experimental quantum gravity
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Experimental Quantum Gravity: Bridging the Gap Between Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity

When Albert Einstein attempted to unify Newtonian gravity with Special Relativity, he developed the theory of General Relativity, in which gravity manifests as the curvature of spacetime.

This was a remarkable theoretical achievement that, unfortunately, helped present the illusion that pure thought alone might also accomplish the next grand challenge of unifying General Relativity with quantum mechanics.

Reality, however, is different. String theorists are still unable to explain away the singularities of the Big Bang or black holes. Human ingenuity’s limitation is not unprecedented. Quantum mechanics was discovered experimentally a century ago. It was not expected theoretically and is not fully understood at a fundamental level even today. The same may apply to quantum gravity. It is, therefore, important to pursue an experimental approach that will guide us towards a unique theory of quantum gravity. Are there any suitable environments for this pursuit?

Given the standard model of particle physics, we expect quantum gravity effects to appear prominently at the Planck energy, which is 19 orders of magnitude higher than the proton rest-mass energy.  Unfortunately, even the highest-energy cosmic rays are short by a factor of a hundred million relative to the Planck energy. Black hole singularities should be replaced by something else in quantum gravity, but getting close to that poses an existential risk – as the huge gravitational tide would tear apart any would-be experimentalists.

Gladly, there are more accommodating environments. For example, insights about quantum gravity may be linked to the nature of dark energy, which sets the accelerated cosmic expansion. This energy density of the vacuum dominates the current cosmic mass budget even though it is smaller by 123 orders of magnitude than the Planck energy density. We can attempt to understand its nature by perturbing the cosmic vacuum in the laboratory or by measuring its evolution over cosmic time – as currently done by DESI.

Another approach is to detect the cosmic graviton background at a temperature below a degree Kelvin above absolute zero. This graviton background constitutes an analog for the cosmic microwave background. Whereas the thermal photon background was released 400,000 years after the Big Bang, the gravitons were thermalized at the Planck time and propagated freely afterward.  As I argued in a 2022 paper with Sunny Vagnozzi, the detection of this background would tightly constrain theories of quantum-gravity and rule out cosmic inflation.

In principle, modified gravity at low accelerations, such as MOND, could also have its roots in quantum gravity. In that case, dark matter does not actually exist. Instead, it represents a misinterpretation of the discrepancy between General Relativity and data on dynamics at low accelerations.

Finally, if mini black holes in the mass range of asteroids were produced in the early Universe and one of them is discovered in the Solar system, then the experimental study of its Hawking evaporation or interaction with infalling matter could probe quantum-gravity effects, as I discussed in a new paper.

In line with this discussion, at the end of a recent podcast interview, the brilliant undergraduate student Oem Trivedi, with whom I had the privilege of co-authoring a scientific paper, asked, “What do you see as the most exciting frontier in cosmology a century from now?”

In response to this, I replied, “Experimental studies of quantum gravity.” I clarified to Oem that these are just a few examples of experimental paths of inquiry into quantum gravity. Other unexpected routes may open up with new anomalies in the coming decades.

Consider, for example, gravitational wave astrophysics. So far, the detected signals did not reveal new physics. However, future runs of gravitational-wave observatories, such as LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA or LISA, could reveal surprising sources shaped by quantum gravity. One such source could be a white hole, the time reversal of a black hole, in which energy flows out from the vicinity of a General Relativistic singularity. Another could be a wormhole – a spacetime bridge that offers a shortcut between widely separated regions of space. Other quantum-gravity signatures could involve faster-than-light travel or a time machine that delivers information from our future and violates Stephen Hawking’s “chronology protection conjecture.”

All in all, detecting gravitons from the Planck time in cosmic history or observing a white hole is equivalent to staring at a quantum-gravity system straight in the eyes.

A shortcut to uncovering new insights about quantum gravity can be provided by encountering technological products from an advanced alien civilization. In that case, the manufacturers may have benefitted from insights developed over millions of years of their history of science and technology. This could have allowed them, for example, to employ quantum gravity for spacecraft propulsion. Reverse-engineering their gadgets might save us time in developing our insights independently.

With quantum-gravity insights from smarter scientists in our cosmic block, we might be able to figure out what happened before the Big Bang. This might provide a recipe for creating a baby universe in the laboratory. With that at hand, we would unify quantum mechanics, gravity, science, and not only these but perhaps even religion.

Avi Loeb is the head of the Galileo Project, founding director of Harvard University’s – Black Hole Initiative, director of the Institute for Theory and Computation at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and the former chair of the astronomy department at Harvard University (2011-2020). He is a former member of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology and a former chair of the Board on Physics and Astronomy of the National Academies. He is the bestselling author of “Extraterrestrial: The First Sign of Intelligent Life Beyond Earth” and a co-author of the textbook “Life in the Cosmos”, both published in 2021. The paperback edition of his new book, titled “Interstellar”, was published in August 2024.