1. Introduction
The conceptual framework of general relativity (GR) has provided us with the richest example of the interplay between geometry and physics to date. On the other hand, the mathematical structure of Einstein’s equations is complicated: they constitute a set of non-linear partial differential equations that are highly non-polynomial in the basic variable—the space-time metric. It is desirable both from the point of view of classical general relativity, as well as for progress in non-perturbative quantum gravity, to deepen our structural understanding of these equations. In this paper, we pursue this goal in the context of the Hamiltonian formulation of general relativity. As is well-known, in this formulation Einstein’s equations split into two sets: the gravitational constraints which are conditions on the initial data on a Cauchy slice, and the evolution equations which describe how the data evolve off the Cauchy slice with respect to any given choice of time. Our new results pertain to the evolution equations.
In most of this paper, we will restrict ourselves to vacuum GR where issues of central interest to our discussion reside. We use a parameter that takes the value 1 while referring to the Riemannian signature and −1 while referring to the Lorentzian signature. Finally, a tilde will denote a field with density weight 1 and an under-tilde, of −1. (However, as a concession to notational simplicity, we make an exception and omit the tildes on the square-root of the determinant of the metric which has density weight 1, and its inverse which has density weight-1.)
Let us begin by briefly recalling the geometrodynamical phase space framework, introduced by Arnowitt, Deser and Misner (ADM) (see, e.g., Reference [
1]). The canonically conjugate variables consist of a positive definite metric
on a spatial 3-manifold
that serves as the configuration variable, and its conjugate momentum is a symmetric tensor density
of weight 1 on
, both in the Lorentzian (−,+,+,+) and Riemannian (+,+,+,+) signature:
When equations of motion hold,
encodes the extrinsic curvature
of
via
where
denotes the square root of the determinant of
and
. The phase space variables
are subject to a set of 4 first class constraints:
where
D is the torsion-free derivative operator compatible with
; and
, the scalar curvature of the metric
. In the standard terminology they are, respectively, the diffeomorphism and the Hamiltonian constraints. As in any generally covariant theory, they are intertwined with dynamics: the Hamiltonian generating evolution equations is a linear combination of constraints. The action of the diffeomorphism constraint
is simple: When smeared with a shift vector field
, it generates the infinitesimal canonical transformations
where, as usual,
denotes the Lie derivative with respect to
. By contrast, because of the presence of the determinant factors and the Ricci scalar
in the Hamiltonian constraint, the evolution equations it generates are highly non-polynomial in the fundamental canonical variables
, and do not admit a natural geometric interpretation (see Equation (
59)). Our goal is to reformulate the Hamiltonian framework in such a way that time evolution becomes simple, with a transparent geometric interpretation analogous to that of (
3).
A natural starting point towards this goal is to seek alternate canonical variables in terms of which the constraint and evolution equations simplify. Such a reformulation has been available in the literature for some quite time now: the
connection-dynamics framework [
2,
3,
4]. It served two purposes. First, the constraint and evolution equations simplified enormously in that they became low order polynomials in the fundamental canonical variables. Second, GR was brought closer to gauge theories that describe the other three fundamental interactions. Specifically, gravitational issues could be investigated using the conceptual setting and well developed techniques of gauge theories.
Let us then start ab-initio, introduce a background independent
gauge theory without any reference to gravity, and summarize its relation to geometrodynamics at the end. Thus, now the configuration variable is a connection 1-form
on a 3-manifold
that takes values in the Lie-algebra
of
, (so that the index
i refers to
). Its conjugate momentum is an
-valued electric field
on
(with density weight 1, since there is no background metric). Although the phase space is the same as
of the
Yang-Mills (YM) theory in Minkowski space, there is a key difference in the formulation of dynamics since the space-time metric is not given a priori but is rather the end-product of dynamics. Thus, in stark contrast to the YM theory, the constraints and evolution equations that
and
are now subject to, cannot involve a pre-specified space-time metric. What are the simplest gauge covariant equations one can construct from this canonical pair
without reference to any background field? These are:
where
is the gauge covariant derivative operator defined by
;
its curvature; and
the structure constants of
. The first equation is at most linear in each of the canonical variables; the second is linear in
and at most quadratic in
; and the third is at most quadratic in each variable. Thus all equations are low order polynomials. Since, by construction, they do not involve any time derivatives, they serve as constraint equations on the gauge theory phase space. Note that the first equation in (
4) is the familiar Gauss constraint on
that generates local gauge transformations. The second and third are new from the gauge theory perspective. Interestingly, on
the full set turns out to be of first class in the Dirac classification. Since we have 9 configuration variables
per point of
and 7 constraints, we have the kinematics of a
background independent gauge theory with
precisely 2 degrees of freedom. One may therefore hope that this is just a reformulation of GR in a gauge theory disguise.
