Quantum mechanics and General Relativity overlap

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General relativity (GR) and quantum mechanics (QM) are currently ununified theories, each effective in different domains—GR for large, massive objects and QM for small, light ones. There is a critical need for a theory of quantum gravity, particularly in extreme conditions like black holes where both theories are required but lead to inconsistencies. The discussion highlights the lack of empirical data to bridge the gap between GR and QM, especially in scenarios where both are applicable. Additionally, the potential overlap between Quantum Information Theory and General Relativity is noted, particularly in addressing the black hole information paradox. Pursuing a PhD in either Quantum Information Theory or Cosmology could be beneficial for studying this intersection.
daveian
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I am not an expert on cosmology, merely an interested layman, so I hope my question is not either too stupid or obvious.
As I understand it from reading books (currently Brian Greene's "Fabric of the Cosmos"), general relativity (GR) is used for analysing large massive objects whereas quantum mechanics (QM) works for small light objects and that the 2 theories have not yet been successfully unified. But this poses a question, What about the middle ground? At what point in the spectrum from large/ massive to small/ light does GR not function and vice versa for QM. Is it sudden or gradual fall off in effectivness for either theory.
Greene refers to the centre of a black hole (massive and tiny) where both GR and QM are needed but can't be used because they don't fit together.
 
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Yes, there are situations where you need both quantum mechanics and gravity. We have no experiments or observations that probe those situations. If we had empirical information about such situations, it would be a lot easier to construct a theory of quantum gravity.
 
When both quantum theory and general relativity are both needed (for exasmple inside a black hole) it ends up with mathematical nonsense.
 
I was wondering, is there any overlap between Quantum Information Theory and General Relativity? The black hole information paradox could be solved by devoloping knowledge about quantum information in strong gravitational field?

If someone wants to study this overlap between these 2 differentes areas of physics, what would be better: having a PhD in Quantum Information Theory or in Cosmology?

thanks for the help
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recombination_(cosmology) Was a matter density right after the decoupling low enough to consider the vacuum as the actual vacuum, and not the medium through which the light propagates with the speed lower than ##({\epsilon_0\mu_0})^{-1/2}##? I'm asking this in context of the calculation of the observable universe radius, where the time integral of the inverse of the scale factor is multiplied by the constant speed of light ##c##.
Why was the Hubble constant assumed to be decreasing and slowing down (decelerating) the expansion rate of the Universe, while at the same time Dark Energy is presumably accelerating the expansion? And to thicken the plot. recent news from NASA indicates that the Hubble constant is now increasing. Can you clarify this enigma? Also., if the Hubble constant eventually decreases, why is there a lower limit to its value?
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