativity
113(19)
4.3 Canonical gravity with connections and loops
132(9)
5 Quantum geometrodynamics
141(49)
5.1 The programme of canonical quantization
141(3)
5.2 The problem of time
144(8)
5.3 The geometrodynamical wave function
152(20)
5.4 The semiclassical approximation
172(18)
6 Quantum gravity with connections and loops
190(18)
6.1 Connection and loop variables
190(8)
6.2 Quantization of area
198(5)
6.3 Quantum Hamiltonian constraint
203(5)
7 Quantization of black holes
208(52)
7.1 Black-hole thermodynamics and Hawking radiation
208(13)
7.2 Canonical quantization of the Schwarzschild black hole
221(7)
7.3 Black-hole spectroscopy and entropy
228(5)
7.4 Quantum theory of collapsing dust shells
233(8)
7.5 The Lemaitre-Tolman-Bondi model
241(8)
7.6 The information-loss problem
249(3)
7.7 Primordial black holes
252(8)
8 Quantum cosmology
260(38)
8.1 Minisuperspace models
260(15)
8.2 Introduction of inhomogeneities
275(4)
8.3 Boundary conditions
279(10)
8.4 Loop quantum cosmology
289(5)
8.5 On singularity avoidance
294(4)
9 String theory
298(31)
9.1 General introduction
298(5)
9.2 Quantum-gravitational aspects
303(24)
9.3 String field theory
327(2)
10 Phenomenology, decoherence, and the arrow of time
329(25)
10.1 Quantum-gravity phenomenology
329(2)
10.2 Decoherence and the quantum universe
331(12)
10.3 Arrow of time
343(6)
10.4 Reflections and outlook
349(5)
References 354(35)
Index 389
Claus Kiefer has been a Professor at the Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of Cologne, Germany since 2001.