1This expectation is correct. The detailed dictionary between the gauge theory and geometrodynamics is given in
Section 2. The correspondence enables us to recast the second and the third constraints in (
4) in the language of geometrodynamics: Once the Gauss constraint is satisfied, they turn out to be precisely the diffeomorphism and Hamiltonian constraints (
2)! Thus, if we think of the gauge theory phase space as primary, then the constraints of GR are the simplest low order polynomials in the basic canonical variables that can be written down without reference to a background field. Since evolution equations are obtained by taking the Poisson brackets of the canonical variables with constraints, they also contain only low order polynomials in the new canonical pair. These features brought out the fact that gravitational dynamics simplifies greatly if one adopts a gauge theory perspective in analyzing Einstein’s theory [
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8]. Therefore the connection-dynamics formulation lies at the foundation of Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG).
There is an additional feature of this reformulation that was also noted in the early days but has not been directly used. Let us consider the fundamental, spin
representation of
to express the constraints. Then the second and the third of the constraints in (
4) naturally blend together into a single equation (see, e.g., Reference [
4], page 85)
where the indices
refer to
spinors. The trace-free part of this unified constraint is precisely the second of Equation (
4)—(essentially) the diffeomorphism constraint—and the trace-free part, the third—(essentially) the Hamiltonian constraint. Thus the framework naturally combines the diffeomorphism and the Hamiltonian constraints of GR into a single, simple expression.
2 This observation suggests that it should be possible to blend the canonical transformation generated by the two constraints as well. In particular, although the intuition shaped by the ADM framework has led us to consider ‘time-evolution’ to be on a
very different footing from ‘space-evolution’ (
3), the fusion (
5) of their generators suggests that the ‘time’ evolution should also admit a natural geometric interpretation analogous to the ‘space-evolution’ (
3).
In this paper we will show that this expectation is borne out in detail in the following sense:
Time evolution will emerge as a gauge covariant generalization of the Lie derivative of the canonical variables, along a
spatial shift vector field
constructed from the lapse function
. This novel shift is a ‘q-number’ vector field in the sense that it depends on the momentum variable, the YM electric field
. We will therefore refer to it as the
electric shift. This reformulation of the action of the Hamiltonian constraint provides new conceptual insights already at the classical level. Furthermore, analysis of certain model systems that mimic GR [
9,
10,
11,
12,
13] indicates that these novel shift vector fields are likely to play a role in constructing a more satisfactory Hamiltonian constraint operator in LQG. Taken together, these considerations suggest a new avenue to the problem of obtaining an anomaly-free realization of the constraint algebra in quantum theory that faithfully mirrors the structure of its classical counterpart [
14].
The paper is organized as follows. In
Section 2 we fix the notation and recall how geometrodynamics emerges from the YM phase space. The section contains the basic equations from the connection formulation of GR that will be used in the rest of the paper. In
Section 3 we introduce the notion of a
generalized gauge covariant Lie derivative, now associated with vector fields that also carry
internal indices, such as the electric shift
. We use it in
Section 4 to bring out a new geometrical structure that underlies the dynamics of GR. Our central result recasts ‘time evolution’ in terms of ‘space-evolution’ along electric shifts
in both Riemannian and Lorentzian signatures. The existing literature in Hamiltonian LQG generally follows the original derivation of connection variables [
3] and discusses the canonical transformations generated by constraints using ordinary Lie derivatives. Then the actions of the diffeomorphism and Hamiltonian constraints appear quite distinct. The use of generalized gauge covariant Lie derivatives along electric shifts brings out the conceptual unity underlying the two actions. Consequently, the derivation of the Poisson algebra of constraints simplifies significantly. This formulation also shows the sense in which dynamics of full GR is a natural, gauge invariant generalization of the much simpler equations governing dynamics of (anti)self-dual, ‘integrable’ sector. In
Section 5, we first summarize the main results and then put them in a broader context.
Appendix A provides further details on generalized, gauge covariant Lie derivatives, using the algebraic and operational approach to differential geometry due to Penrose [
15,
16] and Geroch [
17] that puts to the forefront properties of differential operations that are used repeatedly in practice.
The interplay between YM theory and GR has experienced a renaissance recently, thanks to the astute observation that the perturbative scattering amplitudes of classical GR can be expressed using “double copy” relations between the gauge theory and gravitational amplitudes (for a review, see Reference [
18]). Because of the focus on on-shell quantities, manifest gauge covariance plays an important role in that analysis. At a perturbative level, satisfaction of the Jacobi identity by the so-called kinematical factors that appear in the expression of scattering amplitudes implies that the gravitational amplitudes are invariant under linearized diffeomorphisms. The reformulation of
non-perturbative Einstein dynamics of this paper may help clarify the ‘origin’ of this connection, since YM kinematics and strong emphasis on gauge covariance play a central role in our analysis. On the gravitational phenomenology side, the double copy framework provides new approximation methods for analyzing gravitational waves in binary coalescence of compact objects (see, e.g., Reference [
19]). In particular, these methods have been used to calculate the Hamiltonians used in the Post-Newtonian approximation. Because ours is a Hamiltonian approach, it could provide a more direct route. Therefore, to improve accessibility to the double copy community, we have made a special effort to make the presentation reasonably self-contained at the cost of repeating some discussion that the LQG community is quite familiar with. Also, since the compactness and simplicity of time-evolution in the final result is quite surprising even from the LQG perspective, we present the intermediate steps in detail.
