Self-dual Palatini action

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Ashtekar variables, which were a new canonical formalism of general relativity, raised new hopes for the canonical quantization of general relativity and eventually led to loop quantum gravity. Smolin and others independently discovered that there exists in fact a Lagrangian formulation of the theory by considering the self-dual formulation of the Tetradic Palatini action principle of general relativity.[1][2][3] These proofs were given in terms of spinors. A purely tensorial proof of the new variables in terms of triads was given by Goldberg[4] and in terms of tetrads by Henneaux et al.[5] Here we in particular fill in details of the proof of results for self-dual variables not given in text books.

The Palatini action

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The Palatini action for general relativity has as its independent variables the tetrad e_I^\alpha and a spin connection \omega_\alpha^{\;\; IJ}. Much more details and derivations can be found in the article tetradic Palatini action. The spin connection defines a covariant derivative D_\alpha. The space-time metric is recovered from the tetrad by the formula g_{\alpha \beta} = e^I_\alpha e^J_\beta \eta_{IJ}. We define the `curvature' by

\Omega_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\;\;\; IJ} = \partial_\alpha \omega_\beta^{\;\; IJ} - \partial_\beta \omega_\alpha^{\;\; IJ} + \omega_\alpha^{IK} \omega_{\beta K}^{\;\;\;\; J} - \omega_\beta^{IK} \omega_{\alpha K}^{\;\;\;\; J} \;\;\;\;\; Eq(1).

The Ricci scalar of this curvature is given by e_I^\alpha e_J^\beta \Omega_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\;\;\; IJ}. The Palatini action for general relativity reads

S = \int d^4 x \; e  \;e_I^\alpha e_J^\beta  \; \Omega_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\;\;\; IJ} [\omega]

where e = \sqrt{-g}. Variation with respect to the spin connection \omega_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\;\; IJ} implies that the spin connection is determined by the compatibility condition D_\alpha e_I^\beta = 0 and hence becomes the usual covariant derivative \nabla_\alpha. Hence the connection becomes a function of the tetrads and the curvature \Omega_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\;\;\; IJ} is replaced by the curvature R_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\;\;\; IJ} of \nabla_\alpha. Then e_I^\alpha e_J^\beta R_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\;\;\; IJ} is the actual Ricci scalar R. Variation with respect to the tetrad gives Einsteins equation R_{\alpha \beta} - {1 \over 2} g_{\alpha \beta} R = 0.

Self-dual variables

(Anti-)self-dual parts of a tensor

We will need what is called the totally antisymmetry tensor or Levi-Civita symbol, \epsilon_{IJKL}. This is equal to either +1 or -1 depending on whether IJKL is either an even or odd permutation of 0123, respectively, and zero if any two indices take the same value. The internal indices of \epsilon_{IJKL} are raised with the Minkowski metric \eta^{IJ}.

Now, given any anti-symmetric tensor T^{IJ}, we define its dual as

*T^{IJ} = {1 \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} T^{ KL}.

The self-dual part of any tensor T^{IJ} is defined as

\;^+T^{IJ} := {1 \over 2} \Big( T^{IJ} - {i \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} T^{KL} \Big)

with the anti-self-dual part defined as

\;^-T^{IJ} := {1 \over 2} \Big( T^{IJ} + {i \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} T^{KL} \Big)

(the appearance of the imaginary unit i is related to the Minkowski signature as we will see below).

Tensor decomposition

Now given any anti-symmetric tensor T^{IJ}, we can decompose it as

T^{IJ} = {1 \over 2} (T^{IJ} - {i \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} T^{KL}) + {1 \over 2} (T^{IJ} + {i \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} T^{KL}) =\;^+T^{IJ} +\;^-T^{IJ}

where \;^+T^{IJ} and \;^-T^{IJ} are the self-dual and anti-self-dual parts of T^{IJ} respectively. Define the projector onto (anti-)self-dual part of any tensor as

P^{(\pm)} = {1 \over 2} (1 \mp i *).

