
TL;DR
This paper explores Lorentz-invariant phenomenology of causal set quantum gravity, deriving diffusion equations for particles in discrete spacetime and analyzing observable effects like energy diffusion and polarization rotation.
Contribution
It provides a rigorous derivation of particle diffusion equations in causal set theory and investigates their observable consequences, including effects on cosmic microwave background photons.
Findings
Massive particles undergo diffusion in position and momentum.
Massless particles experience energy diffusion and drift.
Spacetime discreteness affects photon polarization, causing rotation and suppression.
Abstract
Central to the development of any new theory is the investigation of the observable consequences of the theory. In the search for quantum gravity, research in phenomenology has been dominated by models violating Lorentz invariance (LI) -- despite there being, at present, no evidence that LI is violated. Causal set theory is a LI candidate theory of QG that seeks not to quantise gravity as such, but rather to develop a new understanding of the universe from which both GR and QM could arise separately. The key hypothesis is that spacetime is a discrete partial order: a set of events where the partial ordering is the physical causal ordering between the events. This thesis investigates Lorentz invariant QG phenomenology motivated by the causal set approach. Massive particles propagating in a discrete spacetime will experience diffusion in both position and momentum in proper time. This…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNoncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Mental Health and Psychiatry