2. From the YM Phase Space to Geometrodynamics
The primary focus of this paper is on time-evolution of gravitational fields in 4-dimensional spacetimes
of GR with topology
. We will assume that the 3-manifold
is oriented. For simplicity of presentation, in the main text we will also assume that
is compact without boundary. In the asymptotically flat case, the Hamiltonians generating ‘space’ and ‘time’ evolution acquire surface terms in addition to the constraints, but this difference is not relevant for the main point under discussion in this paper. We will see in
Section 4.3 that the principal results hold also in that case. Finally, we will mostly restrict ourselves to vacuum GR but briefly comment on inclusion of a scalar field as the source in
Section 4.3.
In this section we fix notation and sketch the steps that enable one to regard GR as the simplest background independent gauge theory. Although the metric and the associated Riemannian geometry is invaluable in the classical domain, from this new perspective they are completely absent to begin with, and can be regarded as secondary notions that can be introduced at the end. The LQG community is very familiar with the technical arguments that lead to this paradigm shift [
2,
3,
5,
6,
7]. However, one often starts from geometrodynamics and then passes to the gauge theory framework (see, e.g., References [
4,
20,
21] and Chapter 1 in Reference [
8]). Consequently, the Riemannian structures used in geometrodynamics are at the forefront in the beginning, and at the back of one’s mind even when one arrives to the gauge theory framework. Here we adopt the opposite viewpoint and start with the
YM phase space, without
any reference to a spacetime metric or gravity. While this reversal is technically rather straightforward, the concepts and mathematical tools it puts at the forefront suggest new directions that, in turn, bring out new structures. As explained in
Section 1 the final result is an unforeseen perspective on time evolution in GR.
Let us then start with an
gauge theory. Since
bundles over 3-manifolds
are trivial, they admit global cross-sections which are naturally isomorphic with
. Therefore, any
connection
can be regarded as acting on fields
on
whose indices take values in
, that is, have only internal indices. We will restrict ourselves to those
that are compatible with the Cartan-Killing metric
on
and the structure constants
of
, both regarded as fields on
:
Consequently one can freely raise and lower internal indices of fields before or after the derivative operator
acts on them. As usual, curvature of
will be denoted by
:
Note that, although we will describe Einstein dynamics, this formulation does not need a metric tensor on , or the derivative operator D compatible with it, while both are omnipresent in equations of geometrodynamics. Indeed, one does not need any specific derivative operator on tensor fields. In intermediate steps of calculations, it is often convenient to extend the action of to tensor indices. However, throughout our analysis one can extend it using any torsion-free derivative operator. It is generally simplest—although by no means necessary—to extend the action of using a flat derivative operator on tensor indices and denote this extension by ∂. We will generally adopt this extension in the intermediate calculations.
Fix any flat connection—that is, with zero curvature both on tensor and internal indices—and denote it also by
∂. Then since bundles under consideration are trivial, we can express the action of
via a globally defined connection 1-form
on
:
As explained in
Section 1, in the gauge theory formulation, the configuration variable is an
connection 1-form
on
and its canonical momentum is the electric field
, a vector density of weight 1 that also takes values in
. Thus, the Poisson brackets are:
We begin by considering the simplest gauge covariant functions on this phase space
and impose them as constraints, as in (
4):
(The factor of
in the expression of
is for later convenience; see
Section 4.2.) As we noted in
Section 1, the first set,
, is the Gauss constraint and the canonical transformations it generates are the standard internal
gauge rotations of the YM theory. The second and the third set,
are called the
vector and
scalar constraint; they are new from the gauge theory perspective. As noted in
Section 1, one can verify that this is a system of 7 first class constraints à la Dirac. Since we are interested in a background independent theory, we are led to introduce a linear combination of the three constraints as the Hamiltonian of the theory:
using Lagrange multipliers
and
. The vector field
is called the
shift, and
, a scalar density of weight
is called the
lapse in this framework. Note that because the integrand has density weight 1, the integral is well defined without reference to a background volume element. Note also that the Hamiltonian is a low order polynomial in the basic canonical pair
. Therefore, the equations of motion it generates are gauge covariant and simple (see
Section 4.1). This is our background independent gauge theory with a set of first class constraints and precisely two true degrees of freedom. Interestingly this theory is completely equivalent to geometrodynamics discussed in
Section 1 with an appropriate dictionary.
The dictionary is the following. Let us first consider the recovery of Riemannian GR with signature +,+,+,+ from the gauge theory framework. Each electric field provides a map from fields taking values in to vector fields (with density weight 1) on : . Let us restrict ourselves to the generic case when the map is 1–1. Then defines a +,+,+ metric on via: where is the determinant of .
