IQI Weekly Seminar
Annenberg 107
CORRELATED WORLDLINE THEORY of QUANTUM GRAVITY: LOW-ENERGY CONSEQUENCES & TABLE-TOP TESTS
Philip Stamp,
Pacific Institute of Theoretical Physics, Univ. of British Columbia,
It is often assumed that the clash between Quantum Mechanics (QM) and General Relativity (GR) happens only as one approaches the Planck energy. I will show through simple thought experiments that there is also a severe conflict at laboratory energy scales. I will then argue that the only reasonable way to fix this is in a correlated worldline theory wherein gravity creates correlations between different Feynman paths for the SAME PARTICLE (or same Quantum Field). The basic structure of this theory is explained, and the modifications it implies for our ideas about spacetime. For laboratory tests one only requires the low-energy version of this theory, and controlled calculations can be done with no adjustable parameters. I describe how such calculations can be done, and then what sort of effects they predict for 2-path experiments. The deviations from QM will be hard to see, since gravity is a weak force but they are by no means beyond current experimental techniques.
For more information, please contact Jackie O'Sullivan by phone at 626.395.4964 or by email at [email protected].