A QCD analogy for quantum gravity
Abstract
Quadratic gravity presents us with a renormalizable, asymptotically free theory of quantum gravity. When its couplings grow strong at some scale, as in QCD, then this strong scale sets the Planck mass. QCD has a gluon that does not appear in the physical spectrum. Quadratic gravity has a spin-2 ghost that we conjecture does not appear in the physical spectrum. We discuss how the QCD analogy leads to this conjecture and to the possible emergence of general relativity. Certain aspects of the QCD path integral and its measure are also similar for quadratic gravity. With the addition of the Einstein-Hilbert term, quadratic gravity has a dimensionful parameter that seems to control a quantum phase transition and the size of a mass gap in the strong phase.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1512.05305,
title = {A QCD analogy for quantum gravity},
author = {Bob Holdom and Jing Ren},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1512.05305},
year = {2016}
}
Comments
27 pages, 3 figures, matches published version