3 Thus, we have recovered the configuration variable
of geometrodynamics. Through this dictionary, the electric field
acquires a dual interpretation as an orthonormal triad (with density weight 1) for the metric
. Next, to understand the interpretation of the gauge theory connection
in terms of geometrodynamical fields, let us begin by noting that
admits a unique derivative operator
that acts on both tensor and internal indices and annihilates
, that is, satisfies
. Let us focus on its action on fields with only internal indices. Then,
admits a connection 1-form
and a 1-form
which take values in
such that
for all
. Therefore,
. The field
is essentially the extrinsic curvature
of geometrodynamics. More precisely,
Recall that
determines the momentum
conjugate to
via
. Thus, in the Riemannian sector a pair
in
, (where
is non-degenerate) determines the pair
via
This completes the dictionary. We will see in
Section 4.2 that
satisfy the geometrodynamical constraints and evolution equations in the Riemannian signature if
satisfy the constraints (
10) and the evolution equations generated by the Hamiltonian (
11). Thus, the map (
14) provides us with a projection from the pairs
on
to the pairs
of the geometrodynamical phase space
that
- (i)
preserves the Poisson brackets (up to an overall constant);
- (ii)
maps the constraint surface on to the constraint surface of ; and,
- (iii)
sends dynamical trajectories on the constraint surface of to dynamical trajectories on the constraint surface of .
If
is a 4-d solution of Einstein’s equation with initial data
on
, then
turns out to have a natural geometrical interpretation: It is the pull-back of the self-dual part of the space-time connection that parallel transports unprimed spinors. (
is the pull-back to
of the self-dual part of the full space-time connection on internal indices.) Therefore, as we will see in
Section 4.3, the gauge theory formulation is particularly well suited to describe Einstein dynamics in the anti self-dual and self-dual sectors. Note, however, that the above Hamiltonian description on
captures
full Riemannian GR; not just that of its (anti) self-dual sector.
This may seem surprising at first since, whereas all equations on
are low order polynomials in basic variables, those on
have a complicated non-polynomial dependence. But this is simply because
are complicated, non-polynomial functions of
. Given that electroweak and strong interactions are described by gauge theories, it is interesting that equations of GR simplify considerably when the theory is also recast as a gauge theory—but now background independent, by necessity—regarding Riemannian geometry as ‘emergent’. Finally, note that (
10) and the evolution equations generated by the Hamiltonian of Equation (
11) provide a slight generalization of Einstein’s equations because they continue to be valid even when
fails to be 1–1, that is,
becomes degenerate. We will return to this point in
Section 5.
Let us now consider Lorentzian general relativity. In the Riemannian signature, equations simplified because the configuration variable
turned out have the interpretation of (the pull-back to
of) the self-dual part of the spacetime connection in the final solution. The same is true in the Lorentzian signature. However, now the self-dual part of the connection is complex. Therefore we have to consider a complexification
of
. The basic Poisson-bracket (
9) is the same
given by the natural extension of the symplectic structure on
to
, and the constraints continue to be given by (
10). Since the Hamiltonian is a linear combination of these constraints, the equations of motion are also unchanged from those in the Riemannian case, but now refer to complex-valued fields
. (The explicit form of the dynamical equations is given in
Section 4.1). It is clear from our discussion above that the Riemannian theory is recovered simply by restricting oneself to the real section
of
on which
are both real-valued.
The real, Lorentzian phase space
of general relativity, on the other hand, corresponds to another ‘real’ section of
that is more subtle to specify. First, it is
—rather than the momentum
—that has the interpretation of the density-weighted orthonormal triad: The positive definite 3-metric on
is now given by
. To spell out the restriction on
, let us,
as before, denote the derivative operator that annihilates
(and hence also
) by
, and define the connection 1-form
and the
-valued 1-form
via:
On the Lorentzian section, it is that is real-valued so that is real. As in the Riemannian case, on dynamical trajectories has the interpretation of the extrinsic curvature. To summarize, the real Lorentzian section of is the one on which the pair of fields is real modulo gauge rotations—that is, their imaginary parts, if any, are pure gauge in the sense that they can be can be removed by the same internal rotation.
The dynamical flow on
(discussed in
Section 4.1) is tangential to this section (just as it is to the Riemannian section
on which
and
are real). The dictionary is:
We will see in
Section 4.2 that this map provides us with a projection from the pairs
in
to the pairs
of the Lorentzian geometrodynamical phase space
that has the same three properties as in the Riemannian case: It
- (i)
preserves the Poisson brackets (up to an overall constant);
- (ii)
maps the constraint surface on to the constraint surface of ; and,
- (iii)
sends dynamical trajectories on the constraint surface of to dynamical trajectories on the constraint surface of .
While in the Riemannian sector the self-dual connection is given by (with real), in the geometrodynamical variables, Lorentzian sector it is given (with real).
From the geometrodynamical perspective, as noted in (section 2 of chapter 8 of) [
4] the real Lorentzian section of the complexified phase space is the one on which the metric and the extrinsic curvature are real. This sector is recovered from the projection map by restricting ourselves to the subspace of
on which
using equations of motion generated by the Hamiltonian
discussed in
Section 4.1 (with
real, and, say,
). These conditions ensure that the initial data in geometrodynamics are real. Evolution equations on the YM phase space preserve these reality conditions. Note that these ‘Lorentzian reality conditions’ are also low order-polynomials in
.