The meaning of these projectors can be made explicit. Let us concentrate of P^+,

(P^+ T)^{IJ} = ({1 \over 2} (1 - i *) T)^{IJ} = {1 \over 2} (\delta^I_{\; K} \delta^J_{\;\; L} - i {1 \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ}) T^{KL} = {1 \over 2} (T^{IJ} - {i \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} T^{KL}) = \;^+ T^{IJ}.

Then

\;^\pm T^{IJ} = (P^{(\pm)} T)^{IJ}.

The Lie bracket

An important object is the Lie bracket defined by

[F , G]^{IJ} := F^{IK} G_K^{\;\; J} - G^{IK} F_K^{\;\; J},

it appears in the curvature tensor (see the last two terms of Eq.1), it also defines the algebraic structure. We have the results (proved below):

P^{(\pm)} [F , G]^{IJ} = [P^{(\pm)} F, G]^{IJ} = [F , P^{(\pm)} G]^{IJ} = [P^{(\pm)} F , P^{(\pm)} G]^{IJ} \;\;\;\;\; Eq.2

and

[F , G] = [P^+ F , P^+ G] + [P^- F , P^- G].

That is the Lie bracket, which defines an algebra, decomposes into two separate independent parts. We write

so(1,3)_\mathbb{C} = so (1,3)_\mathbb{C}^+ + so (1,3)_\mathbb{C}^-

where so (1,3)_\mathbb{C}^\pm contains only the self-dual (anti-self-dual) elements of so(1,3)_\mathbb{C}.

The Self-dual Palatini action

We define the self-dual part, A_\alpha^{\;\;\; IJ}, of the connection \omega_\alpha^{\;\; IJ} as

A_\alpha^{\;\;\; IJ} = {1 \over 2} \big( \omega_\alpha^{\;\; IJ} - {i \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\; IJ} \omega^{KL} \big).

which can be more compactly written

A_\alpha^{\;\;\; IJ} = (P^+ \omega \big)^{IJ}.

Define F_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\; IJ} as the curvature of the self-dual connection

F_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\; IJ } = \partial_\alpha A_\beta^{\;\; IJ} - \partial_\beta A_\alpha^{\;\; IJ} + A_\alpha^{\;\; IK} A_{\beta K}^{\;\;\;\;\; J} - A_\beta^{IK} A_{\alpha K}^{\;\;\;\;\; J}.

Using Eq.2 it is easy to see that the curvature of the self-dual connection is the self-dual part of the curvature of the connection,

F_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\;\;\; IJ } = \partial_\alpha (P^+ \omega_\beta)^{IJ} - \partial_\beta (P^+ \omega_\alpha)^{IJ} + [P^+ \omega_\alpha , P^+ \omega_\beta]^{IJ}

= (P^+ 2 \partial_{[\alpha} \omega_{\beta]})^{IJ} + (P^+ [\omega_\alpha , \omega_\beta])^{IJ}

= (P^+ \Omega_{\alpha \beta})^{IJ}.

The self-dual action is

S = \int d^4 x \; e  \;e_I^\alpha e_J^\beta  \; F_{\alpha \beta}^{\;\;\;\; IJ}.

As the connection is complex we are dealing with complex general relativity and appropriate conditions must be specified to recover the real theory. One can repeat the same calculations done for the Palatini action but now with respect to the self-dual connection A_\alpha^{\;\; IJ}. Varying the tetrad field, one obtains a self-dual analog of Einstein's equation:

\;^+R_{\alpha \beta} - {1 \over 2} g_{\alpha \beta} \;^+R = 0.

That the curvature of the self-dual connection is the self-dual part of the curvature of the connection helps to simplify the 3+1 formalism (details of the decomposition into the 3+1 formalism are to be given below). The resulting Hamiltonian formalism resembles that of a Yang-Mills gauge theory (this does not happen with the 3+1 Palatini formalism which basically collapses down to the usual ADM formalism).

Derivation of main results for self-dual variables

The results of calculations done here can be found in chapter 3 of notes Ashtekar Variables in Classical Relativity.[6] The method of proof follows that given in section II of The Ashtekar Hamiltonian for General Relativity.[7] We need to establish some results for (anti-)self-dual Lorentzian tensors.

Identities for the totally anti-symmetric tensor

Since \eta_{IJ} has signature (-,+,+,+), it follows that

\epsilon^{IJKL} = - \epsilon_{IJKL}  .

to see this consider,

\epsilon^{0123} = \eta^{0I} \eta^{1J} \eta^{2K} \eta^{3L} \epsilon_{IJKL} = (-1) (+1) (+1) (+1) \epsilon_{0123} = - \epsilon_{0123}  .

With this definition one can obtain the following identities,

\epsilon^{IJKO} \epsilon_{LMNO} = - 6 \delta^I_{[L} \delta^J_M \delta^K_{N]} \;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\; Eq.3

\epsilon^{IJMN} \epsilon_{KLMN} = - 4 \delta^I_{[K} \delta^J_{L]} = - 2 (\delta^I_K \delta^J_L - \delta^I_L \delta^J_K) \;\;\;\; Eq.4

(the square brackets denote anti-symmetrizing over the indices).

Definition of self-dual tensor

It follows from Eq.4 that the square of the duality operator is minus the identity,

** T^{IJ} = {1 \over 4} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} \epsilon_{MN}^{\;\;\;\;\;\;\; KL} T^{\;\; MN} = - T^{IJ}

The minus sign here is due to the minus sign in Eq.4, which is in turn due to the Minkowski signature. Had we used Euclidean signature, i.e. (+,+,+,+), instead there would have been a positive sign. We define S^{IJ} to be self-dual if and only if

*S^{IJ} = i S^{IJ}  .

(with Euclidean signature the self-duality condition would have been *S^{IJ} = S^{IJ}). Say S^{IJ} is self-dual, write it as a real and imaginary part,

S^{IJ} = {1 \over 2} T^{IJ} + i {1 \over 2} U^{IJ}  .

Write the self-dual condition in terms of U and V,

*(T^{IJ} + i U^{IJ}) = {1 \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} (T^{KL} + i U^{KL}) = i (T^{IJ} + i U^{IJ})  .

Equating real parts we read off

U^{IJ} = - {1 \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} T^{KL}

and so

S^{IJ} = {1 \over 2} (T^{IJ} - {i \over 2} \epsilon_{KL}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} T^{KL})

where T^{IJ} is the real part of 2 S^{IJ}.

Important lengthy calculation

The following lengthy calculation is important as all the other important formula can easily be derived from it. From the definition of the Lie bracket and with the use of Eq.3 we have

*[F , *G]^{IJ} = {1 \over 2} \epsilon_{MN}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} (F^{MK} (*G)_K^{\;\;\; N} -(*G)^{MK} F_K^{\;\;\; N})

= {1 \over 2} \epsilon_{MN}^{\;\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} (F^{MK} {1 \over 2} \epsilon_{OPK}^{\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\; N} G^{OP} - {1 \over 2} \epsilon_{OP}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; MK} G^{OP} F_K^{\;\;\; N})

= {1 \over 4} (\epsilon_{MN}^{\;\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} \epsilon_{OP}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; KN} + \epsilon_{NM}^{\;\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} \epsilon_{OP}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; NK}) F^M_{\;\;\; K} G^{OP}

= {1 \over 2} \epsilon_{MN}^{\;\;\;\;\;\;\; IJ} \epsilon_{OP}^{\;\;\;\;\;\; KN} F^M_{\;\;\; K} G^{OP}

= {1 \over 2} \epsilon^{MIJN} \epsilon_{OPKN} F_M^{\;\;\; K} G^{OP}

= - {1 \over 2} \epsilon^{KIJN} \epsilon_{OPMN} F^M_{\;\;\; K} G^{OP}

= {1 \over 2} (\delta^K_O \delta^I_P \delta^J_M + \delta^K_M \delta^I_O \delta^J_P + 
\delta^K_P \delta^I_M \delta^J_O - \delta^K_P \delta^I_O \delta^J_M - \delta^K_M \delta^I_P \delta^J_O - \delta^K_O \delta^I_M \delta^J_P) F^M_{\;\;\; K} G^{OP}

