Hartle–Hawking proposal
The Hartle–Hawking state, also known as the no-boundary wave function, is a cosmological model that applies quantum mechanics to the Big Bang.[2]Template:Rp It is named after James Hartle and Stephen Hawking, who first proposed it in 1983.[3][4] The concept can also be considered as an initial condition for models of quantum cosmology.[5]Template:Rp
Ingredients
The Hartle-Hawking proposal includes several ingredients. First it uses Richard Feynman's sum over histories approach to quantum mechanics. In this approach every possible path a particle can take through spacetime contributes to the solution with its own an amplitude and phase. Technical challenges with those sums lead to the second ingredient, a transformation to Euclidean space-time: a geometry which combines 3 space dimensions with an imaginary time dimension.[6]Template:Rp This is related to the Wick rotation, , and it converts the spacetime metric in to a Euclidean metric, . In Hawking approach this rotation is applied to every path, not to the background space of the paths as in Wick's approach and therefore the sum of histories becomes a quantum superposition of spacetimes.[2]Template:Rp This curved Euclidean spacetime can be analogous to a sphere in being both finite in extent and yet have no boundary.[6]Template:Rp
History
The original 1983 paper by Hartle and Hawking grew out of a summer visit by Hawking to UC Santa Barbara where Hartle worked. Hawking was exploring the idea that the boundary condition for space time was simply no-boundary at all. With Hartle this idea was converted in to a proposal and published.[6]Template:Rp In 1998 Hawking worked with Neil Turok to expand the Hartle-Hawking concept to include a hyperbolic or open geometry.[7][2][8][1]
See also
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References
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