To summarize, one can recover GR from a natural background independent gauge theory. (Results presented in this section have been extended to include the fields—scalar, Dirac and YM—that feature in the standard model [
4,
22].) This procedure has the advantage that it leads to an enormous simplification of the constraint as well as evolution equations. In this formulation, there is no mention of a metric, its derivative operator that acts on tensor fields, or the extrinsic curvature, all of which are ubiquitous in the equations of geometrodynamics. The Riemannian/pseudo-Riemannian geometry that underlies GR can be thought of as a secondary, emergent structure, albeit one that plays a central role both in classical GR, as well as in quantum field theory on a background space-time.
Remark 1. In our dictionary, the Poisson bracket between the geometrodynamical variables is given by . The factor of 2 comes from the fact that the triads are ‘square roots’ of the metric, and the ϵ comes from the fact that they directly determine the contravariant rather than the covariant metric, together with the ϵ in the relation between the momentum and the extrinsic curvature.
Remark 2. In much of the LQG literature, the Poisson bracket in the Lorentzian sector has an i on the right side. Then the Riemannian and Lorentzian phase spaces, and do not arise as (appropriately defined) ‘real’ sections of a single
gauge theory phase space .
In the present formulation they do. Technically, this point is trivial but conceptually it is a genuine advantage to have both sectors embedded in the same phase space. As we will see in Section 4.2, thanks to this feature, GR dynamics in both
signatures gets encoded in a single Hamiltonian on the gauge theory phase space. 5. Discussion
We will first summarize the main results and then make a number of remarks to put them in a broader perspective.
The point of departure of our investigation is the old observation that GR can be recovered from a background independent gauge theory that, to begin with, makes no reference to a metric or its curvature. While our discussion was based on the Hamiltonian perspective of References [
2,
3], the observation also holds from a 4-dimensional space-time perspective [
5,
6,
7]. In this framework, the gauge theory concepts—particularly
connections, their curvature and holonomies—are at forefront. The emphasis is on fields with internal indices. Indeed, the theory does not even need a specific derivative operator on tensor indices! The (pseudo)Riemannian metric, its causal structure, derivative operator and curvature, are of course ubiquitous in GR and play a central role in classical physics. However, from the gauge theory perspective they are all ‘emergent’ rather than primary notions. This perspective lies at the heart of LQG: The viewpoint is that the gauge theory framework—together with the associated rich set of techniques, particularly ‘Wilson loops’—offers a better starting point for a background independent, non-perturbative approach to quantum gravity (see, e.g., References [
8,
20,
21,
35]).
The LQG community is therefore very familiar with the ‘connection-dynamics’ framework used in this paper. However, as noted in
Section 1 one typically arrives at it starting from the metric and associated structures, whence the gauge theory perspective is often ‘diluted’. For example, one often uses the Poisson brackets
in the Riemannian theory and
in the Lorentzian, and the expression of constraints often contain the signature dependent factors. In this paper, by contrast, both sectors arose as two ‘real sections’ of the fixed gauge theory phase space
. Poisson brackets, constraints, and equations of motion were specified once and for all on full
without any signature dependent factors. Yet, restriction to the Riemannian ‘real section’ yielded the constraints and equations of motion of Riemannian geometrodynamics, and the restriction to the Lorentzian ‘real section’ yielded the constraints and equations of motion of Lorentzian geometrodynamics.
The more significant new element is that the ‘purer’ gauge theory perspective with its emphasis on gauge covariance led us to a pleasing ‘blending’ of the vector and the scalar constraints and ‘time’ and ‘space’ evolutions. Let us summarize how this rather unexpected unification came about. To begin with, the classical Hamiltonian theory has 7 first class constraints. The canonical transformations generated by six of them—the Gauss and the vector constraints—have a natural geometrical interpretation in terms of the Lie algebra generated by infinitesimal gauge rotations and infinitesimal diffeomorphisms generated by vector fields on the 3-manifold
. However, the crux of dynamics lies in the seventh, scalar constraint. While canonical transformation it generates is also algebraically simple in the gauge theory formulation that has been used in LQG, its ‘structural’ meaning had remained obscure. Our principal result is that: (i) this canonical transformation also has a simple geometrical meaning as a
generalized gauge covariant (GGC)
Lie derivative; (ii) the Lie derivative in question is along
spatial ‘electric shifts’, whence ‘time evolution’ is cast as a suitable ‘space evolution’; and (iii) the GGC Lie derivatives form an infinite dimensional Lie algebra just as the gauge covariant (GC) Lie derivatives do, albeit it is a much larger, graded Lie algebra (see below). This interpretation of the dynamics is rooted in the gauge theory perspective, particularly the requirement of gauge covariance on geometrical operations such as Lie derivatives. This coming together of the two constraints and their actions is perhaps as clear a manifestation of the underlying 4-dimensional covariance of the theory as we can hope for, within the realm of Hamiltonian methods.
Thus use the of electric shift leads to a conceptual shift in the description of dynamics in the Hamiltonian perspective. Now, in the LQG literature, the connection-dynamics formulation has been extended to include supergravity [
36,
37]. It would be interesting to investigate if the use of GGC Lie derivatives and electric-shifts also simplifies the dynamics there.
