|
Semiclassical gravity is the approximation to the theory of quantum gravity in which one treats matter fields as being quantum and the gravitational field as being classical. In semiclassical gravity, matter is represented by quantum matter fields that propagate according to the theory of quantum fields in curved spacetime. The spacetime in which the fields propagate is classical but dynamical. The curvature of the spacetime is given by the ''semiclassical Einstein equations'', which relate the curvature of the spacetime, given by the Einstein tensor , to the expectation value of the energy–momentum tensor operator, , of the matter fields: : where ''G'' is Newton's constant and indicates the quantum state of the matter fields. ==Stress–energy tensor== There is some ambiguity in regulating the stress–energy tensor, and this depends upon the curvature. This ambiguity can be absorbed into the cosmological constant, Newton's constant, and the quadratic couplings〔See Wald (1994) Chapter 4, section 6 "The Stress-Energy Tensor".〕 : and . There's also the other quadratic term :, but (in 4-dimensions) this term is a linear combination of the other two terms and a surface term. See Gauss–Bonnet gravity for more details. Since the theory of quantum gravity is not yet known, it is difficult to say what is the regime of validity of semiclassical gravity. However, one can formally show that semiclassical gravity could be deduced from quantum gravity by considering ''N'' copies of the quantum matter fields, and taking the limit of ''N'' going to infinity while keeping the product ''GN'' constant. At diagrammatic level, semiclassical gravity corresponds to summing all Feynman diagrams which do not have loops of gravitons (but have an arbitrary number of matter loops). Semiclassical gravity can also be deduced from an axiomatic approach. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Semiclassical gravity」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|