= {1 \over 2} (F^J_{\;\;\; K} G^{KI} + F^K_{\;\;\; K} G^{IJ} + F^I_{\;\; K} G^{JK} - F^J_{\;\;\; K} G^{IK} - F^K_{\;\;\; K} G^{JI} - F^I_{\;\; K} G^{KJ})

= - F^{IK} G_K^{\;\; \;J} + G^{IK} F_K^{\;\; J}

= -[F , G]^{IJ}

That gives the formula

*[F,*G]^{IJ} = - [F , G]^{IJ}  \;\;\;\;\;\; Eq.5.

which is the starting point for everything else.

Derivation of important results

First consider

*[*F,G]^{IJ} = - *[G,*F]^{IJ} = + [G,F]^{IJ} = - [F , G]^{IJ}  .

where in the first step we have used the anti-symmetry of the Lie bracket to swap *F and G, in the second step we used Eq.5 and in the last step we used the anti-symmetry of the Lie bracket again. Now using this we obtain

* (- [F , G]^{IJ}) = *(*[*F,G]^{IJ}) = **[*F,G]^{IJ} = - [*F , G]^{IJ}  .

where we used ** = - 1 in the third step. So we have then * [F , G]^{IJ} = [*F , G]^{IJ}. Similarly we have * [F , G]^{IJ} = [F , *G]^{IJ}.

Now if we took *[F,G]^{IJ} = [*F,G]^{IJ} and simply replaced G with *G we would get *[F,*G]^{IJ} = [*F,*G]^{IJ}. Combining - [F , G]^{IJ} = *[F,*G]^{IJ} (Eq.5) and *[F,*G]^{IJ} = [*F,*G]^{IJ} we obtain

- [F , G]^{IJ} = [*F,*G]^{IJ}  .

Summarising, we have

*[F,*G]^{IJ} = - [F , G]^{IJ} = *[*F,G]^{IJ}

*[F , G]^{IJ} = [* F , G]^{IJ} = [F , * G]^{IJ} \;\;\;\;\; Eq.6

[* F , * G]^{IJ} = - [F , G]^{IJ}  \;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\; Eq.7

Then

(P^{(\pm)} [F, G])^{IJ} = {1 \over 2} ([F, G]^{IJ} \mp i * [F,G]^{IJ})

= {1 \over 2} ([F, G]^{IJ} + [\mp i * F, G]^{IJ})

= [P^{(\pm)} F, G]^{IJ} \;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\; Eq.8

where we used Eq.6 going from the first line to the second line. Similarly we have (P^{(\pm)} [F , G])^{IJ} = [F , P^{(\pm)} G]^{IJ}. Now consider [P^+ F, P^- G]^{IJ},

[P^+ F, P^- G]^{IJ} = {1 \over 4} [(1 - i *) F , (1 + i *) G]^{IJ}

= {1 \over 4} [F , G]^{IJ} - {1 \over 4} i [* F , G]^{IJ} + {1 \over 4} i [F , * G]^{IJ} + {1 \over 4} [* F , * G]^{IJ}

= {1 \over 4} [F , G]^{IJ} - {1 \over 4} i [* F , G]^{IJ} + {1 \over 4} i [* F , G]^{IJ} - {1 \over 4} [F , G]^{IJ}

= 0   \;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\; Eq.9

where we have used Eq.6 and Eq.7 in going from the second line to the third line. Similarly

[P^- F, P^+ G]^{IJ} = 0 \;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\;\; Eq.10.

Starting with Eq.8 we have

(P^{(\pm)} [F, G])^{IJ} = [P^{(\pm)} F, G]^{IJ} = [P^{(\pm)} F, P^{(\pm)} G + P^{(\mp)} G]^{IJ} = [P^{(\pm)} F, P^{(\pm)} G]^{IJ}

where we have used that any G can be written as a sum of its self-dual and anti-sef-dual parts, i.e. G = P^{(\pm)} G + P^{(\mp)} G, and Eq.9 / Eq.10.

