English

Decoherence-Free Entropic Gravity: Model and Experimental Tests

Quantum Physics 2021-07-23 v2 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology High Energy Physics - Theory

Abstract

Erik Verlinde's theory of entropic gravity [arXiv:1001.0785], postulating that gravity is not a fundamental force but rather emerges thermodynamically, has garnered much attention as a possible resolution to the quantum gravity problem. Some have ruled this theory out on grounds that entropic forces are by nature noisy and entropic gravity would therefore display far more decoherence than is observed in ultra-cold neutron experiments. We address this criticism by modeling linear gravity acting on small objects as an open quantum system. In the strong coupling limit, when the model's unitless free parameter σ\sigma goes to infinity, the entropic master equation recovers conservative gravity. We show that the proposed master equation is fully compatible with the \textit{q}\textsc{Bounce} experiment for ultra-cold neutrons as long as σ250\sigma\gtrsim 250 at 90%90\% confidence. Furthermore, the entropic master equation predicts energy increase and decoherence on long time scales and for large masses, phenomena which tabletop experiments could test. In addition, comparing entropic gravity's energy increase to that of the Di\'{o}si-Penrose model for gravity induced decoherence indicates that the two theories are incompatible. These findings support the theory of entropic gravity, motivating future experimental and theoretical research.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2012.10626,
  title  = {Decoherence-Free Entropic Gravity: Model and Experimental Tests},
  author = {Alex J. Schimmoller and Gerard McCaul and Hartmut Abele and Denys I. Bondar},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2012.10626},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

12 pages and 4 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T21:05:39.626Z