Why in the news?
- Gamma-ray bursts emitted from tiny remnants of black holes could provide crucial insights into the nature of quantum gravity.
Quantum Gravity
- What is it?:
- Quantum Gravity is the theoretical framework that seeks to unify General Relativity (gravity) with Quantum Mechanics.
- It attempts to describe gravity according to the principles of quantum physics, where space-time itself becomes quantized at the smallest scales.
- Core Idea:
- At the Planck scale, spacetime is not smooth but has a “quantum foam” structure- fluctuating and probabilistic.
- The gravitational field, like other forces, should have quantum excitations called gravitons (hypothetical, massless, spin-2 particles).
- These gravitons would mediate gravity in a quantum-mechanical way, similar to photons in electromagnetism.
- Significance:
- Advances here contribute to fundamental physics, cosmology, and space research, with indirect implications for India’s astrophysics & ISRO’s cosmological missions.
- Explain Big Bang singularity and early universe evolution.
- Describe black hole information paradox.
- Develop a unified theory of nature.
- Inspire quantum computing and cosmology models.
- Challenges:
- No experimental proof yet- effects appear at energies far beyond current technology.
- Difficult to quantize spacetime because gravity acts on the very fabric that defines quantum fields.
- Competing theories make differing predictions that lack consensus.
- Bridging between macroscopic smoothness and microscopic discreteness remains unresolved.
- Indian Contributions:
- IUCAA (Pune), TIFR, IISc, and Institute of Mathematical Sciences (Chennai) conduct research in quantum cosmology, loop quantum gravity, and black hole thermodynamics.
- India participates in global collaborations like LIGO-India to study gravitational waves, a potential testing ground for quantum gravity theories.