• FQXi Essay Contest - Spring, 2017
  • Using Klauder’s Enhanced Quantization to set a bound to the Cosmological constant, in Pre Planckian space- as a way to ascertain the most important fundamental physics question. by Andrew Beckwith

Essay Abstract

We are looking at comparison of two action integrals and we identify the Lagrangian multiplier as setting up a constraint equation (on cosmological expansion). In FFP 15, in the Author's presentation, one of the two compared action integrals was from Hambler' Quantum Gravity reference, while another was given as similar to the action principle of the Hilbert idea of General Relativistic derivation of the Einstein Field Equations. What we have done is to replace the Hambler Quantum gravity reference based action integral with a result straight from John Klauder's "Enhanced Quantization" tome. In doing so, with also a nod to Thanu Padamabhan's treatment of the inflaton, we then commence to initiate an explicit bound upon the cosmological constant. The further approximation is to use the inflaton results, and conflate them with John Klauder's Action principle for a way to , if we have the idea of a potential well, generalized by Klauder, with a wall of space time in the Pre Planckian regime to ask what bounds the Cosmological constant prior to inflation. We argue this is the most important fundamental question in physics today, for reasons we elaborate upon in the conclusion. Section 6 details my actual answers to the essay's ideas, in lieu of the creation of this answer to the cosmological constant due to enhanced quantization.

Author Bio

Live in New York state part of the year with trips as a guest instructor to Chongqing, PRC, where I perform the duties of a visiting professor and researcher in gravitational physics. Received PhD in 2001 at the U of Houston, and a frequent visitor to conferences, the last being Frontiers in Fundamental physics 15 in Spain this last November, 2017

Download Essay PDF File

I wish to add a note to this essay

1st. there is an error which I already pointed out to FQXI admins which was not corrected

It is, to read section 7 as follows

quote

7 . Acknowledgements

This work is supported in part by National Nature Science Foundation of China grant No. 11375279. We also thank Dr. Christian Corda for recommending that this author be allowed to participate in Frontiers of Fundamental physics, as also did Johnathan Dickau in communications with the organizers of FFP 15. Finally, and not least is profound thanks to Dr. John Klauder who was a gracious explainer of the physics of his insightful reference [3] which the author bought upon return from Frontiers of Fundamental physics 15. The recommendations of both Corda and Dickau lead to the author's fortuitous introduction to the marvellous physics of Dr. John Klauder which the author thinks are of fundamental import.

Review this document with the [4] changed to [3]

Secondly, here are some arXIV references as to John Klauder's ideas

https://arxiv.org/abs/1702.04713

quote

Enhanced Quantization: The Right way to Quantize Everything

John R. Klauder

(Submitted on 15 Feb 2017 (v1), last revised 24 May 2017 (this version, v2))

Canonical quantization relies on Cartesian, canonical, phase-space coordinates to promote to Hermitian operators, which also become the principal ingredients in the quantum Hamiltonian. While generally appropriate, this procedure can also fail, e.g., for covariant, quartic, scalar fields in five-and-more spacetime dimensions (and possibly four spacetime dimensions as well), which become trivial; such failures are normally blamed on the `problem' rather than on the 'quantization procedure'. In Enhanced Quantization the association of c-numbers to q-numbers is chosen very differently such that: (i) there is no need to seek classical, Cartesian, phase-space coordinates; (ii) every classical, contact transformation is applicable and no change of the quantum operators arises; (iii) a new understanding of the importance of 'Cartesian coordinates' is established; and (iv) although discussed elsewhere in detail, the procedures of enhanced quantization offer fully acceptable solutions yielding non-trivial results for quartic scalar fields in four-and-more spacetime dimensions. In early sections, this paper offers a wide-audience approach to the basic principles of Enhanced Quantization using simple examples; later, several significant examples are cited for a deeper understanding. An historical note concludes the paper.

Comments: 18 pages, contribution to conference proceedings, version approved by referee

Subjects: Quantum Physics (quant-ph); High Energy Physics - Theory (hep-th); Mathematical Physics (math-ph); History and Philosophy of Physics (physics.hist-ph)

Cite as: arXiv:1702.04713 [quant-ph]

(or arXiv:1702.04713v2 [quant-ph] for this version)

Submission history

From: John Klauder [view email]

[v1] Wed, 15 Feb 2017 18:55:00 GMT (16kb)

[v2] Wed, 24 May 2017 19:50:09 GMT (16kb)

individuals reading my essay should be aware that the prior version of section 7 had an INCORRECT [4] instead of [3] put in. What I have done is to append and correct this error

I asked for a substitution of a corrected document for the FQXI contest, but this evidently was denied

I hope that these two posts, as made will re focus the evaluators upon the intended flow of ideas.

  • [deleted]

Hi Andrew, Your knowledge in math and physics is very apparent from this paper. You state the cosmological constant is fundamental. Have you derived our universe from just this constant? Did you derive the additional basic physical parameters from the cosmological constant? Don't the physical constants have to be associated with some physical reality. Would those physical realities be considered fundamental also?

Also it seems unusual that the most fundamental parameter would be the cosmological constant - why not the speed of light?

The reason why I picked the cosmological constant is because the speed of light can vary in materials. I.e.the speed of light is not quite what people think it is

https://www.sciencenews.org/article/speed-light-not-so-constant-after-all?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_f

Next, see

The learned paper referenced from the article is here:

https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1411/1411.3987.pdf

But be sure also to see a follow-up paper here:

https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1504/1504.06059.pdf »

The single sentence summary of the follow-up paper "says it all":

"We show that even spatially structured photons travel at the speed of light and the measurement of D. Giovannini et al. only provided the projection of this velocity onto the axis of beam propagation."

In fact, the original paper even acknowledges this, in at least a few places.

It's as simple as comparing a beam traveling straight with one reflecting back and forth along some beam path: simply add up the extra path-length travelled.

IMO if we go by what is MEASURED, we have to use data collection and the speed of light has some measurement issues

Whereas the Cosmological constant is tied into the question of Dark Energy

https://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/universe/uni_accel.html

i.e. setting the cosmological constant gets into the fate of tthe universe which is why I picked it

setting the cosmological constant leads to some very huge components as to the fate of the universe as related here:

https://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/universe/uni_accel.html

To paraphrase my point. the speed of light, as Measured , has some obvious and subtle issues, as brought up above.

If the Cosmological constant is in a 1 relationship with respect to dark energy, this may be a way to explain the speed up of acceleration of the universe, and also of other things, in a macro scale

I.e. see the following

http://www.physicsoftheuniverse.com/topics_bigbang_accelerating.html

quote

The only thing that could be accelerating the expansion (i.e. more than countering the braking force of the mutual gravitational pull of the galaxies) is space itself, suggesting that perhaps it is not empty after all but contains some strange "dark energy" or "antigravity" currently unknown to science. Thus, even what appears to be a complete vacuum actually contains energy in some currently unknown way. In fact, initial calculations (backed up by more recent research such as that on the growth of galaxy clusters by NASA's Chandra x-ray space telescope and that on binary galaxies by Christian Marinoni and Adeline Buzzi of the University of Provence) suggest that fully 73 - 74% of the universe consists of this dark energy.

    Here is a popular science exposition as to how Dark energy and the cosmological constant may have a 1-1 relationship

    https://www.wired.com/2008/12/dark-energy-ein/

    If this identification is correct, and I am suggesting it is, then that is why I have made the identification I have made, about the cosmological constant being so fundamental.

    I hope this answers your question, from an OBSERVATIONAL stand point.

      I agree with all you said about dark energy and its relationship with the cosmological constant.

      And that, from an observational stand point is the reason for the huge importance of the cosmological constant, Scott, from an OBSERVATIONAL stand point

        See page 59 of "Faster than light" by Nick Herbert for fourteen things moving faster than the speed of light

        Issue is of information transfer, and communication

        Hi Andy - I just want to state for the record that what we "observe" will not unlock the actual true physical model (our eyes and instruments deceive us!). My theory shows that the speed of light is the first and most fundamental constant and even the speed of light is not an "absolute" constant - It is a "relative constant" (a term I coined from my theory) and it is the reason why all physical constants are the same in all inertial reference frames.

        One more thing - The cosmological constant is a misnomer... it was never a constant in time or place in the universe.

        I know you will not believe me now but time will tell... I like your original thinking on the topic and wish you the best of luck.

        Why I do not believe you, and this is not personal

        https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/supernova/home.html

        Now for falsification of quinessence

        http://supernova.lbl.gov/

        http://www.slac.stanford.edu/econf/C990809/docs/perlmutter.pdf

        review the last link, i.e. it kills a time varying cosmological constant

        quote

        I was asked to present the status of the cosmological parameters, and in particular

        the status of the recent results concerning the accelerating universe--and

        the possible cosmological constant or dark energy that is responsible for the

        universe's acceleration. This result comes most directly from the recent type Ia

        supernova work, so although I will mention a few of the approaches to the cosmological

        parameters, I will emphasize the work with the type Ia supernovae. I

        will try to give you a sense of exactly how we reached the current conclusions

        and what the current level of confidence is in that conclusion.

        end of quote

        then see

        To summarize, the current type Ia supernova data suggests that we live in an

        accelerating universe, a universe with either a positive cosmological constant or

        some other dark energy with strongly negative pressure. This statement can

        be made with great confidence if you have reason to believe that we live in a

        flat universe, either based on the cosmological microwave background data or

        based on the predictions of the inflationary universe theory. The best fit in a

        flat universe is approximately ΩM = 0.7 and ΩΛ = 0.3. Even if you are not

        yet convinced by the current data (or inflationary theory) that we live in a flat

        universe, and consider the possibility that the universe is open and low-mass, the

        positive-Λ supernova results are still statistically quite strong and we have not

        yet been able to identify any systematic uncertainty that could reconcile our data

        with zero Λ. The loopholes that remain in this last statement will be addressed

        with upcoming data from the new low-redshift supernova campaign and the new

        very-high-redshift supernova work.

        thanks again for your reply. There may be quinessence in the initial formation of the cosmological constant, and my work indicates how that could happen, but for a long term solution, Scott, there is no need for quinessence.

        Use Oscam's razor.

        Thanks for your reply to me Scott

        Andy

        No Problem Andy - Like I said - I stated it for the record!

        Dr. Beckwith,

        any thoughts on why the Gravitational Constant is what it is, and why it apparently exists as a fundamental property of action? jrc

          preserving the consistency of physical law from cycle to cycle

          avoiding having a collapsing universe

          otherwise one would have the cascade of baby universes with most of them non viable

          Dr. Beckwith,

          To say, "The only thing that could be accelerating the expansion... is space itself," suggests that space (along with time) is continuously coming into being. That in turn could be the origin of energy. This would be a violation of conservation laws in a naïve sense, but would be an argument for the Cosmological Constant expressing a fundamental property of creational equilibrium. I'd buy that. GR isn't a complete theory, and while being causal and realistic, it is dependent on the Gravitational Constant which has yet to be rationalized, and cannot unify with the quantum realm because it treats ponderable bodies by *mass average* in an observable horizon without an empirical density bound established by theoretical premise. jrc