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Quantum Geometry---the Brian Greene quote
This is a spin-off from the "Loop Gravity-Rovelli's program" thread
based on a post by Sol2.
We were talking about Rovelli's book Quantum Gravity---he recently redid his homepage---and Sol2 posted this, with a quote from Elegant Universe
and a reference to the notion of quantum geometry:
what I am hoping people will focus on in this thread is the Brian Greene quote that Sol2 copied in.
this quote raises a bunch of interesting issues
The "Rovelli program" thread, where we came from, is serving as a link-basket or surrogate sticky for LQG links. If there is a chance for lengthier discussions IMO we probably should start separate threads like this.
This is a spin-off from the "Loop Gravity-Rovelli's program" thread
based on a post by Sol2.
We were talking about Rovelli's book Quantum Gravity---he recently redid his homepage---and Sol2 posted this, with a quote from Elegant Universe
and a reference to the notion of quantum geometry:
sol2 said:http://assets.cambridge.org/0521837332/cover/0521837332.jpg
Quantum gravity is perhaps the most important open problem in fundamental physics. It is the problem of merging quantum mechanics and general relativity, the two great conceptual revolutions in the physics of the twentieth century. The loop and spinfoam approach, presented in this book, is one of the leading research programs in the field. The first part of the book discusses the reformulation of the basis of classical and quantum Hamiltonian physics required by general relativity. The second part covers the basic technical research directions. Appendices include a detailed history of the subject of quantum gravity, hard-to-find mathematical material, and a discussion of some philosophical issues raised by the subject. This fascinating text is ideal for graduate students entering the field, as well as researchers already working in quantum gravity. It will also appeal to philosophers and other scholars interested in the nature of space and time.
http://titles.cambridge.org/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521837332
It will be a must buy for myself as well.
But I wonder about the issue of quantum geometry. How will this be formulated into the LQG perspective, as it has in strings?
The Elegant Universe, by Brian Greene, pg 231 and Pg 232
"But now, almost a century after Einstein's tour-de-force, string theory gives us a quantum-mechanical discription of gravity that, by necessity, modifies general relativity when distances involved become as short as the Planck length. Since Reinmannian geometry is the mathetical core of general relativity, this means that it too must be modified in order to reflect faithfully the new short distance physics of string theory. Whereas general relativity asserts that the curved properties of the universe are described by Reinmannian geometry, string theory asserts this is true only if we examine the fabric of the universe on large enough scales. On scales as small as Planck length a new kind of geometry must emerge, one that aligns with the new physics of string theory. This new geometry is called, quantum geometry."
I am seeing similarities arising not only from this perspective but from the current link Marcus supplied on the cosmological association (LQC ).
what I am hoping people will focus on in this thread is the Brian Greene quote that Sol2 copied in.
this quote raises a bunch of interesting issues
The "Rovelli program" thread, where we came from, is serving as a link-basket or surrogate sticky for LQG links. If there is a chance for lengthier discussions IMO we probably should start separate threads like this.
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