The interpretation provides a new perspective on the structure of Einstein’s equations. We presented two examples. First, we now have a unified picture of the smeared scalar and vector constraints—the former has the same form as the latter but the smearing field is a ‘q-number electric shift’ rather than a c-number shift . Consequently the constraint algebra is streamlined—it uses essentially the same operations for both vector and scalar constraints, resulting in a clear underlying unity in the nature of the ‘shift vector’ that appears in the Poisson bracket of two vector constraints smeared with shifts and , and the shift vector that appears in the Poisson bracket of two scalar constraints smeared with electric shifts and . This result also illuminates ‘origin’ of the -dependent structure functions in the Poisson algebra of geometrodynamics: they arise simply because one expands out . The reason why we have a structure function—rather than a structure constant—is simply that the scalar constraints are smeared with ‘electric shifts’ that are ‘q-number’ vector fields, while the vector constraints are smeared with c-number vector fields .
Our second illustration used the ‘integrable’ half-flat sectors of GR [
29,
30,
31]. That Einstein’s equations assume the extremely simple form (
63) in the half-flat sector, and are intertwined with the group of volume preserving diffeomorphisms, has been known for quite some time [
33]. Our recasting the scalar constraint of full GR as a vector constraint with an ‘electric shift’ brought out the precise sense in which these features descend directly from full GR: in the half flat sector, the gauge covariant
can be replaced by a flat
∂ whence the GGC Lie derivative between the three electric lapse fields
becomes ordinary Lie derivative. Thus, the full GR equations can be regarded as a natural gauge covariant generalization of those in the much simpler, half-flat sector. Now, it has been known for some time that the half-flat solutions to Einstein’s equations are in 1–1 correspondence with hyperkähler manifolds [
38]. It would be interesting to see if the notion of GGC Lie derivatives also sheds direct light on the ‘origin’ of this rich structure. From the perspective of our gauge theory reformulation, can dynamics of full GR also be regarded as encoding a natural ‘gauge covariant extension’ of hyperkähler structures in the half flat sector?
Another set of mathematical issues that may lead to new insights and applications arises from the notion of a GGC Lie derivative. The usual Lie derivative of two vector fields is of course just another vector field, and vector fields form a Lie algebra under this operation. By contrast, the ‘electric shift’
is a vector field that takes values in
. Therefore, the GGC Lie derivative
carries two internal indices rather than one.
4 Consequently, the calculation of commutators leads one to consider GGC Lie derivatives by vector fields
with an arbitrary number of internal indices. These fields have the structure of a graded vector space. As
Appendix A shows, GGC Lie derivative they generate, together with local gauge transformations, form a graded Lie algebra. Therefore, one would expect that there is a rich underlying mathematical structure with an infinite dimensional group whose action has a geometrical interpretation. Let us make a small detour to explain this point. As we saw in
Section 3.1, the gauge covariant (GC) Lie derivatives generated by ordinary vector fields do not close under commutator. However, as we recall in
Appendix A.2, together with local gauge transformations they do form an infinite dimensional Lie algebra. This is the Lie algebra of the semi-direct product of the group of local gauge transformations with the group of diffeomorphisms on
. Furthermore, we can realize this action geometrically as the group of structure preserving diffeomorphisms on
bundles over
[
23,
24]. Is there an analogous interpretation of the action of GGC Lie derivatives? If so, what is the bundle? Do we need to have the infinite dimensional, graded vector space of all tensors only with internal indices as fibers over
? Perhaps one could proceed in the spirit of the Gel’fand theory in which geometrical notions are recovered from suitable algebraic ones—for example, the manifold is recovered knowing only its ring of regular functions; regular vector fields from derivations on the given ring; regular forms from linear mappings from the space of regular vector fields to regular functions; and so forth. We introduced the GGC Lie derivative in terms of its action on the graded algebra of fields with internal indices, but they could perhaps be realized as geometric operations (say diffeomorphisms) on a suitable (possibly infinite dimensional) manifold. Can one reconstruct this manifold, say along the lines of the Gel’fand theory? These issues are interesting in themselves from a mathematical physics perspective. In addition, their resolution may lead to a deeper understanding of new infinite dimensional groups underlying GR which may, for example, very significantly broaden the notion of symmetries and associated conserved charges.
We will conclude with three remarks that elucidate different aspects of the gauge theory formulation of gravitational dynamics presented in this paper.
1. The
Belinskii Khalatnikov Lifshitz conjecture [39]: In the gauge theory phase space, we saw that ‘time’ derivatives of the basic canonical pair
can be represented by GGC Lie derivatives along
spatial directions. At first sight, this result may seem to negate the BKL conjecture which posits that time derivatives dominate over space derivatives near space-like singularities. However, there is no tension what so ever: We showed in
Section 4.2 that the evolution equations for
imply those for the geometrodynamical variables
—the 3-metric and the extrinsic curvature—that have been used to display the BKL behavior in various contexts (see, e.g., Reference [
40]). The point is that the BKL conjecture refers to derivatives of the metric while, when translated to the geometrodynamical variables, the GGC Lie derivative involves also the extrinsic curvature through the connection
that features in the GC derivative operator
.
