somy said:
Can anyone explain the relation between quantum field theory and relativity...
From context, I assume that by relativity you mean General Relativity.
I guess the answer is that there is a disconnect.
Space, in GR, has a dynamic unpredetermined geometry which is constantly be influenced by the flow of matter.
One special solution of the GR equation is the static flat solution you get when the universe is perfectly empty----this is Minkowski space and it was the space of the earlier (1905) theory of
special rel.
Quantum field theory has been constructed on Minkowski space.
QFT and GR do not even share the same space, which is one reason for the disconnect.
One widely used test of whether a theory is compatible with GR is
to see whether it is "background independent"-----that it does not rely on a prior rigid geometrical framework (like Minkowski space) but can be defined without precommitting to a background geometry.
What is called "relativistic quantum field theory" is not, in fact, background independent and is therefore not relativistic in the GR sense.
A major longterm theoretical objective that has been identified, is to construct a truly relativistic quantum physics---a
general relativistic quantum field theory. The first requirement is to provide a background independent quantum theory of space and time within which venue, or on top of which foundation, such a background independent QFT can be built.
Increasingly, I would say, this is how quantum gravitists see the problem of uniting QFT with GR.
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by comparison, the talk about the 120 order of magnitude mismatch is just scratching the surface.
we have a clear indication that there is a small positive cosmological constant-----which is by definition a small positive curvature term in the einstein equation----we do not know that this is produced by an invisible constant energy.
But if we SUPPOSE that it is produced by a dark energy or vacuum energy then that constant energy density must be
0.6 joules per cubic kilometer
or, if you know Planck units, there is a Planck energy unit and a Planck volume unit, the cube of the Planck length, and the same energy density
is
1.3 x 10-123 Planck energy units per Planck volume
But thinking of it that way could be inappropriate and in any case is jumping the gun---the thing might just be an intrinsic curvature that space has for some other reason, or simply a correction term in the Einstein equation.
the cosm. constant is something that comes up in Gen Rel, and in astronomical observation, and which (special relativistic) QFT doesn't say anything about. And I can't say that I would expect it to.
Some people hype the CC situation into a big scandal, but I think it is better seen as just one aspect of a larger crisis in physics.
they hastily assume that the CC arises from a energy density
and then they presume that (effectively non-relativistic) late-20th century QFT should be able to explain it as a quantum vacuum energy, and
then they make scandalized noises when QFT predicts a vacuum energy density that is many OOM off----say 120 orders of magnitude---or this or that, things get a bit vague because the QFT predictions of vacuum energy are absurd and would have caused space to collapse long ago if they were real. So this is headlined by the attentiongetters and being the biggest-ever scandal in theoreticial physics. But all it means is that
(non-background independent) QFT is beginning to go out of date.
Well somy, that is my personal take on it, and with luck you will get a few more viewpoints that you can contrast with this one! wish the best of luck in hunting answers.