Hurkyl said:
Short question: is the concept of length meaningful in LQG?
Hurkyl in my opinion the most developed and applied branch of LQG
is LQC and Bojowald just this month published a very brief summary of the current status of his field.
http://arxiv.org/gr-qc/0503020
one could take this as representative of LQG
here you will see area operators/eigenvalues
and volume operators/eigenvalues
you will not see a length operator, or a length eigenvalue
over and over again, in LQG analysis, I have seen length arise as the square root of area, and it could also emerge as the volume of something divided by its cross-section area.
And so I have gotten the impression that length is less of a basic or primitive measurement and more derived.
I have the impression that Yes the concept of length IS meaningful in LQG and, although not in bojowald's brief paper, one encounters lengths quite often! Although it may be less basic to LQG than either area or volume and more of a convenient derived concept.
Do you have any ideas about this? I could be interesting to pursue it some.
(also I am just someone on the sidelines giving my impression, an LQG expert might contradict me and say length was equally basic with area and volume)