Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword, by Chris Isham
- Preface
- Notation and conventions
- Introduction: Defining quantum gravity
- I CLASSICAL FOUNDATIONS, INTERPRETATION AND THE CANONICAL QUANTISATION PROGRAMME
- II FOUNDATIONS OF MODERN CANONICAL QUANTUM GENERAL RELATIVITY
- III PHYSICAL APPLICATIONS
- IV MATHEMATICAL TOOLS AND THEIR CONNECTION TO PHYSICS
- 18 Tools from general topology
- 19 Differential, Riemannian, symplectic and complex geometry
- 20 Semianalytic category
- 21 Elements of fibre bundle theory
- 22 Holonomies on non-trivial fibre bundles
- 23 Geometric quantisation
- 24 The Dirac algorithm for field theories with constraints
- 25 Tools from measure theory
- 26 Key results from functional analysis
- 27 Elementary introduction to Gel'fand theory for Abelian C*-algebras
- 28 Bohr compactification of the real line
- 29 Operator *-algebras and spectral theorem
- 30 Refined algebraic quantisation (RAQ) and direct integral decomposition (DID)
- 31 Basics of harmonic analysis on compact Lie groups
- 32 Spin-network functions for SU(2)
- 33 + Functional analytic description of classical connection dynamics
- References
- Index
20 - Semianalytic category
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword, by Chris Isham
- Preface
- Notation and conventions
- Introduction: Defining quantum gravity
- I CLASSICAL FOUNDATIONS, INTERPRETATION AND THE CANONICAL QUANTISATION PROGRAMME
- II FOUNDATIONS OF MODERN CANONICAL QUANTUM GENERAL RELATIVITY
- III PHYSICAL APPLICATIONS
- IV MATHEMATICAL TOOLS AND THEIR CONNECTION TO PHYSICS
- 18 Tools from general topology
- 19 Differential, Riemannian, symplectic and complex geometry
- 20 Semianalytic category
- 21 Elements of fibre bundle theory
- 22 Holonomies on non-trivial fibre bundles
- 23 Geometric quantisation
- 24 The Dirac algorithm for field theories with constraints
- 25 Tools from measure theory
- 26 Key results from functional analysis
- 27 Elementary introduction to Gel'fand theory for Abelian C*-algebras
- 28 Bohr compactification of the real line
- 29 Operator *-algebras and spectral theorem
- 30 Refined algebraic quantisation (RAQ) and direct integral decomposition (DID)
- 31 Basics of harmonic analysis on compact Lie groups
- 32 Spin-network functions for SU(2)
- 33 + Functional analytic description of classical connection dynamics
- References
- Index
Summary
In this chapter we define semianalytic structures and draw conclusions from those which are important for the uniqueness of the kinematical representation of LQG. Semianalytic structures are intuitively the same thing as piecewise analytic structures, that is, objects such as paths or surfaces are analytic on generic subsets but analyticity may be violated on lower-dimensional subsets. On those subsets there is again a notion of semianalyticity. This enables one to take advantage of analyticity while making the constructions local: for instance, strictly analytical paths are determined everywhere on their analytic extension once they are known on an open set, thus making them very non-local. If we make it semianalytic then these data only determine the path up to the next point where analyticity is reduced to Cn, n > 0. This is important because we need to make sure that certain local constructions do not have an impact on regions far away from the region of interest. We will see this explicitly in the uniqueness proof.
We will now develop elements of semianalytic differential geometry in analogy to Chapter 19. We begin with ℝn with its canonical analytic structure. For general manifolds M we will assume that they are differential manifolds with given smooth structure and that a compatible analytic structure has been fixed. An introduction to semianalytical notions can be found in [888].
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- Chapter
- Information
- Modern Canonical Quantum General Relativity , pp. 627 - 633Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007