Do we know for sure if gravity exists in quantum states?

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SUMMARY

The forum discussion centers on the existence of gravity within quantum states, particularly questioning whether gravity can be measured in undisturbed quantum systems. Participants argue that while classical gravity couples to quantum states, evidenced by phenomena like the gravitational redshift of photons measured via the Mössbauer effect, definitive proof of gravity's role in undisturbed quantum states remains elusive. The conversation also touches on the speculative nature of quantum gravity theories, with various approaches like Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG) and Causal Dynamical Triangulations (CDT) being discussed as potential frameworks for understanding this relationship.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of quantum mechanics principles, particularly decoherence.
  • Familiarity with gravitational effects on quantum states, such as gravitational redshift.
  • Knowledge of quantum gravity theories, including Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG) and Causal Dynamical Triangulations (CDT).
  • Basic grasp of experimental physics methods, such as beam-splitter experiments.
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the implications of gravitational redshift in quantum mechanics.
  • Explore the experimental setups for measuring quantum states in gravitational fields.
  • Study the theories of quantum gravity, focusing on Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG) and Causal Dynamical Triangulations (CDT).
  • Investigate the concept of gravity as an emergent property from quantum information.
USEFUL FOR

Physicists, researchers in quantum mechanics and gravitational theory, and anyone interested in the intersection of quantum physics and gravitational effects.

Coldcall
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I was just wondering because it seems there is a contradiction in qm. If a quantum state can only be represented by an abstract statistic then would not gravity be equally subjective until decoherence occurs?

And what about entanglement? It appears to act as a constant (an immediate one) over whatever distances never mind any gravitational influences.

Maybe I am crazy but that seems to suggest gravity aint happening in quantum states. Any evidence either way?
 
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One can show that classical gravity couples to quantum states and induces quantum effects. One example is the gravitational red-shift of photons which can be measured via the Mössbauer effect.
 
google
neutron gravity quantum
you get all sorts of articles of different credibility about quantum states created by gravity field.
 
tom.stoer said:
One can show that classical gravity couples to quantum states and induces quantum effects. One example is the gravitational red-shift of photons which can be measured via the Mössbauer effect.

redshift doesn't prove gravity at quantum scale. You are talking light which is being measured hence its no longer in coherent state. I am talking about proof of gravity within an undisturbed quantum state.
 
Dmitry67 said:
google
neutron gravity quantum
you get all sorts of articles of different credibility about quantum states created by gravity field.

thanks will do.
 
What do you mean by "gravity in an undisturbed quantum state"; do you mean "a quantum state of the gravitational field"? If yes this is quantum gravity; if not then you always couple a quantum state to a gravitational field. It doesn't matter if you call this "disturbed", it's just an interaction. The particle doesn't care where the constant force (linear potential) comes from, whether it's a constant electric field or a gravitational field.

The redshift is in some sense a proof of gravity at the quantum scale as it couples to a quantum object, a single photon. If you don't like the redshift + Mössbauer then you can use a kind of beam-splitter experiment where one beam is at constant gravitational potental whereas the other beam feels a different potential. Then instead of measuring an energy difference you can measure the phase shift.

Anyway - it's a gravitational field coupled to a quantum system.
 
tom.stoer said:
What do you mean by "gravity in an undisturbed quantum state"; do you mean "a quantum state of the gravitational field"? If yes this is quantum gravity; if not then you always couple a quantum state to a gravitational field. It doesn't matter if you call this "disturbed", it's just an interaction. The particle doesn't care where the constant force (linear potential) comes from, whether it's a constant electric field or a gravitational field.

The redshift is in some sense a proof of gravity at the quantum scale as it couples to a quantum object, a single photon. If you don't like the redshift + Mössbauer then you can use a kind of beam-splitter experiment where one beam is at constant gravitational potental whereas the other beam feels a different potential. Then instead of measuring an energy difference you can measure the phase shift.

Anyway - it's a gravitational field coupled to a quantum system.

My question was simple. Have we been able to measure/sense gravitaitonal effect within a un-decohered quantum state.

But its okay becaus ei found another paper by some guys claming gravity is a macroscopic emergent property from quantum information, so i guess they are arguing gravity does not exist prior to decoherence.

Anyways not to worry, thanks.
 
Coldcall said:
... gravity is a macroscopic emergent property from quantum information, so i guess they are arguing gravity does not exist prior to decoherence.
Hopefully you know that this is rather speculative!
 
tom.stoer said:
Hopefully you know that this is rather speculative!

yes of course. However, considering no-one appears able to integrate qm and gravity..the whole idea of quantum gravity is in itself speculative.

That didnt stop you bandying about the term as if its a fact :-)
 
  • #10
To which term do you refer to? Quantum gravity?

I do refer to a specific approach, but there is a rather general reason that something like quantum gravity MUST exist. Einstein's equation (formally) read

G = T

where G[g] is the spacetime and T are all other fields; T must be quantized whereas for G no such quantization is well established up to know. But we know that

G = <T>

is inconsistent, therefore some theory of quantum gravity MUST exist. Individual approaches may be speculative, but not the general idea.

