Revision as of 03:20, 18 March 2007 editJonathanD (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users906 editsm moved Causal dynamic triangulation to Causal dynamical triangulation over redirect: Title is a proper name for a theory universally described with this spelling. In this instance, dynamical can be said to abbreviate dynamically-varying. This ter← Previous edit | Revision as of 03:55, 18 March 2007 edit undoJonathanD (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users906 editsmNo edit summaryNext edit → | ||
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'''Causal dynamical triangulation''' (abbreviated as "CDT") invented by ], ] and ] is an approach to ] that like ] is ]. The conference hosted by many loop quantum gravity theorists included several presentations which reveal CDT in much greater depth. It has sparked interest as it appears to have a good semi-classical description. | '''Causal dynamical triangulation''' (abbreviated as "CDT") invented by ], ] and ] is an approach to ] that like ] is ]. The conference hosted by many loop quantum gravity theorists included several presentations which reveal CDT in much greater depth. It has sparked interest as it appears to have a good semi-classical description. |
Revision as of 03:55, 18 March 2007
It has been suggested that this article be merged with Discrete Lorentzian quantum gravity. (Discuss) Proposed since March 2007. |
Causal dynamical triangulation (abbreviated as "CDT") invented by Renate Loll, Jan Ambjorn and Jerzy Jurkiewicz is an approach to quantum gravity that like loop quantum gravity is background independent. The Loop 2005 conference hosted by many loop quantum gravity theorists included several presentations which reveal CDT in much greater depth. It has sparked interest as it appears to have a good semi-classical description.
It is a modification of quantum Regge calculus where spacetime is discretized by approximating it by a piecewise linear manifold in a process called triangulation. In this process, a d-dimensional spacetime is considered as formed by space slices that are labeled by a discrete time variable t. Each space slice is approximated by a simplicial manifold composed by regular (d-1)-dimensional simplices and the connection between these slices is made by a piecewise linear manifold of d-simplices.
External links
References
Alpert, Mark "The Triangular Universe" Scientific American page 24, February 2007
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