Jacobson renews LQG with a roto-Reuter

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In summary, Jacobson has recently published a paper discussing the potential impact of Martin Reuter's work on Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG). Reuter's research has been gaining attention since 2004, and his talk at the Loops '07 conference was convincing. Jacobson believes that Reuter's ideas could potentially revolutionize LQG and help resolve long-standing issues. He references Reuter's paper on scale-dependent metrics and causal structures in quantum Einstein gravity, and suggests that further research is needed to fully understand the correspondence between the microscopic and macroscopic quantities in LQG. Jacobson also mentions the importance of understanding the renormalization group flow in the semiclassical limit of LQG, and poses questions about how this could
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Jacobson renovates LQG with a roto-Reuter

I think the word for it is RENOVATION
A roto-rooterTM is a tool for clearing clogged drains.

I've been watching Martin Reuter papers since 2004, especially since a possible link with Loll's CDT appeared in 2005, but with reserve. I found Reuter's talk at Loops '07 very persuasive and gave me confidence in what he is doing.

After Loops '07 a central question seemed to be how asymptotic safety, non-perturbative renormalizability, the running of Newton G and Lambda---how these things will affect LQG and other non-string QG approaches.

What Reuter has put on the table can actually bring about a revolution in LQG. Maybe resolve the quandary about the Hamiltonian constraint. In any case bring new results and energy into the field.

In my humble view, it's time to see how Reutering will impact various features of LQG. even ones long taken for granted.

Jacobson brought out a 7-page paper today and it looks to me as if he is going right to work on this.

http://arxiv.org/abs/0707.4026
Renormalization and black hole entropy in Loop Quantum Gravity
Ted Jacobson
7 pages
(Submitted on 26 Jul 2007)

"Microscopic state counting for a black hole in Loop Quantum Gravity yields a result proportional to horizon area, and inversely proportional to Newton's constant and the Immirzi parameter. It is argued here that before this result can be compared to the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy of a macroscopic black hole, the scale dependence of both Newton's constant and the area must be accounted for. The two entropies could then agree for any value of the Immirzi parameter, if a certain renormalization property holds."

Jacobson's reference [15] is a Martin Reuter paper
[15] M. Reuter and J. M. Schwindt, “Scale-dependent metric and causal
structures in quantum Einstein gravity,” JHEP 0701, 049 (2007)
[arXiv:hep-th/0611294].
 
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Ted Jacobson IIRC was invited to Carlo Rovelli's May 2004 workshop explicitly to fill a devil-advocate or critic role. My impression is he takes such responsibilities seriously. He also did an impressive job at the KITP Singularities workshop in January this year. He puts the spotlight on stuff others might casually sweep under the fudge. Or so it seemed to me. A kind of meticulous and dedicated tactlessness. such people are worth their weight.

I will get some quotes. this paper is neat.
==quote==
Thus, it seems to me more reasonable to expect that, if the
microscopic calculation of black hole entropy is really correct, then it should
agree with SBH for all values of [the Immirzi parameter] gamma.

