Emergence of time in quantum gravity: is time necessarily flowing ?
Pierre Martinetti

TL;DR
This paper explores how time emerges in quantum gravity through the thermal time hypothesis, suggesting that time may be an abstract, state-dependent concept rather than necessarily flowing in a geometric sense.
Contribution
It introduces the thermal time hypothesis as a way to understand the emergence of time in quantum gravity, highlighting its algebraic and geometric aspects.
Findings
Thermal time can be realized as a geometric or combined flow.
Time in quantum gravity may be abstract and state-dependent.
Time does not necessarily have to be a flowing geometric entity.
Abstract
We discuss the emergence of time in quantum gravity, and ask whether time is always "something that flows"'. We first recall that this is indeed the case in both relativity and quantum mechanics, although in very different manners: time flows geometrically in relativity (i.e. as a flow of proper time in the four dimensional space-time), time flows abstractly in quantum mechanics (i.e. as a flow in the space of observables of the system). We then ask the same question in quantum gravity, in the light of the thermal time hypothesis of Connes and Rovelli. The latter proposes to answer the question of time in quantum gravity (or at least one of its many aspects), by postulating that time is a state dependent notion. This means that one is able to make a notion of time-as-an-abstract-flow - that we call the thermal time - emerge from the knowledge of both: 1) the algebra of observables of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNoncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect
