Could Quantum Mechanics Explain the Existence of Spacetime?
warping the geometry of the merger of
time and space known as spacetime. (Credit: koya979/Shutterstock)
Rod Serling knew all about dimensions.
His Twilight Zone was a dimension of imagination, a dimension of
sight and sound and mind, a dimension as vast as space and timeless as
infinity. It was all very clear except for the space and time part, the
dimensions of real life. Serling never explained them.
Of course, ever since Einstein, scientists have also been scratching
their heads about how to make sense of space and time. Before then,
almost everybody thought Isaac Newton had figured it all out. Time
“flows equably without relation to anything external,” he declared.
Absolute space is also its own thing, “always similar and immovable.”
Nothing to see there. Events of physical reality performed independently
on a neutral stage where actors strutted and fretted without
influencing the rest of the theater.
But Einstein’s theories turned Newton’s absolute space and time into a
relativistic mash-up — his equations suggested a merged spacetime, a
new sort of arena in which the players altered the space of the playing
field. It was a physics game changer. No longer did space and time
provide a featureless backdrop for matter and energy. Formerly
independent and uniform, space and time became inseparable and variable.
And as Einstein showed in his general theory of relativity, matter and
energy warped the spacetime surrounding them. That simple (hah!) truth
explained gravity. Newton’s apparent force of attraction became an
illusion perpetrated by spacetime geometry. It was the shape of
spacetime that dictated the motion of massive bodies, a symmetric
justice since massive bodies determined spacetime’s shape.
Verification of Einstein’s spacetime revolution came a century ago,
when an eclipse expedition confirmed his general theory’s prime
prediction (a precise amount of bending of light passing near the edge
of a massive body, in this case the sun). But spacetime remained
mysterious. Since it was something rather than nothing, it was natural
to wonder where it came from.
Now a new revolution is on the verge of answering that question,
based on insights from the other great physics surprise of the last
century: quantum mechanics. Today’s revolution offers the potential for
yet another rewrite of spacetime’s résumé, with the bonus of perhaps
explaining why quantum mechanics seems so weird.
“Spacetime and gravity must ultimately emerge from something else,” writes physicist Brian Swingle in the 2018 Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics.
Otherwise it’s hard to see how Einstein’s gravity and the math of
quantum mechanics can reconcile their longstanding incompatibility.
Einstein’s view of gravity as the manifestation of spacetime geometry
has been enormously successful. But so also has been quantum mechanics,
which describes the machinations of matter and energy on the atomic
scale with unerring accuracy. Attempts to find coherent math that
accommodates quantum weirdness with geometric gravity, though, have met
formidable technical and conceptual roadblocks.
At least that has long been so for attempts to understand ordinary
spacetime. But clues to a possible path to progress have emerged from
the theoretical study of alternate spacetime geometries, thinkable in
principle but with unusual properties. One such alternate, known as anti
de Sitter space, is weirdly curved and tends to collapse on itself,
rather than expanding as the universe we live in does. It wouldn’t be a
nice place to live. But as a laboratory for studying theories of quantum
gravity, it has a lot to offer. “Quantum gravity is sufficiently rich
and confusing that even toy universes can shed enormous light on the
physics,” writes Swingle, of the University of Maryland.
A
strange type of spacetime with unusual curvature known as anti de
Sitter space, illustrated here, is nothing like the universe we live in,
but could nevertheless provide clues to the quantum processes that may
be responsible for producing ordinary spacetime. (Credit: U. Moschella/Seminaire Poincare 2005)
Studies of anti de Sitter space suggest, for instance, that the math
describing gravity (that is, spacetime geometry) can be equivalent to
the math of quantum physics in a space of one less dimension. Think of a
hologram — a flat, two-dimensional surface that incorporates a
three-dimensional image. In a similar way, perhaps the four-dimensional
geometry of spacetime could be encoded in the math of quantum physics
operating in three-dimensions. Or maybe you need more dimensions — how
many dimensions are required is part of the problem to be solved.
In any case, investigations along these lines have revealed a
surprising possibility: Spacetime itself may be generated by quantum
physics, specifically by the baffling phenomenon known as quantum
entanglement.
As popularly explained, entanglement is a spooky connection linking
particles separated even by great distances. If emitted from a common
source, such particles remain entangled no matter how far they fly away
from each other. If you measure a property (such as spin or
polarization) for one of them, you then know what the result of the same
measurement would be for the other. But before the measurement, those
properties are not already determined, a counterintuitive fact verified
by many experiments. It seems like the measurement at one place
determines what the measurement will be at another distant location.
That sounds like entangled particles must be able to
communicate faster than light. Otherwise it’s impossible to imagine how
one of them could know what was happening to the other across a vast
spacetime expanse. But they actually don’t send any message at all. So
how do entangled particles transcend the spacetime gulf separating them?
Perhaps the answer is they don’t have to — because entanglement doesn’t
happen in spacetime. Entanglement creates spacetime.
At least that’s the proposal that current research in toy universes
has inspired. “The emergence of spacetime and gravity is a mysterious
phenomenon of quantum many-body physics that we would like to
understand,” Swingle suggests in his Annual Review paper.
Vigorous effort by several top-flight physicists has produced
theoretical evidence that networks of entangled quantum states weave the
spacetime fabric. These quantum states are often described as “qubits” —
bits of quantum information (like ordinary computer bits, but existing
in a mix of 1 and 0, not simply either 1 or 0).
Entangled qubits create networks with geometry in space with an extra
dimension beyond the number of dimensions that the qubits live in. So
the quantum physics of qubits can then be equated to the geometry of a
space with an extra dimension. Best of all, the geometry created by the
entangled qubits may very well obey the equations from Einstein’s
general relativity that describe motion due to gravity — at least the
latest research points in that direction. “Apparently, a geometry with
the right properties built from entanglement has to obey the
gravitational equations of motion,” Swingle writes. “This result further
justifies the claim that spacetime arises from entanglement.”
Still, it remains to be shown that the clues found in toy universes
with extra dimensions will lead to the true story for the ordinary
spacetime in which real physicists strut and fret. Nobody really knows
exactly what quantum processes in the real world would be responsible
for weaving spacetime’s fabric. Maybe some of the assumptions made in
calculations so far will turn out to be faulty. But it could be that
physics is on the brink of peering more deeply into nature’s foundations
than ever before, into an existence containing previously unknown
dimensions of space and time (or sight and sound) that might end up
making The Twilight Zone into Reality TV.
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