On the face of it this looks impossible, however in fact the comparison
of SLQG with A/4~G has been made prematurely. The latter refers to a
property of a semiclassical black hole. As such, the area is measured using
the low energy effective metric field, and the Newton constant is the low
energy effective Newton constant.
By contrast, the area and Newton con-
stant in SLQG are the microscopic quantities appearing in the fundamental
formulation of the theory. This raises the question of exactly how the “cor-
respondence principle” between the microscopic description in LQG and the
effective field theory (EFT) description operates.
Anything said about the correspondence now is necessarily provisional,
since fundamental aspects of LQG have not yet been understood. The Hamil-
tonian constraint, which encodes all the dynamics, remains to be understood,
much less solved. Once solved, the theory can in principle only make state-
ments about diffeomorphism invariant observables, and only tentative first
steps have been achieved for the identification of a suitable class of such
observables. Nevertheless, the setting of the black hole entropy computa-
tions is well-defined, and reasonably well-motivated, at least enough to merit
scrutiny of its theoretical basis and self-consistency.
We now come to the central point of this note: there is no reason to ex-
pect the correspondence between microscopic and macroscopic quantities to
be trivial.
There are two different reasons for this. One is that in translating
from a discrete spin-network to a field theoretic framework there is a pro-
found change of objects and language. The other, independent reason is that
even once the correspondence to an effective field theory has been made, the
renormalization group flow of that theory from the UV to the IR
is highly
nontrivial. What then can be said?
...
...
In writing these relations, and in the rest of this paper, I am simply
assuming that a semiclassical EFT limit of LQG exists, for at least some gamma
[as before, gamma is the Immirzi parameter.]
The problem of understanding these renormalization relations is a crucial
part of understanding the semiclassical limit of LQG. While this is a wide
open problem, it can nevertheless be asked at present what properties must
they exhibit if the existing microscopic black hole entropy calculations are
to be valid?
...
...
Area renormalization significantly changes the picture however. The
renormalization of G can then be arbitrarily complicated, and dependent
on the matter content, as long as it is universally tied to the renormalization
of the area operator in the appropriate fashion indicated by (9). I see no
reason why this could not be the case. If the continuum limit indeed exists,
and the LQG black hole state counting is correct, then I would assert that it
must be the case.

I have indicated a scenario in which SLQG correctly counts the black hole
entropy, without the need to select a special Immirzi parameter. It involves
an unproven hypothesis about the correspondence between LQG and the
semiclassical EFT of GR. Can this hypothesis be tested?
...
To directly test the hypothesis requires an improved understanding of
the EFT limit, but need not necessarily involve black holes. Although the
numerical constant b is the one that arises in the horizon state counting,
it does so in a way that might be more generally relevant to the relation
between semiclassical geometry of areas and the microscopic, spin network
variables. Thus perhaps the validity of the relation (9) can be tested in a
simpler setting, for example even in the vacuum.
==endquote==

The renormalization group flow made a big impression via Reuter's talk, it seems timely to be talking about how it may affect one's reasoning about major features of LQG. I like the forceful stylistic element of ending paragraphs with questions.have to go, back later
 
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  • #3


I find this development very exciting. Jacobson's paper suggests that the work of Reuter and Schwindt on scale-dependent metrics and causal structures in quantum Einstein gravity could have a significant impact on Loop Quantum Gravity. This could potentially lead to a better understanding of the Hamiltonian constraint in LQG and bring new results and energy into the field. It will be interesting to see how this renovation of LQG with a roto-Reuter will unfold and what new insights it will bring to our understanding of quantum gravity.
 

Related to Jacobson renews LQG with a roto-Reuter

1. What is the Jacobson renews LQG with a roto-Reuter?

The Jacobson renews LQG with a roto-Reuter is a scientific theory proposed by physicist Ted Jacobson in 2015. It is an extension of the Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG) theory that incorporates rotational degrees of freedom, also known as roto-Reuter, into the theory.

2. What is the purpose of incorporating roto-Reuter into LQG?

The incorporation of roto-Reuter into LQG aims to solve some of the issues that arise in the original LQG theory, such as the lack of a description of rotational degrees of freedom and the difficulty in reconciling LQG with general relativity.

3. How does the Jacobson renews LQG with a roto-Reuter differ from other quantum gravity theories?

The Jacobson renews LQG with a roto-Reuter is different from other quantum gravity theories in that it incorporates both gravitational and rotational degrees of freedom in a consistent way. It also provides a description of the quantum geometry of space-time, which is not present in other theories.

4. What implications does this theory have for our understanding of the universe?

The Jacobson renews LQG with a roto-Reuter has the potential to provide a more complete and consistent understanding of the fundamental nature of space and time, and how gravity and quantum mechanics interact at a fundamental level. It may also have implications for the unification of the four fundamental forces of nature.

5. What are the current developments and challenges in the research of Jacobson renews LQG with a roto-Reuter?

Currently, scientists are working on further developing and refining the theory, as well as testing its predictions through experiments and observations. Some challenges in this research include the difficulty in obtaining experimental evidence to support the theory and the need for further mathematical and theoretical developments to fully understand its implications.

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