In fact there is a useful formulation of the BKL conjecture that not only uses the gauge theory perspective of this paper but, in a sense, takes it to the extreme [
41,
42]. It leads to new insights into space-like singularities of GR, beyond the BKL conjecture. The key step is to eliminate the vector index on the connection
by contracting it with the triad to obtain a density
, and recast the constraints and evolution equations of full GR in terms of fields with
only internal indices. Somewhat surprisingly, it is possible to write the constraints and evolution equations using just these fields. Furthermore, in examples that have been studied in the cosmological context, these fields remain
finite at the singularity because the density weighted contravariant triad
goes to zero there. (So, these fields with only internal indices serve the role of the ‘Hubble normalized’ tensor fields used in the standard, geometrodynamical formulation of the BKL conjecture, which admit well-defined limits at cosmological singularities.) Therefore, one can adopt the following strategy to evolve initial data. Begin with smooth data
in the Lorentzian section
, satisfying the constraints, on some initial slice and construct from it
. Then evolve it. In various examples, the evolution does not break down at the singularity, although the curvature of the space-time metric diverges there. Therefore one can ‘evolve’ the (density weighted) fields with only internal indices across the singularity. Once one arrives on the ‘other side’, one can attempt to reconstruct the metric because the evolution equation for
features only those quantities that remain well-behaved even at the time when the metric curvature diverges. (For details, see Reference [
42].)
Thus, because the equations in the gauge theory formulation do not break down even when the covariant metric
becomes degenerate (or even vanishes, as at the big bang), it is possible to provide a specific time evolution across at least some singularities. This unforeseen and exciting possibility arises only because the standard geometrodynamical
tensor fields—the metric
, its curvature
, and the extrinsic curvature
—never feature in any of the equations. They are secondary, to be reconstructed as ‘derived quantities’ starting from the gauge theory primary fields. Of course from the physical perspective of GR, the singularity is not resolved and physical quantities do diverge there. Nonetheless, the procedure offers a natural avenue to continue the evolution across the singularity. A systematic investigation of the class of singularities that can be so ‘transcended’ has not been ubndertaken. The perspective on dynamics presented in this paper is likely to simplify that analysis. Is there a wide class of space-like singularities across which one can evolve using the gauge theory framework?
52. Gauge theory/gravity correspondence: This paper—as well as most of LQG—is based on a formulation of GR as a background independent gauge theory. A gauge theory/gravity correspondence also features, prominently, in string theory through the AdS/CFT proposal. However, there are some deep differences. Here, the correspondence uses a background independent gauge theory in the bulk which is then shown to be equivalent to GR also in the bulk, with or without a cosmological constant . (In this paper we focused on for simplicity.) In the AdS/CFT proposal, by contrast, the correspondence is between a gauge theory on the boundary of an asymptotically anti-de Sitter space-time and a gravity theory in the bulk. The gauge theory generically refers to a fixed background metric (inherited from the AdS boundary), and the gravity theory has to have a negative cosmological constant. Finally, because the proposal is much more general—a large number of boundary gauge theories are considered and the bulk gravity theories vary accordingly—in most cases one has good evidence supporting the correspondence, but not a detailed proof of equivalence as in our case.
Our correspondence is perhaps closer in spirit to that in the ‘double-copy’ literature in which there is a detailed relation between perturbative scattering amplitudes of Yang-Mills theory and those of GR. As in our case, both theories refer to the bulk. Our correspondence emphasizes gauge invariance. The same is true in the double-copy correspondence because of its emphasis on the ‘on-shell’ quantities. The two strategies seem complementary. One is non-perturbative and emphasizes Hamiltonian methods. The other is perturbative and emphasizes the S-matrix. Therefore, it is quite possible that the two will provide each other useful insights and hints as structures that naturally arise in one may be difficult to see in the other. For example, one could develop a perturbative expansion of the equations of motion in our approach—perhaps using an anti-self-dual background. Do they have any of the features seen in the double-copy literature?
Our phase space is the same as in a Yang-Mills theory, and the Gauss and vector constraint parts of our Hamiltonian are the same as in the Yang-Mills theory (because, when appropriately written, they do not refer to a background metric). But the generators of ‘time evolution’ is quite different in our background independent gauge theory from that in Yang-Mills. Ours is background independent, while the Yang-Mills Hamiltonian makes a crucial role of the background metric. Yet, perhaps a systematic perturbative expansion—paying due respect to all the coupling constants involved in the expansion—will reveal that a relation naturally emerges. In this respect the Lie algebra of GGC Lie derivatives (discussed in the
Appendix A) that dominate dynamics in our approach may be helpful to the double-copy investigations, for example, along the lines of References [
34,
43]. If so, our formulation may shed light on the ‘origin’ of the gauge-kinematics duality that plays a central role in the double copy literature, and could also suggest directions to extend the double copy results beyond perturbation theory.
