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Topic Name: Pushing the envelope of general relativity
Category: Quantum Computing
Research persons: Horatiu Nastase
Location: Tokyo, Japan
Details
Einstein introduced general relativity in the early 20th century, and since
then it has been proven to be an accurate description of gravity beyond the
regime of validity of Newtonian gravitation. Since then, people have been
asking what kind of modifications, or extensions, one can make to it without
contradicting observations. In most cases, the focus has been on theories that
respect the physical principles of general relativity, and the modifications
were restricted to the action (an appropriate quantity integrated over a path
in spacetime between a starting point and ending point) and the equations of
motion that the action encodes, via the principle of least action. In
particular, if quantum mechanics describes gravitation as well as the other
forces of nature, as is widely believed, quantum corrections should introduce
small modifications to the action. However, the study of possible corrections
that disobey the physical principles of general relativity has recently
received a boost by the theory recently proposed by Hořava [1,
2], which posits the
violation of a key symmetry principle thought to be sacrosanct—Lorentz
invariance—at short distance scales. Now, in a paper in
Physical Review Letters, Hong Lu,
Jianwei Mei, and Christopher Pope of Texas A&M University, US, report their
investigations [3] into
how the modifications proposed in Hořava’s theory affect generic solutions of
general relativity. General relativity is a beautiful theory, whose main
physical insight is that gravity is the effect of geometry, specifically, the
curvature of spacetime. Matter curves spacetime, and in turn, the curvature of
spacetime deflects massive bodies, which we then interpret as the influence of
gravity (Fig. 1). A natural consequence appears to be the principle of general
covariance (which is what is meant by “general” relativity), namely, that
physics should be the same in all reference frames, not merely inertial ones.
That is, under a general coordinate transformation
xμ→x′μ
(xν),
where the four-vector xμ=(t,x),
the physics should be invariant. However, no physical principle dictates the
exact form of the action, beyond general coordinate invariance. For action,
Einstein used the integral of
R (the scalar measure of the
curvature at each point), because it reproduces Newtonian gravity in the
appropriate limit (small curvature
R, small velocity). But one
can certainly add small covariant corrections, such as a power of the
curvature scalar. In fact, such terms do appear as quantum corrections in the
only known quantum theory that includes gravity, namely, string theory. In
that case, however, general covariance remains satisfied.
The experimental tests of general relativity are very stringent. Perhaps
the most impressive everyday application is the satellite global positioning
system, whose deviations in the absence of general relativity corrections
would add up to about 10 km
per day [4]. But today
we have many more constraints from astrophysics, and we know general
relativity is correct to a large degree of accuracy. Perhaps more importantly,
if corrections to the Einstein action break general covariance, we have to
have a good theoretical justification, since generally when we break an
important symmetry, quantum corrections spell disaster for the theory,
amplifying the problem.
There is, however, an example that served as a model for Hořava’s theory.
The example, due to Lifshitz [5],
involves the appearance of Lorentz symmetry (which says, in the absence of
gravity, that physics is the same for all inertial observers moving through
space) as an accidental symmetry at large distances in a simple scalar theory
without Lorentz invariance. Lifshitz’s theory has the usual Galilean
invariance of Newtonian mechanics. Quantum corrections, which become larger at
larger distances, were shown to give rise to a Lorentz invariant theory at
distances much larger than the scale at which the theory is defined. In his
original work, Lifshitz was discussing the behavior of critical points (such
as the triple point) in condensed matter systems.
In Hořava’s theory, we have the same idea applied to gravity. The theory,
defined at small distances, has the natural generalization of Galilean
invariance, namely, general covariance in the space coordinates,
x→x′(x)
and invariance under time reparametrizations,
t→t′(t).
Again, quantum corrections are expected to give rise to a general coordinate
invariant theory at large distances. The arguments for this are not so strong
as in the case of the Lifshitz theory, since the quantization of gravity, even
in the Hořava version, is not very well defined. What makes the Hořava theory
so compelling, however, is the fact that the most naive attempt at
quantization seems not to produce the same nonsensical infinite results one
gets in general relativity. Therefore what was a physical principle for
Einstein appears as an accidental symmetry in Hořava’s theory, but the upside
is that it is much easier to introduce quantum mechanics.
