Lorentzian and Euclidean quantum gravity : analytical and numerical results
Publication date
2000-01-27
Authors
Ambjørn, J.
Jurkiewicz, J.
Loll, R.
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Document Type
Preprint
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Abstract
We review some recent attempts to extract information about
the nature of quantum gravity, with and without matter, by quantum field
theoretical methods. More specifically, we work within a covariant lattice
approach where the individual space-time geometries are constructed from
fundamental simplicial building blocks, and the path integral over geometries
is approximated by summing over a class of piece-wise linear geometries.
This method of “dynamical triangulations” is very powerful in 2d,
where the regularized theory can be solved explicitly, and gives us more insights
into the quantum nature of 2d space-time than continuum methods
are presently able to provide. It also allows us to establish an explicit relation
between the Lorentzian- and Euclidean-signature quantum theories.
Analogous regularized gravitational models can be set up in higher dimensions.
Some analytic tools exist to study their state sums, but, unlike in
2d, no complete analytic solutions have yet been constructed. However, a great advantage of our approach is the fact that it is well-suited for numerical
simulations. In the second part of this review we describe the relevant
Monte Carlo techniques, as well as some of the physical results that have
been obtained from the simulations of Euclidean gravity. We also explain
why the Lorentzian version of dynamical triangulations is a promising candidate
for a non-perturbative theory of quantum gravity.