Quantum Geometry and its Implications for Black Holes
Martin Bojowald

TL;DR
This paper discusses how quantum geometry, especially within loop quantum gravity, can resolve classical singularities in black holes and cosmology, providing a non-singular, well-defined evolution across extreme scales.
Contribution
It reviews how loop quantum gravity offers a background-independent, non-perturbative approach that removes singularities and modifies black hole horizon dynamics.
Findings
Classical singularities are resolved by quantum geometry.
Black hole horizon dynamics show characteristic quantum modifications.
Quantum gravity provides a well-defined evolution through extreme scales.
Abstract
General relativity successfully describes space-times at scales that we can observe and probe today, but it cannot be complete as a consequence of singularity theorems. For a long time there have been indications that quantum gravity will provide a more complete, non-singular extension which, however, was difficult to verify in the absence of a quantum theory of gravity. By now there are several candidates which show essential hints as to what a quantum theory of gravity may look like. In particular, loop quantum gravity is a non-perturbative formulation which is background independent, two properties which are essential close to a classical singularity with strong fields and a degenerate metric. In cosmological and black hole settings one can indeed see explicitly how classical singularities are removed by quantum geometry: there is a well-defined evolution all the way down to, and…
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