Assuming that quantum corrections work as expected in Hořava’s theory, it
will give the proper action for general relativity at large distances, and
correction terms that start to dominate at short distances, and break general
covariance. A priori there is a very
large number of such possible terms, but Hořava proposed also a simplified
version, the “detailed balance action.” (The name is given by analogy, it has
no meaning in gravity. A formal similarity with equations appearing in the
quantum description of some thermodynamical systems prompted the name.)
In the work of Lu et al. [3],
a general spherically symmetric solution to Hořava’s detailed balance action
is investigated. In general relativity, the most general spherically symmetric
solution is the Schwarzschild solution, describing everything from planets
like the earth to black holes. However, the solution of the detailed balance
action of Hořava deviates significantly from the Schwarzschild solution, a
reflection of the difficulty of modifying general relativity. A small
modification of the detailed balance action has a solution closer to the
Schwarzschild solution.
Based in part on the results of Lu et al.,
I found [6] that if we
were to apply the detailed balance action to the real world, general
relativity would be reproduced only on unobservable scales, larger than the
size of the Universe (the “cosmological horizon”). Modifications of the
detailed balance action, within Hořava theory, can cure this problem. For
instance, one natural modification was proposed in [6],
and another in [7]. It
is still not known if the quantum Hořava theory makes sense, and more work in
that direction is needed.
Finally, we should mention that other small modifications of general
relativity were proposed over the years, and whether any of them makes sense
is still an open problem. Some of the better-known examples are the
Dvali-Gabadadze-Porrati model [8],
which modifies general relativity at very large distances, and the purely
phenomenological Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) [9],
which modifies Newtonian gravity at small accelerations and large scales.
However, unlike these other cases, Hořava theory presents the tantalizing
possibility that we have a well-defined quantum theory at short distances,
without the need for additional fields.
The only known way to have a well-defined quantum theory at short distances
that preserves general covariance—string theory—needs to postulate an infinite
number of kinds of particles, the excitations of the string, all of them
interacting with gravity. If a version of Hořava theory is correct, would that
circumvent the need for string theory? Not necessarily, since we still would
need a consistent quantum theory of all kinds of particles in nature,
interacting with gravity, and it is difficult to see how Hořava theory would
accommodate that by itself. It is conceivable that pure Hořava gravity theory
could arise as a limit of string theory, just as, say, pure electromagnetism
arises as a limit of string theory, but only time and a lot more work will
tell us.
Reference :
- P. Hořava,
Phys. Rev. D 79,
084008 (2009);
Phys. Rev. Lett. 102,
161301 (2009).
- P. Hořava,
JHEP 03,
020 (2009).
- H. Lü,
J. Mei, and C. N. Pope,
Phys. Rev. Lett. 103,
091301 (2009).
- See,
e.g., and Neil Ashby,
Physics
Today 55, 41
(2002).
- E. M.
Lifshitz, Zh. Exp. Theor. Phys.
11, 255 (1941);
11,
269 (1941).
- H. Nastase,
arXiv:0904.3604.
- A. Kehagias
and K. Sfetsos,
Phys. Lett. B 678,
123 (2009).
- G. R. Dvali,
G. Gabadadze, and M.
Porrati,
Phys. Lett. B 485,
208 (2000).
- M. Milgrom,
Astrophys. J.
270, 365
(1983);
Astrophys.
J. 270, 371
(1983);
Astrophys. J.
270, 384
(1983).
About The Researcher :
Horatiu Nastase
Horatiu Nastase received his Ph.D. from SUNY Stony Brook, US, in 2000. After
postdoctoral research at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, US,
(2000–2002), and at Brown University (2002–2006), he joined the faculty at the
Tokyo Institute of Technology’s “Global Edge Institute” in Tokyo, Japan, where
he is now an Assistant Professor. His research deals mostly with string theory
and supergravity, and its connections to gauge theories like QCD (the “AdS/CFT
correspondence”).
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