Quantum field theory from first principles
P. Perinotti

TL;DR
This paper proposes a foundational approach to quantum field theory by deriving physical laws from cellular automata based on information processing principles, leading to emergent space-time and relativistic dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework where quantum fields and space-time emerge from simple, reversible cellular automata constrained by physical symmetries.
Findings
Cellular automata can reproduce Weyl's equations for relativistic quantum fields.
Maxwell's equations and fermionic dynamics can arise from the same automaton.
Space-time symmetry emerges from the automaton's dynamics, not as a fundamental background.
Abstract
If the systems of quantum theory are thought of as elementary information carriers in the first place, rather than elementary constituents of matter, and their connections are logical connections within a given algorithm, rather than space-time relations, then we need to find the origin of mechanical concepts---that characterise quantum mechanics as a theory of physical systems. To this end, we will illustrate how physical laws can be viewed as algorithms for the update of memory registers that make a physical system. Imposing the characteristic properties of physical laws to such an algorithm, i.e. homogeneity, reversibility and isotropy, we will show that the physical laws thus selected are particular algorithms known as cellular automata. Further assumptions regarding maximal simplicity of the algorithm lead to two cellular automata only, that in a suitable regime can be described by…
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