Phys. Rev. D 52, 1988 - 2000 (1995)Self-adjoint Wheeler-DeWitt operators, the problem of time, and the wave function of the Universe
Joshua Feinberg
Yoav Peleg Received 10 April 1995 We discuss minisuperspace aspects of a nonempty Robertson-Walker universe containing a scalar matter field. The requirement that the Wheeler-DeWitt (WDW) operator be self-adjoint is a key ingredient in constructing the physical Hilbert space and has nontrivial cosmological implications since it is related to the problem of time in quantum cosmology. Namely, if time is parametrized by matter fields we find two types of domains for the self-adjoint WDW operator: a nontrivial domain is comprised of zero current (Hartle-Hawking-type) wave functions and is parametrized by two new parameters, whereas the domain of a self-adjoint WDW operator acting on tunneling (Vilenkin-type) wave functions is a single ray. On the other hand, if time is parametrized by the scale factor both wave function types give rise to nontrivial domains for the self-adjoint WDW operators, and no new parameters appear in them. ©1995 The American Physical Society
URL: http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRD/v52/p1988 [ Abstract | Previous article | Next article | Issue 4 ] |
A new free weekly publication from APS
Read the latest from Physics:
Viewpoint: Undoing a quantum measurement
This Week's Milestone Letters are from 1994: |



