Three models of non-perturbative quantum-gravitational binding
Jan Smit

TL;DR
This paper develops non-perturbative quantum gravity models to explore short-distance gravitational binding, revealing potential black hole-like features and mass-dependent effects, bridging perturbative corrections with quantum gravitational phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces two non-perturbative models of quantum gravitational binding based on evolution equations for a running gravitational coupling, extending perturbative results into the short-distance regime.
Findings
Model-I exhibits a singularity and black hole-like features at short distances.
Model-II approaches a non-Gaussian fixed point as distance decreases.
The models explain the mass dependence of binding energies observed in quantum gravity simulations.
Abstract
Known quantum and classical perturbative long-distance corrections to the Newton potential are extended into the short-distance regime using evolution equations for a `running' gravitational coupling, which is used to construct examples non-perturbative potentials for the gravitational binding of two particles. Model-I is based on the complete set of the relevant Feynman diagrams. Its potential has a singularity at a distance below which it becomes complex and the system gets black hole-like features. Model-II is based on a reduced set of diagrams and its coupling approaches a non-Gaussian fixed point as the distance is reduced. Energies and eigenfunctions are obtained and used in a study of time-dependent collapse (model-I) and bouncing (both models) of a spherical wave packet. The motivation for such non-perturbative `toy' models stems from a desire to elucidate the mass dependence of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies
