Originally posted by HBar
Thanks marcus for the paper. It is very interesting!
-HBar
Yes, I think so too! That one by Ashtekar ("Quantum Geometry in action...") is really interesting.
He takes the step of imagining a quantum state of space.
As a huge polymer----like a ball-and-stick model of a vast protein molecule---or a 3D network made by gluing match-sticks
And this polymer is constantly changing and evolving. Links break and form new connections at other nodes. Maybe this happens as particles pass thru the network.
And he takes the trouble to visualize it and tell the reader Hey, you know, 10
68 of these little links, these match-stick things, pass thru the piece of paper you are reading.
Because the punctures by edges of the graph are what give a thing area.
And the nodes enclosed inside a region are what give it volume.
(lines in the net are one dimensional and they carry surface area which is 2D while nodes are zero dimensional points and they generate volume)
It does seem to be a new vision of space and there is a further extension called a "spin foam" that includes time or anyway is 4D. It is oddly analogous to a "Feynmann diagram" but is about spacetime geometry instead of about elementary particles. The spin foam shows how the quantum state of a polymer-like network can evolve and change. It is just a model of that.
Think of dragging the matchstick model thru another dimension so that the sticks sweep out little patches of area, which form a kind of honeycomb or somthing like the soapsuds in the dishpan
or the washingmachine.
this model of spacetime is quite strange.
The model Einstein had of a continuous smooth curved thing---a smooth 4D "manifold"----is I guess more immediately intuitive to a lot of people. Personally I find it so-----like manifolds. They are good for doing calculus with.
With one of these huge molecules with so many pieces to it, how can one calculate. Need a computer.
However at some scale, one thing blends into the other. If you look very close the quantum state is networky or polymeric
but if you stand back it is beautiful smooth old manifoldy.
It is a lucky time to be watching physics.