The deepest problem: some perspectives on quantum gravity
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2202.08292v2
- Date: Mon, 14 Mar 2022 20:39:23 GMT
- Title: The deepest problem: some perspectives on quantum gravity
- Authors: Steven B. Giddings
- Abstract summary: It is evident that the long distance problem of unitarity, arising at high energies with black hole formation, is more profound.
This reveals a conflict between foundational principles of quantum field theory: those of quantum mechanics, relativity, and locality.
Perturbative gravity gives clues, with structure apparently different than in field theory.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Quantum gravity is likely the deepest problem facing current physics. While
traditionally associated with short distance nonrenormalizability, it is
evident that the long distance problem of unitarity, arising at high energies
with black hole formation, is more profound. This reveals a conflict between
foundational principles of quantum field theory: those of quantum mechanics,
relativity, and locality. Difficulties modifying quantum mechanics suggest a
"quantum-first" approach, with other principles as mathematical properties of a
quantum space of states. A challenge is how to describe locality, in terms of
Hilbert space structure. Perturbative gravity gives clues, with structure
apparently different than in field theory. The mathematical structure of
subsystems plausibly supplants conventional locality and plays a foundational
role in the theory. This view differs from one of spacetime "emerging" from
another quantum system. If a black hole behaves as a subsystem, a "black hole
theorem" says that unitarity requires interactions with its environment
depending on its state, or more drastic phenomena. Minimal interactions can be
parameterized, in an effective approach; they could arise from wormholes or
other fundamental dynamics. These or other near-horizon modifications
potentially alter electromagnetic or gravitational signatures of this strong
gravity region, now being probed in a new era of observation; it is important
to seek observational clues for or constraints on such scenarios. One may also
investigate quantum gravity via its S-matrix. New perturbative structure has
been discovered there, but the harder question again goes beyond to the
nonperturbative regime. Long-distance behavior of amplitudes indicates novel
analytic behavior; further exploration may provide important clues. Other key
questions regard quantum description of cosmologies, and of associated
observables.
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