Btw.: how do you know that nobody is able to integrate gravity and the quantum? Have you studied all approaches and proven that they are all inconsistent or physically wrong? Congratulations!
 
  • #11
tom.stoer said:
To which term do you refer to? Quantum gravity?

I do refer to a specific approach, but there is a rather general reason that something like quantum gravity MUST exist. Einstein's equation (formally) read

G = T

where G[g] is the spacetime and T are all other fields; T must be quantized whereas for G no such quantization is well established up to know. But we know that

G = <T>

is inconsistent, therefore some theory of quantum gravity MUST exist. Individual approaches may be speculative, but not the general idea.

Btw.: how do you know that nobody is able to integrate gravity and the quantum? Have you studied all approaches and proven that they are all inconsistent or physically wrong? Congratulations!

Its a well-known fact that various approaches to quantum gravity have failed thus far. Otherwise we would all have heard about it as a major breakthrough.

Some theory of quantum gravity must exist? Well that's your opinion. I don't agree.
 
  • #12
Coldcall said:
Its a well-known fact that various approaches to quantum gravity have failed thus far. Otherwise we would all have heard about it as a major breakthrough.
Which one has failed?
 
  • #13
tom.stoer said:
Which one has failed?

As far as i know they've all failed. If you know of one which is now proven and accepted then please do share that breaking news with the rest of us :-)
 
  • #14
It's the total amount of energy that is required to test a theory of quantum gravity that is a the hurdle. But as Coldcall asserts, they may all be wrong(or maybe not).
 
  • #15
Do you know what it means for a theory to have failed? It must have made at least one wrong prediction.

What I see so far is rather different: present-day approaches towards quantum gravity can make some predictions which are subject to future experimental tests; some of them establish both an UV complete and finite theory with correct low-energy limit.
CDT naturally has a phase which corresponds to macroscopic deSitter w/o any fine tuning or artificial input. CDT and LQG both indicate a "running spectral dimension" between 2 in the UV and 4 in the low-energy regime (LQG does not fix any dimension on the level of spin networks, so this can lead to a prediction of spacetime dimension). LQC (which is related but not derived from LQG) makes some testable predictions regarding the spectrum of primordial gravitational waves which can be seen as imprint in the CMB. LQC resolves big bang and black hole singularities; it points towards a natural explanation for inflation w/o artificial inflaton. Both string theory and LQG allow one to derive a microscopic picture for black holes micro state counting = entropy. From LQG (in its new formulation) one should be able to derive the long-range effective graviton propagator and therefore the correct semiclassical limit. The AS (asymptotic safety) approach provides another (rather different) setup which is UV complete and which to some extend explains the structure of Einsteins gravity as one "special point" in the "theory space" according to the renormalization group approach (via a non-Gaussian fixpoint). This approach backs up the results regarding spectral dimension 2 - 4.

So all these approaches have not yet succeeded in defining a unique theory of quantum gravity. But saying that they have failed is absurd.
 
  • #16
GeorgCantor said:
... they may all be wrong(or maybe not)
I agree, that's a correct statement
:biggrin:
 
  • #17
Tom,

"So all these approaches have not yet succeeded in defining a unique theory of quantum gravity. But saying that they have failed is absurd."

You know that science is in big trouble when it hides behind semantic nonsense to deny something we all know to be a fact. That being, the failure (thus far) to combine qm and gravity into a unified theory or law.

Anyways i think we all agree. My question was simple, i asked for proof, none was forthcoming, cheers.
 
  • #18
I have some random questions about QGish ideas tom as long as this thread is bumping:

1) can a quantum particle absorb gravitational energy? I mean, would all the quantum particles that make up a classical article individually absorb quantized gravitational potential energy as the classical object fell through a g-potential... or what?

2) can (does?) gravity shape the potential landscape that a typical quantum particle exists in?

3) of course, mass appears as a constant in introductory QM texts (I remember in solid state we had an effective mass, but I don't remember the context and I'm trying to keep it simple). But this is as an inertial term and doesn't necessarily imply gravity... unless one accepts Mach's principle. Is there any attempts at unification through Mach's principle?

thanks!
 
  • #19
Coldcall said:
My question was simple, i asked for proof, none was forthcoming, cheers.

well.. you DID see a theoretical proof stating that a quantum description of gravity must exist. I don't know how valid it is (it's the first time I've heard it) but I'm largely ignorant on the subject (even with a Bachelor's in physics).

But you also saw lots of suggestive experimental evidence and falsifiable statements. So far, it sounds like good science to me. But I'm a meager grad student, so I desist.
 
  • #20
Coldcall said:
You know that science is in big trouble when it hides behind semantic nonsense to deny something we all know to be a fact. That being, the failure (thus far) to combine qm and gravity into a unified theory or law.

The difference between "failed = demonstrably false" and "not yet succeeded" is not semantic nonsense but semantic clarity!

