Explicit calculations at a level similar to homogeneous models, at least for matrix elements of individual operators, are possible in inhomogeneous models, too. In particular, the spherically-symmetric model and cylindrically-symmetric Einstein–Rosen waves are of this class, in which the symmetry or other conditions are strong enough to result in a simple volume operator. In the spherically-symmetric model, this simplification comes from the remaining isotropy subgroup isomorphic to U(1) in generic points, while the Einstein–Rosen model is simplified by polarization conditions that play a role analogous to the diagonalization of homogeneous models. With these models one obtains access to applications for black holes and gravitational waves, but also to inhomogeneities in cosmology. Nevertheless, in spite of significant calculational simplifications, several fundamental issues remain to be resolved, such as a satisfactory quantum treatment of the constraint algebras arising in gravity.
In spherical coordinates ,
,
a spherically-symmetric spatial metric takes the
form
with . This is related to densitized triad components by [294, 199]
which are conjugate to the other basic variables given by the Ashtekar connection component and the
extrinsic curvature component
:
Note that we use the Ashtekar connection for the inhomogeneous direction but extrinsic curvature for
the homogeneous direction along symmetry orbits [109
]. Connection and extrinsic curvature components
for the
-direction are related by
with the spin connection component
with the momentum conjugate to a U(1)-gauge angle
. This is a rather complicated function of
both triad and connection variables such that the volume
would have a
complicated quantization. It would still be possible to compute the full volume spectrum, but with the
disadvantage that volume eigenstates would not be given by triad eigenstates such that computations of
many operators would be complicated [107
]. This can be avoided by using extrinsic curvature, which is
conjugate to the triad component [109
]. Moreover, it is also in accordance with a general scheme to
construct Hamiltonian constraint operators for the full theory as well as symmetric models
[292
, 50
, 68
].
The constraint operator in spherical symmetry is given by
accompanied by the diffeomorphism constraint We have expressed this in terms of Since the Hamiltonian constraint contains the spin connection component given by (41
), which
contains inverse powers of densitized triad components, one can expect effective classical equations with
corrections similar to the Bianchi IX model. Moreover, an inverse of
occurs in (42
). However, the
situation is now much more complicated, since we have a system bound by many constraints with
non-Abelian algebra. Simply replacing the inverse of
or
with a bounded function as before will
change the constraint algebra and thus most likely lead to anomalies. In addition, higher powers of
connection components or extrinsic curvature arise from holonomies and further correction terms from
quantum backreaction. This issue has the potential to shed light on many questions related to the
anomaly issue, as done for inverse corrections in [102
]. It is one of the cases where models that lie
between homogeneous ones, where the anomaly problem trivializes, and the full theory are most
helpful.
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