Summary of main results

Altogether we have,

(P^{(\pm)} [F , G])^{IJ} = [P^{(\pm)} F, G]^{IJ} = [F , P^{(\pm)} G]^{IJ} = [P^{(\pm)} F , P^{(\pm)} G]^{IJ}

which is our main result, already stated above as Eq.2. We also have that any bracket splits as

[F , G]^{IJ} = [P^+ F + P^- F , P^+ G + P^- F]^{IJ}

= [P^+ F, P^+ G]^{IJ} + [P^- F , P^- G]^{IJ}  .

into a part that depends only on self-dual Lorentzian tensors and is itself the self-dual part of [F , G]^{IJ}, and a part that depends only on anti-self-dual Lorentzian tensors and is the anit-self-dual part of [F , G]^{IJ}.

Derivation of Ashtekar's Formalism from the Self-dual Action

The proof given here follows that given in lectures by Jorge Pullin[8]

The Palatini action


S(e,\omega) = \int d^4 x e e^a_I e^b_J \Omega_{ab}^{\;\;\;\; IJ} [\omega]
\;\;\; Eq \; 11

where the Ricci tensor, \Omega_{ab}^{\;\;\;\; IJ}, is thought of as constructed purely from the connection \omega_a^{IJ}, not using the frame field. Variation with espect to the tetrad gives Einstein's equations written in terms of the tetrads, but for a Ricci tensor constructed from the connection that has no a priori relationship with the tetrad. Variation with respect to the connection tells us the connection satisfies the usual compatibility condition


D_b e_a^I = 0  .

This determines the connection in terms of the teterad and we recover the usual Ricci tensor.

The self-dual action for general relativity is given above.


S(e,A) = \int d^4 x e e^a_I e^b_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\;\; IJ} [A]

where F is the curvature of the A, the self-dual part of \omega,


A_a^{IJ} = {1 \over 2} (\omega_a^{IJ} - {i \over 2} \epsilon^{IJ}_{\;\;\;\; MN} \omega_a^{MN})  .

It has been shown that F [A] is the self-dual part of \Omega [\omega].

Define vector fields


E^a_I = q^a_b e^b_I,

(where q^a_b = \delta^a_b + n^a n_b is the projector onto the three surface), which are orthogonal to n^a.

Writing E^a_I = (\delta_b^a + n_b n^a) e^b_I then we can write


 \int d^4 x (e E^a_I E^b_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ} - 2 e E^a_I e^d_J n_d n^b F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ})  

= \int d^4 x (e (\delta_c^a + n_c n^a) e^c_I (\delta_d^b + n_d n^b) e^d_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ} - 2 e (\delta_c^a + n_c n^a) e^c_I e^d_J n_d n^b F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ})

= \int d^4 x (e e^a_I e^b_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ} + e n_c n^a e^c_I e^b_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ} + e e^a_I n_d n^b e^d_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ} 
+ e n_c n^a n_d n^b E^c_I E^d_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ}

\qquad - \; 2 e e^a_I e^d_J n_d n^b F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ} - 2 n_c n^a e^c_I e^d_J n_d n^b F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ})


= \int d^4 x e e^a_I e^b_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ}


= S(E,A)

where we used F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ} = F_{ba}^{\;\;\; JI} and n^a n^b F_{ab}^i = 0.

So the action can be written


S(E,A) = \int d^4 x (e E^a_I E^b_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ} - 2 e E^a_I e^d_J n_d n^b F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ})
\;\;\;  Eq \; 12

We have e = N \sqrt{q}. We now define


\tilde{E}_I^a = \sqrt{q} E_I^a

An internal tensor S^{IJ} is self-dual if and only if


*S^{IJ} := {1 \over 2} \epsilon^{IJ}_{\;\;\;\; MN} S^{MN} = i S^{IJ}

and given the curvature F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ} is self-dual we have


F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ} = - i {1 \over 2} \epsilon^{IJ}_{\;\;\;\; MN} F_{ab}^{\;\;\; MN}

