Advances in Theoretical and Mathematical Physics

Volume 25 (2021)

Number 7

Probing the Big Bang with quantum fields

Pages: 1651 – 1702

DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4310/ATMP.2021.v25.n7.a1

Authors

Abhay Ashtekar (Institute for Gravitation and the Cosmos & Physics Department, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pa., U.S.A.)

Tommaso De Lorenzo (Institute for Gravitation and the Cosmos & Physics Department, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pa., U.S.A.)

Marc Schneider (Institute for Gravitation and the Cosmos & Physics Department, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pa., U.S.A.; and Albert Einstein Institute for Gravitational Physics, Potsdam, Germany)

Abstract

By carrying out a systematic investigation of linear, test quantum fields $\hat{\varphi}(x)$ in cosmological space-times, we show that $\hat{\varphi}(x)$ remain well-defined across the big bang as operator valued distributions in a large class of Friedmann, Lemaître, Robertson, Walker space-times, including radiation and dust filled universes. In particular, the expectation values $\hat{\varphi}(x) \langle \hat{\varphi}(x^\prime) \rangle$ are well-defined bi-distributions in the extended space-time in spite of the big bang singularity. Interestingly, correlations between fields evaluated at spatially and temporally separated points exhibit an asymmetry that is reminiscent of the Belinskii, Khalatnikov, Lifshitz behavior. The renormalized products of fields ${\langle \hat{\varphi}^2 (x) \rangle}_{\mathrm{ren}}$ and ${\langle \hat{T}_{ab} (x) \rangle}_{\mathrm{ren}}$ also remain well-defined as distributions. Conformal coupling is not necessary for these considerations to hold. Thus, when probed with observables associated with quantum fields, the big bang (and the big crunch) singularities are quite harmless.

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Published 11 July 2022