Brown researchers link quantum gravity to cosmological constant

Scientists at Brown University have proposed a topological explanation for why the cosmological constant remains small despite predictions from quantum field theory. The study connects quantum gravity to the quantum Hall effect. It was published recently in Physical Review Letters.

Researchers Stephon Alexander, Aaron Hui and Heliudson Bernardo argue that space-time topology stabilizes the cosmological constant. Their model draws on the Chern-Simons-Kodama state and shows how topological features can suppress large quantum fluctuations.

Alexander said the topology renders disruptive quantum effects inert and keeps the constant's value stable. The approach revives a conservative method of quantizing gravity first explored by physicists such as Dirac and Wheeler.

The cosmological constant was introduced by Albert Einstein and later called his biggest blunder. Observations in 1998 confirmed the universe's accelerating expansion, restoring its importance. The new work offers one route to reconciling theory with measured values.

Further calculations are required to test the idea fully. The authors say the findings also strengthen the case for the Chern-Simons-Kodama state as a candidate for quantum gravity.

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An international team of physicists has found that quantum collapse models, potentially linked to gravity, introduce a minuscule uncertainty in time itself. This sets a fundamental limit on clock precision, though far below current detection levels. The research, published in Physical Review Research, explores ties between quantum mechanics and gravity.

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French physicists James Hefford and Matt Wilson have proposed a mathematical model called QBox, outlining a post-quantum layer of reality that could bridge quantum theory and gravity. The theory introduces 'hyperdecoherence,' allowing quantum mechanics to emerge from a deeper realm with indefinite causality. Experts praise the work as a promising step toward quantum gravity.

Physicists have shown that the key signatures of string theory can arise naturally from a handful of simple rules about particle behavior at extreme energies. Researchers from Caltech, New York University, and a Barcelona institute reached this result using a bootstrap approach that starts with minimal assumptions rather than presupposing strings. The work has been accepted for publication in Physical Review Letters.

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Scientists from Stockholm University, Nordita, and the University of Tübingen have suggested detecting gravitational waves by observing changes in the light emitted by atoms. The waves would subtly shift photon frequencies in different directions without altering emission rates. This approach could enable compact detectors using cold-atom systems.

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