MC 5417
Candidate
Paul
Tiede,
Applied
Mathematics,
University
of
Waterloo
Title
The Relation between Polygonal Gravity and 3D Loop Quantum Gravity
Abstract
In this thesis, we explore the relation between ’t Hooft polygonal gravity and loop quantum gravity (LQG) - two models of discrete gravity in 2+1 dimensions. While the relation between the two theories has been studied in the past, the relation between LQG and polygonal gravity remains unclear. Indeed we argue that each approach does not implement the same type of constraint at the kinematical level. Using a dual formulation of LQG, we show that polygonal gravity is then recovered by a gauge fixing in this framework. However, whether these gauge choices are possible in general is unanswered in this work. Therefore, we analyze a specific example given by the torus universe in each approach, using one and two polygon decompositions. By using the map from dual LQG to polygonal gravity, we express the physical variables of discrete gravity, or observables, in terms of polygonal gravity quantities. Once the constraints in polygonal gravity are implemented we find that physical observables are no longer independent, meaning that polygonal gravity cannot describe the torus universe using one and two polygon decompositions: the gauge fixing is actually over-constraining the theory. Faced with these results, we develop a dual version of ’t Hooft gravity. The resulting theory is then proven to be equal to the kinematical phase space of LQG; therefore, dual ’t Hooft gravity is free of the issues plaguing polygonal gravity.