Abstract
The canonical quantization of supergravity is developed, starting from the Hamiltonian treatment of classical supergravity. Quantum states may be represented by wave functionals f(eAAi(x),ψAi(x)) of the spatial spinor-valued tetrad forms eAAi and of the right-handed spatial part ψAi of the spin-32 field, or equivalently by functionals f̃(eAAi(x),ψ¯Ai(x)) of eAAi, and the left-handed part ψ¯Ai. In the first representation the momentum pAAi classically conjugate to eAAi, together with ψ¯Ai, can be represented by functional differential operators such that the correct (anti) commutation relations hold; similarly for pAAi,ψAi in the second representation. A formal inner product can be found in which pAAi is Hermitian and ψAi,ψ¯Ai are Hermitian adjoints. Physical states obey the quantum constraints JABf=0, J¯ABf=0, SAf=0, S¯Af=0, HAAf=0, where JAB, J¯AB are the quantum versions of the classical generators of local Lorentz rotations, SA, S¯A correspond to classical supersymmetry generators, and HAA to generalized coordinate transformations. The constraints JABf=0, J¯ABf=0 describe the invariance of f(e,ψ) under local Lorentz transformations, S¯Af=0 gives a simple transformation property of f(e,ψ) under left-handed supersymmetry transformations applied to eAAi, ψAi, and SAf=0 gives a corresponding property of f̃(e,ψ¯) under right-handed transformations; these transformation properties are all that is required of a physical state. All physical wave functionals can be found by superposition from the amplitude K to go from prescribed data (eAAi,ψ̃Ai)I on an initial surface to data (eAAi,ψAi)F on a final surface, which is given by a Feynman path integral. In a semiclassical expansion of this amplitude around a classical solution, the constraints imply that the one- and higher-loop terms A,A1,A2, are invariant under left-handed supersymmetry transformations at the final surface, and under right-handed transformations at the initial surface. An alternative approach to perturbation theory is provided by the multiple-scattering expansion, which constructs higher-order terms from the one-loop approximation A exp(iSc) to K, where Sc is the classical action. This gives a resummation of the standard semiclassical expansion, which may help in improving the convergence of the theory. The invariance of A under left-handed supersymmetry at the final surface is shown to limit the allowed surface divergences in A; there is at most one possible surface counterterm at one loop. Similar restrictions on surface counterterms in the standard expansion are expected at higher-loop order; these conditions may possibly also affect the usual volume counterterms, which must here be accompanied by surface contributions.