Trying to understand Quantum Gravity

In summary, Carlo Rovelli discusses how the universe is not composed of nothing, but rather made of fields on fields. He goes on to say that this has far reaching implications for quantum field theory, and that if it is successful it will bring about a major change in physics.
  • #1
Vast
285
0
There’s a consensus among many physicists that the universe did not emerge from nothing, if fact stating that nothing simply cannot exist.

However while reading Carlo Rovelli book Quantum Gravity, the following on page 25 states:
The space and time of Newton and Minkowski are reinterpreted as a configuration of one of the fields, the gravitational field. This implies that physical entities –particles and fields- are not all immersed in space, and moving in time. They do not live on spacetime. They live, so to say, on one another.
It is as if we had observed in the ocean many animals living on an island: animals on the island. Then we discover that the island itself is in fact a great whale. Not anymore animals on the island, just animals on animals. Similarly, the universe is not made by fields on spacetime; it is made by fields on fields. This book studies the far reaching effect that this conceptual shift has on QFT.
One consequence is that the quanta of the field cannot live in spacetime; they must build “spacetime” themselves. This is precisely what the quanta of space do in loop quantum gravity.

So if we continue with this interpretation of fields building fields, do we have a picture of the universe which is built from nothing? Or something entirely different?

Hope I'm on the right track here. :frown:
 
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  • #2
Vast said:
[page 7 of rovelli's book: the parable of the whale]

I guess i would caution that how we humans contrive to model the universe is not necessarily the same as how the thing itself came into existence


rovelli, if i understand him, is here not saying anythingabout how It was created

he is talking about how we model it

In Newton's time it was believed that you could not construct a satisfactory model without first assuming a background of absolute space

certain areas of theoretical physics still require a fixed background
e.g. conventional quantum field theory QFT is constructed on an artificial stage called "Minkowski space". this is a rigid spacetime with no curvature and no spatial expansion
so it in this respect it is unlike nature
however the theory leads to good approximations

Many people therefore imagine that it is impossible to define a field without first setting out a rigid absolute spacetime framework on which to define it.

However rovelli and others have described a proceedure for defining the gravitational field without prior committment to a fixed geometry
this field then IS the geometry of spacetime and upon that field other fields can be defined.

so the models of all fields/particles can be bootstrapped into existence
without resorting to a prior static framework

the model is dynamic from the ground up

this is the whale on which the other animals are sitting

-----------------

notice however that this is talking about the human process of constructing models with which we desire to make checkable predictions

God, as one laughingly says, may have used some absolute space in which to create the world and all its fields, or he may not have. Rovelli's parable
IMHO IMHO IMHO is not supposed to suggest how the world came into being but how models of it are constructed. I fervently believe that the jury is still out about how the world came into being and that what one should be desiring is merely to have a model of quantum spacetime with matter fields in it that will actually predict numbers that one can check by observation. we humble vertebrates who still resemble our fish ancestors do not even have this
 
  • #3
Vast, I forgot to tell you, it is really exciting to encounter
someone else who is reading rovelli's book Quantum Gravity.

in this book quantum states of the gravitational field
eventually get identified with colored networks

immense networks with jillions of edges, and the coloring
of the edges and vertices can represent matter fields and particles

and the model has "diffeomorphism invariance" that is you dont
break it if you morph it around---it doesn't have a stiff preordained shape.
so its a audacious new vision of things
(which in the largescale limit is supposed to look like the familiar world, it is only if you take a microscopic look up close that the networkiness appears)
actually einstein's 1915 GR already has diffeo morphability and backgroundlessness---GR has no fixed geometry the geometry comes out as a solution to the equations. So what rovelli and the others are trying to do is get a quantum theory that has the same freedom and morphability as the original 1915 theory of gravity.
this would, I guess, allow these same qualities to spread to the rest of physics
what is now QFT (the fields of matter and its forces) would be redefined
in a background-free and morphable manner----on a whale instead of an island

if it succeeds it will bring about a major change in physics
this is my take on it anyway

I hope you enjoy the book whether or not you agree with this personal view of it!
 
  • #4
So far I have been enjoying the book, and your personal view is appreciated!
Spin networks and loops is still all fairly new and over my head, but already it is quiet exciting.

My original assumption was that what was being described had implications to an actual explanation of how the universe is built. I didn’t read it that way at first but later on considered if it did actually represent the way the universe comes into existence.

I have to say that using the gravitational field as an actual canvas does make sense.

On another note how would this stand up to space being infinite? It seems to contradict space being infinite in extent, because as they say, if on the submicroscopic scale we see that there is a mesh of loops, wouldn’t that imply that space was finite?
 
  • #5
Vast said:
On another note how would this stand up to space being infinite? It seems to contradict space being infinite in extent, because as they say, if on the submicroscopic scale we see that there is a mesh of loops, wouldn’t that imply that space was finite?

I see. It is a problem! it does seem as if the LQG quantum states of the gravitational field (being networks) are intrinsically finite

And in contrast, the simplest most troublefree flat classical cosmology model has space be infinite

right now i can't think how that might be resolved
maybe if the Loop gravity program succeeds it will narrow the cosmology menu down to finite space models, but it might not. Perhaps there is another way
it could get sorted out

quantum models describe the state of an observers knowledge, and I guess one's information is always finite even if the universe is not

and if there is no bound on the number N of nodes in the network,
then although each pure state consists of a finite network with some number of nodes, yet a mixed state which is an average or sum of many pure states could have an arbitrarily large indefinite number of nodes and
it begins to look as if the u could be infinite afterall. I am afraid I am not thinking very precisely about this. Unless someone else responds I will try to get back to this question. it seems like a good question.
 
  • #6
are you reading the draft pdf version of this book? it doesn't seem to have been published yet...
 
  • #7
zeta101 said:
are you reading the draft pdf version of this book? it doesn't seem to have been published yet...

publication is not expected until later this year
Cambridge Press says September, Rovelli says October

it is easy to download the draft pdf version
which is what everybody at PF I've talked to who
has read in the book has done.

http://www.cpt.univ-mrs.fr/~rovelli/rovelli.html
 
  • #8
So if we continue with this interpretation of fields building fields, do we have a picture of the universe which is built from nothing?

"Nothing" is "not anything". One cannot build with or from "not anything".
 

1. What is quantum gravity?

Quantum gravity is a theoretical framework that aims to explain the fundamental nature of gravity at a quantum level. It combines the principles of quantum mechanics and general relativity to provide a consistent understanding of the behavior of gravity and the structure of space-time on a very small scale.

2. Why is understanding quantum gravity important?

Understanding quantum gravity is important because it can help us reconcile the two major theories of physics - general relativity and quantum mechanics. It can also provide insights into the behavior of the universe at a fundamental level, such as the behavior of black holes and the origin of the universe.

3. What are the challenges in trying to understand quantum gravity?

One of the main challenges in understanding quantum gravity is that it requires a unified theory that can accurately describe both the behavior of gravity and the behavior of subatomic particles. This has proven to be a difficult task, as the two theories have conflicting principles and equations.

4. How do scientists approach the study of quantum gravity?

Scientists use various theoretical and experimental methods to study quantum gravity. These include mathematical models, simulations, and experiments using high-energy particle accelerators. They also collaborate with other scientists in the field to share ideas and findings.

5. What are some proposed theories of quantum gravity?

There are several proposed theories of quantum gravity, including string theory, loop quantum gravity, and causal dynamical triangulations. Each theory has its own approach to reconciling general relativity and quantum mechanics, and they are all actively being researched and tested by scientists.

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