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It is often said that QG is a topological QFT: given a bordism between $D$-manifolds $\Sigma_1$ and $\Sigma_2$, QG assigns a unitary between the Hilbert spaces associated with $\Sigma_1$ and $\Sigma_2$. For simplicity, here we won't sum over topologies, even though this is widely believed to be the right thing to do in general.

Concretely, the Hilbert space $\mathcal{H}_\Sigma$ associated to a $D$-manifold $\Sigma$ is the space of complex functionals $\Psi:Riem(\Sigma)/Diff(\Sigma)\to \mathbb{C}$. Note that these states are diff-invariant by construction, and so no spatial-diff constraint must be imposed.

Now, it's my understanding that in a TQFT, the Hamiltonian $H$ must vanish identically. To see this, fix the background topology $\mathbb{R}\times\Sigma$, with $t\in\mathbb{R}$ interpreted as time. Then all the bordisms are the identity bordism, so the evolution from $t_1\times \Sigma$ to $t_2 \times \Sigma$ is just the identity. But the generator of time translations is $H$, so we must have $H=0$.

On the other hand, in canonical quantum gravity, the Hamiltonian constraint of classical GR is quantised and leads to the Wheeler-de Witt equation $H|\Psi\rangle=0$. This equation is supposed to be a nontrivial constraint, selecting a "physical" sector of $H_\Sigma$. Much effort has gone into constructing explicit solutions for $|\Psi\rangle$. It surely can't be the case that $H$ vanishes identically on $\mathcal{H}_\Sigma$, otherwise no one would talk about "solving" the WdW equation.

What have I misunderstood? In answering, please feel free to assume $\Sigma$ is closed, compact and without boundary, if this simplifies things.

Qmechanic
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    Often said where? Which page? – Qmechanic Mar 31 '22 at 11:58
  • The Hamiltonian of TQFTs does not usually vanish identically. Your argument only shows that it vanishes on-shell, and indeed $H$ is almost always non-trivial, but proportional to constraints. Check the canonical quantization of Chern-Simons theories, for example. – AccidentalFourierTransform Mar 31 '22 at 12:20
  • @Qmechanic see e.g first para of https://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9506070 – nodumbquestions Mar 31 '22 at 13:06
  • @AccidentalFourierTransform What do you mean by "on-shell". I've only previously seen that term used to describe classical trajectories, in which case it means those which make the action stationary. But in my question, $H$ acts on kets labelled by "geometry on a slice", and I don't know what it means for geometry on a single slice to be "on-shell". – nodumbquestions Mar 31 '22 at 13:10
  • The canonical hamiltonian being zero is imposed as a constraint on the phase space. It's like the Gauss-law $\nabla\cdot\vec{E}=0$ in QED and QCD. Physical states should be gauge invariant, i.e $\nabla\cdot\vec{E}|\psi\rangle=0$. The Wheeler-de Witt equation you wrote is like the "Gauss-law" for diffeomorphism. – Valac Jun 06 '22 at 12:00

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"The Hamiltonian is zero" is not really an interesting statement for reparametrization-invariant theories - the Hamiltonian is generically zero for such theories, see this answer of mine.

The crucial point is that a Hamiltonian theory is more than its "naive" Hamiltonian $H(p,q)$. The Hamiltonian theories that correspond to Lagrangian theories with gauge freedoms are typically constrained (see also this answer of mine), and the action of such a constrained theory looks like $$ S = \int (\dot{q}^ip_i - u^\alpha\chi_\alpha - H)\mathrm{d}t$$ where the $\chi_\alpha$ are the constraints that must be fulfilled as $\chi_\alpha(p(t),q(t)) = 0$ on-shell classically and as $\chi_\alpha \lvert \psi(t)\rangle = 0$ quantumly. Your argument shows $H=0$, but that's just a very elaborate way of showing the general fact that reprametrization-invariant systems have zero Hamiltonians. It does not remove at all the requirement that the constraints of the system need to be implemented. The confusion with the "Hamiltonian constraint" of the Wheeler-deWitt equation is that the people who talk about the Wheeler-deWitt equation consider as "the Hamiltonian" the extended Hamiltonian $$ H' = u^\alpha \chi_\alpha - H$$ so that $H'\lvert \psi\rangle = 0$ requires fulfillment of the constraints.

ACuriousMind
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  • Technical follow-up question: just to be clear, in the case of GR, are the $\chi_\alpha$ the usual constraint operators $\mathcal{H},\mathcal{H}^i$, and $u_\alpha$ are the lapse and shift? And $\mathcal{H}$ is distinct from both $H$ and $H'$? – nodumbquestions Mar 31 '22 at 16:21
  • Conceptual follow-up: I see the point of the spatial-diff constraint: physical wavefunctionals on a slice $\Sigma$ should be invariant under $diff(\Sigma)$. But I don't see the "point" of the Hamiltonian constraint. What's stopping us from using any old state from $\mathcal{H}_\Sigma$ (as defined in the question) as our initial state, and just turning the crank of the path integral to produce a final state? Isn't the unitary evolution produced by the gravitational path integral (at least formally) fully diff-invariant? – nodumbquestions Mar 31 '22 at 16:30
  • @nodumbquestions 1. My answer is not specific to GR, the $u^\alpha$ are generic Lagrange multipliers enforcing the constraints $\chi_\alpha$. 2. You don't have a path integral to crank if you ignore the constraints! This is also a general fact in the quantization of constrained Hamiltonian systems: Since your actual (classical) states are equivalence classes of gauge orbits in a constraint surface, the naive space of states you would associated to your system (either classically or quantumly)`is too big and trying to integrate over that overcounts equivalent configurations. – ACuriousMind Mar 31 '22 at 16:35
  • I appreciate your general answer, I just want to understand how it maps onto the specific case of GR. 2. Surely I do have a path integral. I've already quotiented by $Diff(\Sigma)$ in my definition of $\mathcal{H}\Sigma$, so there's no overcounting. Use [ ] to denote equivalence classes under surface diffeos. Then we can calculate amplitudes $\langle [h{ij}^{(2)}]|U_{1\to 2}|[h_{ij}^{(1)}]\rangle$ by path integrating over all geometries (mod diffeos) that restrict to the given geometries on the boundary. What's wrong with that?
  • – nodumbquestions Mar 31 '22 at 21:27
  • @nodumbquestions 1. Ah, I think in the ADM formalism the Lagrange multipliers are the lapse and shift, yes. 2. a) Whether or not "diffeomorphism invariance" corresponds to the gauge freedom in GR is somewhat thorny issue, see https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/346793/50583 and its linked questions. b) Generically in constrained quantization, restricting to the constraint surface is not enough to avoid overcounting, since the gauge orbits are orbits inside the constraint surface. Unfortunately I don't know enough QG to tell you how your TQFT model meshes with the canonical approach. – ACuriousMind Mar 31 '22 at 21:43