What is missing is that one of these theories has been proven to be correct; but as you know one can't prove that a theory is correct, you can only prove that it's wrong (Popper). Of course I agree that there is still a long way to go, but there are promising approaches.
 
  • #21
To come back to the original question: what about my proposal of a beam-splitter / interference experiment with one quantum object staying at constant gravitational potental whereas the other quantum object being exposed to different potential along its "path"?
 
  • #22
Pythagorean said:
well.. you DID see a theoretical proof stating that a quantum description of gravity must exist. I don't know how valid it is (it's the first time I've heard it) but I'm largely ignorant on the subject (even with a Bachelor's in physics).

But you also saw lots of suggestive experimental evidence and falsifiable statements. So far, it sounds like good science to me. But I'm a meager grad student, so I desist.

actually saying a theory of quantum gravity must exist is a sort of straw-man argument. There is obviously some relation which can be described in some way, between qm and gravity. Perhaps gravity is emergent from qm, which would also conclude a relationship between the two.

I am just interested in whether gravity can be, or has been, measured and confirmed, within an undisturbed quantum system/state. Obviously its a difficult task considering measurement means its no longer undisturbed.

But considering the holy grail of combining qm and gravity has been so elusive, and also considering the abstact nature of quantum state description, then it seems logical ( at least to me) to question whether gravity has a similar asbtract existence within the qauntum state's environment.
 
  • #23
Coldcall said:
actually saying a theory of quantum gravity must exist is a sort of straw-man argument. There is obviously some relation which can be described in some way, between qm and gravity...

I see your point.

I am just interested in whether gravity can be, or has been, measured and confirmed, within an undisturbed quantum system/state. Obviously its a difficult task considering measurement means its no longer undisturbed.

I'm not sure what you mean by "measuring gravity with an undisturbed quantum state" or why specifically, it would be important. Do you mean, for instance, measuring a graviton? I think I would have heard about something like that...
 
  • #24
You may check this (rather old) reference for neutron interferometry and gravity-induced phase shift:

http://www.atomwave.org/rmparticle/ao%20refs/aifm%20refs%20sorted%20by%20topic/inertial%20sensing%20refs/gravity/COW75%20neutron%20gravity.pdf
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #25
Pythagorean said:
1) can a quantum particle absorb gravitational energy?
As there is no fundamental, unifying theory available this is hard to answer. Of course each individual quantum particle would interact with the quantized gravitational field. But even classically this does not mean that it "absorbs gravitational energy". The concept of energy is notoriously difficult in ART and will not become easier to tackle in QG, I am afraid.

Pythagorean said:
2) can (does?) gravity shape the potential landscape that a typical quantum particle exists in?
According to what we know the answer is "yes" - in the same sense as an electric field forms a potential; but be aware of the fact that you have to translate all this into "QG language"; already in quantum field theory the term "potential" is misleading as all fields become quantized. So there's a problem with your question already at the level of ordinary and well-understoof quantumfield theories.

Pythagorean said:
3) of course, mass appears as a constant in introductory QM texts (I remember in solid state we had an effective mass, but I don't remember the context and I'm trying to keep it simple). But this is as an inertial term and doesn't necessarily imply gravity... unless one accepts Mach's principle. Is there any attempts at unification through Mach's principle?
I don't understand. Mass is mass - already in ART; gravitational and inertial mass are identical. But I guess that it's difficult to define mass in a QG theory, basically due to the same reasons as energy becomes a rather purely understood concept.
 
  • #26
Coldcall said:
But considering the holy grail of combining qm and gravity has been so elusive, and also considering the abstact nature of quantum state description, then it seems logical ( at least to me) to question whether gravity has a similar asbtract existence within the qauntum state's environment.

I didn't understand what you meant first either, but now I think you more or less ask wether the future understanding of marrying QM and GR must necessarily be cast in the form of a "regular quantum theory" of gravity, in the sense that the state of the gravitational field somehow fits into some fixed hilbert space etc.

IMHO, we don't know that. It could equally be that instead of inventing a regular "quantum theory" of GR in some sense, QM may need to be revised. I think there is indications that using a regular quantum theory anzats of hilbert spaces of equivalenec classes of observes etc, is quite questionable.

/Fredirk
 
  • #27
Fra said:
I think there is indications that using a regular quantum theory anzats of hilbert spaces of equivalenec classes of observes etc, is quite questionable. /Fredirk
To which indications are you referring to?
I think that a theory of holography with "boundary Hilbert spaces" seems to be a promising framework.
 
  • #28
@coldcall, tom.stoer's already mentioned it but neutron interferometers are used in precision gravitational experiments, where the "quantum states" are most definitely influenced by gravity ("before they decohere").

But until the mechanism for QG is understood you can just as well argue an information based interpretation a la the entropic model of Verlinde's you alluded to (or a whole lot of other bizarre stuff)

ps you should try to be less rude to people like tom.stoer, (save the attitude for less knowledgeable people, like me :smile: )
 
  • #30
Quantum gravity is seen in "gravitational red-shift" effects. This state is proven whit a lot of theoretical and experimental works.
 

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