The deepest problem: some perspectives on quantum gravity
Steven B. Giddings

TL;DR
This paper discusses the profound challenges in quantum gravity, emphasizing the importance of long-distance unitarity issues, the role of subsystem structures, and potential observational signatures of near-horizon modifications.
Contribution
It proposes a quantum-first approach to quantum gravity, highlighting the significance of subsystem structures over spacetime emergence and exploring new perturbative and nonperturbative insights.
Findings
Long-distance unitarity problems are more fundamental than short-distance issues.
Subsystem structures may replace traditional notions of locality in quantum gravity.
Potential observational signatures from near-horizon modifications are being actively investigated.
Abstract
Quantum gravity is likely the deepest problem facing current physics. While traditionally associated with short distance nonrenormalizability, it is evident that the long distance problem of unitarity, arising at high energies with black hole formation, is more profound. This reveals a conflict between foundational principles of quantum field theory: those of quantum mechanics, relativity, and locality. Difficulties modifying quantum mechanics suggest a "quantum-first" approach, with other principles as mathematical properties of a quantum space of states. A challenge is how to describe locality, in terms of Hilbert space structure. Perturbative gravity gives clues, with structure apparently different than in field theory. The mathematical structure of subsystems plausibly supplants conventional locality and plays a foundational role in the theory. This view differs from one of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