For simplicity, in this paper we set various constants to unity. On the other hand the double copy results involve perturbative expansions. Therefore to facilitate the comparison it is useful to restore the dimensions. Denoting the gauge theory coupling constant by
, setting
and
(but
not setting
since we are comparing classical theories here) we have the following relations:
where the gauge theory connection
has dimensions
and the coupling constant
has dimensions
. On the GR side, we have:
where now the gravity connection
has dimensions
and the coupling constant
has dimensions
. Hence the relation between the connections and their conjugate momenta
are:
Therefore after restoring the dimensionfull constants, the GR Hamiltonian, written as a function on
, is given by
where the fields on the right side refer to gauge theory. Note that the coefficient in front of the crucial scalar constraint is
; so strong coupling in the gauge theory corresponds to weak coupling on the GR side and vice versa. However, one has also to keep in mind, that the scalar part, that is responsible for ‘pure time evolution’, refers to a background independent gauge theory and not to the Yang-Mills Hamiltonian.
3.
Implementation of the Dirac program in canonical gravity: In LQG, quantum dynamics is pursued using two complementary approaches: The spinfoams that use a sum over histories approach and canonical quantum gravity that aims to complete the Dirac program for quantization of constrained systems. Both approaches use the fully developed kinematic framework [
8,
20,
21,
44] which provides a Hilbert space of states and operators using background independent tools from gauge theories. In the canonical approach, in particular, these tools have provided concrete candidates for representing the constraints. The mathematical precision of these results is high in that technical issues related to infinite dimensional spaces have been addressed in detail; the constraints are not the formal, unregulated operators one finds, for example, in the Wheeler-Dewitt theory. In particular, a careful analysis and the application of novel techniques has led to background independent constructions of the scalar constraint operator [
45,
46,
47,
48]. However, the program has remained unsatisfactory in a crucial respect: there is a large freedom in the choice of this operator and so far none leads to a quantum constraint algebra that adequately mirrors the classical Poisson bracket algebra of two scalar constraints.
Therefore, over the last decade, these methods have been further developed and applied to progressively more complicated models that capture more and more aspects of 3 + 1 GR [
10,
11,
12,
13,
49,
50,
51,
52,
53]. In these models classical dynamics can be understood in terms of geometrical deformations of field variables in
space-like directions. Progress in the quantum theory of these models is then greatly facilitated by the incorporation of this property of classical evolution into the quantum dynamics driven by their Hamiltonian constraints. The geometric insights into the action of the scalar constraint of GR, reported in this paper, indicate that the key property of the classical evolution of model systems also holds for gravity. Results obtained in the model systems strongly suggest that the quantum scalar constraint should be constructed by appropriately incorporating this property. In the Riemannian case this has lead to the definition of a scalar constraint operator in which the operator analog of the electric shift introduced in this paper plays a central role. As a result, the action of the scalar constraint operator on quantum states is closely related to spatial diffeomorphisms. An immediate consequence of this geometrical implementation of the constraint action turns out to be the elimination of Perez’s ‘spin ambiguity’ [
54]. Moreover this geometrical understanding of the constraint action points to the exciting possibility of a demonstration of a non-trivial anomaly free quantum constraint algebra that mirrors the classical Poisson algebra.
In the Lorentzian case the geometrical understanding of classical evolution in terms of GGC Lie derivatives with respect to the electric shift is again based on self-dual connections. As noted in
Section 2 and emphasized in Reference [
55], these variables have a natural spacetime interpretation. However, self-dual connections are now complex-valued while the
quantum kinematics of LQG is based on real connections. So far it has proven difficult to generalize the underlying functional analysis to complex connections. Consequently, a direct construction of a mathematically rigorous constraint operator in terms of the electric shift, similar to the Riemannian case, seems out of reach at the moment. The question then is, if there is an indirect way to combine the rigor of the quantum framework based on the real variables together with geometric insights on dynamics afforded by the complex variables. Remarkably, an affirmative answer exists to this question in the form of Thiemann’s ‘complexifier’ [
56]. The complexifier is a complex-valued function on the real phase space that generates a canonical transformation from the real variables (used in the Riemannian self-dual sector
) to the complex variables (used in the Lorentzian self-dual sector
). Since the Riemannian and Lorentzian constraints arise simply as restrictions to the
and
sections of the constraints on the full complex phase space
, they have the same
form. Hence, the canonical transformation generated by the complexifier can be thought of as a generalized Wick transform on
the gauge theory phase space. The proposal is to implement this finite transformation in the quantum theory of the Riemannian sector and thereby directly map physical states in the kernel of the quantum constraints of the Riemannian sector to physical states in kernel of the constraints in the Lorentzian sector [
56,
57,
58].
These three remarks illustrate the implications and possible applications of our main results. There are also other potential applications of this gauge theory formulation of GR. For example, while in the space-time picture, discrete symmetries like parity and time reversal do not admit a natural extension to GR, the gauge theory formulation makes it possible to introduce them because the operations are well defined in the internal space in the covariant version of this framework. Similarly, in geometrodynamics, the scalar constraint has a ‘potential’ term , in addition to the ‘kinetic’ term that is quadratic in momenta , while in connection dynamics it is purely quadratic in momenta. Therefore, there is a precise sense in which dynamics of GR is encoded in the null geodesics of the (contravariant) supermetric on the ‘connection superspace’ (even though it is degenerate at non-generic points of the phase space). These features could be used to gain new insights into the dynamics of GR.