Backreactions from inhomogeneous modes on homogeneous geometry are significant and sensitive to Fock representation in this deparametrized second-order adiabatic calculation.
Coherent states, quantum gravity and the Born-Oppenheimer approximation, I: General considerations
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
This article, as the first of three, aims at establishing the (time-dependent) Born-Oppenheimer approximation, in the sense of space adiabatic perturbation theory, for quantum systems constructed by techniques of the loop quantum gravity framework, especially the canonical formulation of the latter. The analysis presented here fits into a rather general framework, and offers a solution to the problem of applying the usual Born-Oppenheimer ansatz for molecular (or structurally analogous) systems to more general quantum systems (e.g. spin-orbit models) by means of space adiabatic perturbation theory. The proposed solution is applied to a simple, finite dimensional model of interacting spin systems, which serves as a non-trivial, minimal model of the aforesaid problem. Furthermore, it is explained how the content of this article, and its companion, affect the possible extraction of quantum field theory on curved spacetime from loop quantum gravity (including matter fields).
fields
gr-qc 2years
2019 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Space adiabatic perturbation theory applied to homogeneous oscillator models shows that backreactions add correction terms to effective Hamiltonians neglected in the Born-Oppenheimer approximation.
citing papers explorer
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Quantum Cosmological Backreactions III: Deparametrised Quantum Cosmological Perturbation Theory
Backreactions from inhomogeneous modes on homogeneous geometry are significant and sensitive to Fock representation in this deparametrized second-order adiabatic calculation.
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Quantum Cosmological Backreactions II: Purely Homogeneous Quantum Cosmology
Space adiabatic perturbation theory applied to homogeneous oscillator models shows that backreactions add correction terms to effective Hamiltonians neglected in the Born-Oppenheimer approximation.