Substituting this into the action (EQ  \; 12) we have,


S(E,A) = \int d^4 x (- i {1 \over 2} ({N \over \sqrt{q}}) \tilde{E}^a_I \tilde{E}^b_J \epsilon^{IJ}_{\;\;\;\; MN} F_{ab}^{\;\;\; MN} - 2 N n^b \tilde{E}^a_I n_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ})

where we denoted n_J = e_J^d n_d. We pick the gauge \tilde{E}^a_0 = 0 and n^I = \delta_0^I (this means n_I = \eta_{IJ} n^J = \eta_{00} \delta_0^I = - \delta_0^I). Writing \epsilon_{IJKL} n^L = \epsilon_{IJK}, which in this gauge \epsilon_{IJK0} = \epsilon_{IJK}. Therefore,


S(E,A) = \int d^4 x (- i {1 \over 2} ({N \over \sqrt{q}}) \tilde{E}^a_I \tilde{E}^b_J (\epsilon^{IJ}_{\;\;\;\; M0} F_{ab}^{\;\;\; M0} + \epsilon^{IJ}_{\;\;\;\; 0M} F_{ab}^{\;\;\; 0M}) - 2 N n^b \tilde{E}^a_I n_J F_{ab}^{\;\;\; IJ})

= \int d^4 x (- i ({N \over \sqrt{q}}) \tilde{E}^a_I \tilde{E}^b_J \epsilon^{IJ}_{\;\;\;\; M} F_{ab}^{\;\;\; M0} + 2 N n^b \tilde{E}^a_I F_{ab}^{\;\;\; I0})

The indices I,J,M range over 1,2,3 and we denote them with lower case letters in a moment. By the self-duality of A_a^{IJ},


A_a^{i0} = - i {1 \over 2} \epsilon^{i0}_{\;\;\; jk} A_a^{jk}
= i {1 \over 2} \epsilon^i_{\;\; jk} A_a^{jk}
= i A_a^i  .

where we used \epsilon^{i0}_{\;\;\; jk} = - \epsilon^i_{\;\; 0jk} = - \epsilon^i_{\;\; jk0} = - \epsilon^i_{\;\; jk}. This implies


F_{ab}^{\;\;\; i0} = \partial_a A_b^{i0} - \partial_b A_a^{i0} + A_a^{ik} A_{bk}^{\;\;\; 0} - A_b^{ik} A_{ak}^{\;\;\; 0}


= i (\partial_a A_b^i - \partial_b A_a^i + A_a^{ik} A_{bk} - A_b^{ik} A_{ak})


= i (\partial_a A_b^i - \partial_b A_a^i + \epsilon_{ijk} A_a^j A_b^k)


= i F_{ab}^i  .

We replace in the second term in the action N n^b by t^b - n^b. We need


\mathcal{L}_t A_b^i = t^a \partial_a A_b^i + A_a^i \partial_b t^a

and


\mathcal{D}_b (t^a A_a^i) = \partial_b (t^a A_a^i) + \epsilon_{ijk} A^j_b (t^a A_a^k)

to obtain


\mathcal{L}_t A_b^i - \mathcal{D}_b (t^a A_a^i) = t^a (\partial_a A_b^i - \partial_b A_a^i + \epsilon_{ijk} A_a^j A^k_b)
= t^a F_{ab}^i .

The action becomes


S = \int d^4 x (- i ({N \over \sqrt{q}}) \tilde{E}^a_I \tilde{E}^b_J \epsilon^{IJ}_{\;\;\;\; M} F_{ab}^{\;\;\; M0} - 2 (t^a - N^a) \tilde{E}^b_I F_{ab}^{\;\;\; I0})

= \int d^4 x (- 2 i \tilde{E}_i^b \mathcal{L}_t A_b^i + 2 i \tilde{E}_i^b \mathcal{D}_b (t^a A_a^i) + 2 i N^a \tilde{E}^b_i F_{ab}^i - ({N \over \sqrt{q}}) \epsilon_{ijk} \tilde{E}^a_i \tilde{E}^b_j F_{ab}^k)

where we swapped the dummy variables a and b in the second term of the first line. Integrating by parts on the second term,


