Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Why (2+1)-dimensional gravity?
- 2 Classical general relativity in 2+1 dimensions
- 3 A field guide to the (2+1)-dimensional spacetimes
- 4 Geometric structures and Chern–Simons theory
- 5 Canonical quantization in reduced phase space
- 6 The connection representation
- 7 Operator algebras and loops
- 8 The Wheeler–DeWitt equation
- 9 Lorentzian path integrals
- 10 Euclidean path integrals and quantum cosmology
- 11 Lattice methods
- 12 The (2+1)-dimensional black hole
- 13 Next steps
- Appendix A The topology of manifolds
- Appendix B Lorentzian metrics and causal structure
- Appendix C Differential geometry and fiber bundles
- References
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Why (2+1)-dimensional gravity?
- 2 Classical general relativity in 2+1 dimensions
- 3 A field guide to the (2+1)-dimensional spacetimes
- 4 Geometric structures and Chern–Simons theory
- 5 Canonical quantization in reduced phase space
- 6 The connection representation
- 7 Operator algebras and loops
- 8 The Wheeler–DeWitt equation
- 9 Lorentzian path integrals
- 10 Euclidean path integrals and quantum cosmology
- 11 Lattice methods
- 12 The (2+1)-dimensional black hole
- 13 Next steps
- Appendix A The topology of manifolds
- Appendix B Lorentzian metrics and causal structure
- Appendix C Differential geometry and fiber bundles
- References
- Index
Summary
Interest in (2+1)-dimensional gravity – general relativity in two spatial dimensions plus time – dates back at least to 1963, when Staruszkiewicz first showed that point particles in a (2+1)-dimensional spacetime could be given a simple and elegant geometrical description. Over the next 20 years occasional papers on classical and quantum mechanical aspects appeared, but until recently the subject remained largely a curiosity.
Two discoveries changed this. In 1984, Deser, Jackiw, and 't Hooft began a systematic investigation of the behavior of classical and quantum mechanical point sources in (2+1)-dimensional gravity, showing that such systems exhibit interesting behavior both as toy models for (3+1)-dimensional quantum gravity and as realistic models of cosmic strings. Interest in this work was heightened when Gott showed that spacetimes containing a pair of cosmic strings could admit closed timelike curves; (2+1)-dimensional gravity quickly became a testing ground for issues of causality violation. Then in 1988, Witten showed that (2+1)-dimensional general relativity could be rewritten as a Chern–Simons theory, permitting exact computations of topology-changing amplitudes. The Chern–Simons formulation had been recognized a few years earlier by Achúcarro and Townsend, but Witten's rediscovery came at a time that the quantum mechanical treatment of Chern–Simons theory was advancing rapidly, and connections were quickly made to topological field theories, three-manifold topology, quantum groups, and other areas under active investigation.
Together, the work on point particle scattering and the Chern–Simons formulation ignited an explosion of new research.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Quantum Gravity in 2+1 Dimensions , pp. xi - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998