No quantum gravity signature from the farthest quasars
Fabrizio Tamburini (1), Carmine Cuofano (2), Massimo Della Valle (3,4), and Roberto Gilmozzi (5) ((1) Dept. of Astronomy, University of Padova,, Italy, (2) Dept. of Physics, University of Ferrara, Italy, (3) INAF -, Osservatorio Astronomico di Capodimonte, Naples, Italy

TL;DR
This study used Hubble Space Telescope observations of distant quasars to search for quantum gravity effects, finding no evidence of space-time foam signatures and setting new constraints on quantum gravity models.
Contribution
We developed a software method to analyze diffraction patterns of quasars, providing the most stringent limits to date on quantum gravity-induced space-time fluctuations.
Findings
Excluded the random walk model of space-time foam.
Most holographic quantum gravity models are ruled out.
No directional dependence of quantum gravity effects found.
Abstract
Context: Strings and other alternative theories describing the quantum properties of space-time suggest that space-time could present a foamy structure and also that, in certain cases, quantum gravity (QG) may manifest at energies much below the Planck scale. One of the observable effects could be the degradation of the diffraction images of distant sources. Aims: We searched for this degradation effect, caused by QG fluctuations, in the light of the farthest quasars (QSOs) observed by the Hubble Space Telescope with the aim of setting new limits on the fluctuations of the space-time foam and QG models. Methods: We developed a software that estimates and compares the phase variation in the interference patterns of the high-redshift QSOs, taken from the snapshot survey of HST-SDSS, with those of stars that are expected to not be affected by QG effects. We used a two-parameter…
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