\int d^4 x \tilde{E}_i^b \mathcal{D}_b (t^a A_a^i) = \int dt d^3 x \tilde{E}_i^b (\partial_b (t^a A_a^i) + \epsilon_{ijk} A_b^j (t^a A_a^k))

= - \int dt d^3 x t^a A_a^i (\partial_b \tilde{E}_i^b + \epsilon_{ijk} A_b^j \tilde{E}_k^b)

= - \int d^4 x t^a A_a^i \mathcal{D}_b \tilde{E}_i^b

where we have thrown away the boundary term and where we used the formula for the covariant derivative on a vector density \tilde{V}_i^b:


\mathcal{D}_b \tilde{V}_i^b = \partial_b \tilde{V}_i^b + \epsilon_{ijk} A_b^j \tilde{V}_k^b  .

The final form of the action we require is


S = \int d^4 x (- 2 i \tilde{E}_i^b \mathcal{L}_t A_b^i - 2 i (t^a A_a^i) \mathcal{D}_b \tilde{E}_i^b + 2 i N^a \tilde{E}^b_i F_{ab}^i + ({N \over \sqrt{q}}) \epsilon_{ijk} \tilde{E}^a_i \tilde{E}^b_j F_{ab}^k)

There is a term of the form ``p \dot{q} thus the quantity \tilde{E}_i^a is the conjugate momentum to A_a^i. Hence, we can immediately write


\{ A_a^i (x) , \tilde{E}_j^b (y) \} = {i \over 2} \delta^b_a \delta^i_j \delta^3 (x,y)  .

Variation of action with respect to the non-dynamical quantities (t^a A_a^i), that is the time component of the four-connection, the shift fucntion N^b, and lapse function N give the constraints


\mathcal{D}_a \tilde{E}_i^a = 0  ,


F_{ab}^i \tilde{E}^b_i = 0  ,


\epsilon_{ijk} \tilde{E}^a_i \tilde{E}^b_j F_{ab}^k = 0  
\;\; Eq \;\; 13 .

Varying with respect to N actually gives the last constraint in Eq  \; 13 divided by \sqrt{q}, it has been rescaled to make the constraint polynomial in the fundamental variables. The connection A_a^i can be written


A^i_a = {1 \over 2} \epsilon^{i}_{\;\; jk} A^{jk}_a
= {1 \over 2} \epsilon^i_{\;\; jk} \big( \omega^{jk}_a - i {1 \over 2} (\epsilon^{jk}_{\;\;\; m0} 

\omega^{m0}_a + \epsilon^{jk}_{\;\;\; 0m} \omega^{0m}_a) \big)
= \Gamma_a^i - i \omega^{0i}_a

and


E_{ci} \omega^{0i}_a = - q^b_a E_{ci} \omega_b^{i0}

= - q^b_a E_{ci} e^{di} \nabla_b e_d^0
= q^b_a q^d_c \nabla_b n_d = K_{ac}

where we used e^0_d = \eta^{0I} g_{dc} e_I^c = -g_{dc} e_0^c = - n_d, therefore \omega^{0i}_a = K_a^i. So the connection reads


A_a^i = \Gamma_a^i - i K_a^i  .

This is the so-called chiral spin connection.

Reality conditions

Because Ashtekar's variables are complex it results in complex general relativity. To recover the real theory one has to impose what are known as the reality conditions. These require that the densitized triad be real and that the real part of the Ashtekar connection equals the compatible spin connection.

More to be said on this, later.

See also

References

  1. J. Samuel. A Lagrangian basis for Ashtekar's formulation of canonical gravity. Pramana J. Phys. 28 (1987) L429-32
  2. T. Jacobson and L. Smolin. The left-handed spin connection as a variable for canonical gravity. Phys. Lett. B196 (1987) 39-42.
  3. T. Jacobson and L. Smolin. Covariant action for Ashtekar's form of canonical gravity. Class. Quant. Grav. 5 (1987) 583.
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