Gauging spacetime inversions in quantum gravity
Abstract
Spacetime inversion symmetries such as parity and time reversal play a central role in physics, but they are usually treated as global symmetries. In quantum gravity there are no global symmetries, so any spacetime inversion symmetries must be gauge symmetries. In particular this includes symmetry (in even dimensions usually combined with a rotation to become ), which in quantum field theory is always a symmetry and seems likely to be a symmetry of quantum gravity as well. In this article we discuss what it means to gauge a spacetime inversion symmetry, and we explain some of the more unusual consequences of doing this. In particular we argue that the gauging of is automatically implemented by the sum over topologies in the Euclidean gravity path integral, that in a closed universe the Hilbert space of quantum gravity must be a real vector space, and that in Lorentzian signature manifolds which are not time-orientable must be included as valid configurations of the theory. In particular we give an example of an asymptotically-AdS time-unorientable geometry which must be included to reproduce computable results in the dual CFT.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2311.09978,
title = {Gauging spacetime inversions in quantum gravity},
author = {Daniel Harlow and Tokiro Numasawa},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2311.09978},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
67 pages plus appendices, 22 figures. Violates causality and modifies quantum mechanics, but not in a bad way. Hopefully. v2: fixes a bug in our derivation of the CRT transformation, which results in an extra factor of i for fermions; conclusions are unchanged