New Reply

Is spacetime quantized or relative?

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
Aug29-12, 07:59 PM   #1
 

Is spacetime quantized or relative?


I was wondering how spacetime could be relative and quantized. It doesn't make sense to me. I am especially interested in how this works in causal dynamical triangulation. I think it is a very interesting theory, and it sometimes doesn't get enough credit. But, I can't understand how at a tiny level, all spacetime is quantized, where at a macroscopic level, spacetime is continuous and relative. If anyone could help explain what I'm missing here, that'd be great!
 
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
physics news on PhysOrg.com

>> Iron-platinum alloys could be new-generation hard drives
>> Lab sets a new record for creating heralded photons
>> Breakthrough calls time on bootleg booze
Aug29-12, 08:59 PM   #2
 
Recognitions:
Science Advisor Science Advisor
Quote by Guymillion View Post
I was wondering how spacetime could be relative and quantized. It doesn't make sense to me. I am especially interested in how this works in causal dynamical triangulation. I think it is a very interesting theory, and it sometimes doesn't get enough credit. But, I can't understand how at a tiny level, all spacetime is quantized, where at a macroscopic level, spacetime is continuous and relative. If anyone could help explain what I'm missing here, that'd be great!
It depends on how their parameters are tuned. In some phases the spatial geometry changes randomly with time. Take a look at Fig 1 of http://arxiv.org/abs/1205.1229 .
 
Aug30-12, 02:53 PM   #3
 
Sorry, I'm sure this was a perfect explanation, but I don't really understand it. What I got from this was that there are three phases: A, B, and C. They can transition from one to another.

I'm new at this.

Anyways, these three phases are placed in a phase diagram. However I'm not quite sure what the differences between these phases are.

My current understanding is that depending on the phase spacetime is in, its geometry could be relative or quantized. It all depends.

However, I'm not even certain if I am looking at this the right way.
 
Aug31-12, 07:10 AM   #4
 

Is spacetime quantized or relative?


Yeah, so basically I have no idea. :p
 
Aug31-12, 02:40 PM   #5
 
Recognitions:
Gold Membership Gold Member
Science Advisor Science Advisor
As a beginner interested in CDT you should have already read Renate Loll's SciAm article.

I'll bet you already have. But if not, let us know. I'll try to find link to online copy. Or at least the date so you can find it in library.

"Quantized" does not mean what you may be thinking. A continuous medium can have a quantum geometry. If angles, lengths, areas etc are uncertain. And if there are some restrictions on what happens when you measure them. Like the energy levels of an atom, a measurement of an area or a volume may only have some discrete possible outcomes.

When geometry is "quantized" it does not mean that space is "made" of little "grains" or "chunks". Space is not a substance.

Saying "quantized" is saying something about geometry (a web of relations among measurements of lengths, areas, angles, volumes etc).
The uncertainty and the discreteness applies to outcomes of measurements, not to some imaginary material or "fabric".

In CDT they do not say that spacetime is made of little blocks, they MODEL the geometry that way, as if it were made of little blocks.

Renate Loll's SciAm article was really good. Let me know if you havent read it yet.

wait, I have a reference, I think it was February 2007 and a free online copy is here:

http://www.signallake.com/innovation...antumJul08.pdf

try this and see if it works. Have to go.
 
Aug31-12, 07:19 PM   #6
 
That looks like a really good article, I'll take a good look at it.
 
Sep1-12, 07:11 AM   #7
 
Thank you so much for that article, it helped me a lot. I had seen Renate Loll's lecture, (which can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fv2gBjQ8xIo) but this described more of the history of quantum gravity.

So, just like particles, spacetime can go into superposition. This means that different geometries can overlap with one another. To describe these geometries, we can approximate with four-simplexes. If we give each of these four-simplexes a direction of time, we get causality, and a universe that is similar to our own. However, quantum spacetime isn't really made of these simplexes, we just used them to give us an approximation of the quantum geometry. In real life, the spacetime isn't split into chunks, but it does go into superposition, and it does have an arrow of time. This way, we still have our relative, continuous, macroscopic spacetime.
 
Sep1-12, 10:47 AM   #8
 
Recognitions:
Science Advisor Science Advisor
Quote by Guymillion View Post
Thank you so much for that article, it helped me a lot. I had seen Renate Loll's lecture, (which can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fv2gBjQ8xIo) but this described more of the history of quantum gravity.

So, just like particles, spacetime can go into superposition. This means that different geometries can overlap with one another. To describe these geometries, we can approximate with four-simplexes. If we give each of these four-simplexes a direction of time, we get causality, and a universe that is similar to our own. However, quantum spacetime isn't really made of these simplexes, we just used them to give us an approximation of the quantum geometry. In real life, the spacetime isn't split into chunks, but it does go into superposition, and it does have an arrow of time. This way, we still have our relative, continuous, macroscopic spacetime.
In the tentative conception of CDT, space is split into little chunks at first, and they form superpositions. Depending on some parameters, the little chunks assemble into a nice spacetime that is smooth on large scales. In other parameter ranges, the little chunks don't assemble into anything like our universe. The different behaviours of their model in different parameter ranges are called diffrerent phases - just like liquid, solid and gas are different phases of water depending on parameters like temperature and pressure. Because of the phase behaviour of their model, they hope that the chunks can be made smaller and smaller until the theory is completely smooth on small and large scales. However, this remains conjectural.
 
Sep1-12, 11:11 AM   #9
 
So they hope to get closer and closer approximations of quantum spacetime geometry, eventually getting rid of the 4-simplexes all together? They just haven't gotten there yet.

Thanks for the help on phases, I was just completely lost there.
 
