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Fermions in loop quantum cosmology and the role of parity

Martin Bojowald et al 2008 Class. Quantum Grav. 25 195006 (23pp)   doi: 10.1088/0264-9381/25/19/195006  Help

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Martin Bojowald1 and Rupam Das1,2
1 Institute for Gravitation and the Cosmos, The Pennsylvania State University, 104 Davey Lab, University Park, PA 16802, USA
2 Department of Physics and Astronomy, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA

Abstract. Fermions play a special role in homogeneous models of quantum cosmology because the exclusion principle prevents them from forming sizable matter contributions. They can thus describe the matter ingredients only truly microscopically and it is not possible to avoid strong quantum regimes by positing a large matter content. Moreover, possible parity-violating effects are important especially in loop quantum cosmology whose basic object is a difference equation for the wavefunction of the universe defined on a discrete space of triads. The two orientations of a triad are interchanged by a parity transformation, which leaves the difference equation invariant for ordinary matter. Here, we revisit and extend loop quantum cosmology by introducing fermions and the gravitational torsion they imply, which renders the parity issue non-trivial. A treatable locally rotationally symmetric Bianchi model is introduced which clearly shows the role of parity. General wavefunctions cannot be parity-even or odd, and parity-violating effects in matter influence the microscopic big bang transition which replaces the classical singularity in loop quantum cosmology.

PACS numbers: 04.20.Fy, 04.60.Pp

Print publication: Issue 19 (7 October 2008)
Received 17 June 2008, in final form 23 July 2008
Published 11 September 2008

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