Sep1-12, 11:16 AM   #10
 
Recognitions:
Science Advisor Science Advisor
Quote by Guymillion View Post
So they hope to get closer and closer approximations of quantum spacetime geometry, eventually getting rid of the 4-simplexes all together? They just haven't gotten there yet.

Thanks for the help on phases, I was just completely lost there.
Yes, that is related to a conjecture called "Asymptotic Safety".
 
Sep1-12, 11:46 AM   #11
 
If spacetime can go into superposition, does that mean that there is a small probability that the distance between me and my computer could change slightly?
 
Sep1-12, 12:28 PM   #12
 
Recognitions:
Science Advisor Science Advisor
Quote by Guymillion View Post
If spacetime can go into superposition, does that mean that there is a small probability that the distance between me and my computer could change slightly?
It is unclear to me in CDT what a measurement of a distance is.

In LQG, the answer is tentatively yes, since there are proposed measurement operators. However, having the distance change each time you measure it seems to require multiple identical preparations of you and your computer, so I'm not sure.
 
Sep1-12, 12:44 PM   #13
 
Recognitions:
Gold Membership Gold Member
brief answer to your title: 'yes'

some details:
here are some good discussions on continuous versus discrete spacetime. Relativists often don't much like the idea of continuous spacetime [because that's not the perspective Einstein developed] but when you stick in 'h' for quantum mechanics formulations of the worold just about everything gets quantized...

From Wikipedia:

Planck discovered that physical action could not take on any indiscriminate value. Instead, the action must be some multiple of a very small quantity (later to be named the "quantum of action" and now called Planck's constant). This inherent granularity is counterintuitive in the everyday world, where it is possible to "make things a little bit hotter" or "move things a little bit faster". This is because the quanta of action are very, very small in comparison to everyday human experience. Thus, on the macro scale quantum mechanics and classical physics converge. Nevertheless, it is impossible, as Planck found out, to explain some phenomena without accepting that action is quantized.


http://pirsa.org/09090005/
Spacetime can be simultaneously discrete and continuous, in the same way that information can.


http://arxiv.org/abs/1010.4354

“The equivalence of continuous and discrete information, which is of key importance in information theory, is established by Shannon sampling theory: of any band limited signal it suffices to record discrete samples to be able to perfectly reconstruct it everywhere, if the samples are taken at a rate of at least twice the band limit. It is known that physical fields on generic curved spaces obey a sampling theorem if they possess an ultraviolet cutoff.”

and
http://arxiv.org/abs/0708.0062
On Information Theory, Spectral Geometry and Quantum Gravity
Achim Kempf, Robert Martin
4 pages
(Submitted on 1 Aug 2007)
We show that there exists a deep link between the two disciplines of information theory and spectral geometry.

In this thread

http://physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=391989

"argument for the discreteness of spacetime",

Ben Crowell posted this question...
The following is a paraphrase of an argument for the discreteness of spacetime, made by Smolin in his popular-level book Three Roads to Quantum Gravity. The Bekenstein bound says there's a limit on how much information can be stored within a given region of space. If spacetime could be described by continuous classical fields with infinitely many degrees of freedom, then there would be no such limit. Therefore spacetime is discrete.
Lee Smolin says this in THREE ROADS TO QUANTUM GRAVITY

"On the Planck scale space seems to be composed of fundamental discrete units. String bits are one view of this, the Bekenstein bound from black hole thermodynamics is another. (LQG sees these units as spin networks.) It’s possible these are three different approaches to the quantum world..maybe there is a way of unifying them within a single theory.

The Holographic principle was inspired by the Bekenstein bound. Einstein’s equations of relativity can be derived by using the Bekenstein bound and laws of thermodynamics..."

If you search these forums you'll find many interesting discussions on your topic.
 
Sep1-12, 03:56 PM   #14
 
Recognitions:
Gold Membership Gold Member
I just found this article:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/48863290...ience-science/

It seems to measure spacetime to be smooth, not discrete.
 
Sep1-12, 04:29 PM   #15
 
"If spacetime could be described by continuous classical fields with infinitely many degrees of freedom, then there would be no such limit. Therefore spacetime is discrete."

I'm not quite certain how this conclusion is drawn. Is there any way we know how to describe spacetime using fields?

I'll take a look at that information theory stuff.
 
Sep1-12, 04:41 PM   #16
 
Recognitions:
Science Advisor Science Advisor
The gauge/gravity duality appears to be provide a mathematically sensible theory of quantum gravity in which spacetime is continuous. It probably does not describe our universe because of the matter content and the cosmological constant. But it appears to be a consistent theory of quantum gravity.

http://www.sns.ias.edu/~malda/sciam-maldacena-3a.pdf
 
Sep1-12, 07:17 PM   #17
 
On the Planck scale space seems to be composed of fundamental discrete units. String bits are one view of this, the Bekenstein bound from black hole thermodynamics is another. (LQG sees these units as spin networks.) It’s possible these are three different approaches to the quantum world..maybe there is a way of unifying them within a single theory.
The Bekenstein bound just has to do with the amount of entropy in an area, not the quantum structure of spacetime, right?

When he said string bits, was he talking about this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit-string_physics

Thanks for all the help, guys. I have a lot of questions.
 
New Reply
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: Is spacetime quantized or relative?
Thread Forum Replies
Spacetime: continuous or quantized? General Physics 1
Spontaneous dimensional reduction of quantized spacetime Beyond the Standard Model 8
Quantized spacetime and Special Relativity Beyond the Standard Model 24
Double slit in time experiment = evidence for quantized spacetime Quantum Physics 18
Can Spacetime be Quantized? General Physics 25