English

Quantum Geometry and Interferometry

Quantum Physics 2012-08-21 v1 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology

Abstract

All existing experimental results are currently interpreted using classical geometry. However, there are theoretical reasons to suspect that at a deeper level, geometry emerges as an approximate macroscopic behavior of a quantum system at the Planck scale. If directions in emergent quantum geometry do not commute, new quantum-geometrical degrees of freedom can produce detectable macroscopic deviations from classicality: spatially coherent, transverse position indeterminacy between any pair of world lines, with a displacement amplitude much larger than the Planck length. Positions of separate bodies are entangled with each other, and undergo quantum-geometrical fluctuations that are not describable as metric fluctuations or gravitational waves. These fluctuations can either be cleanly identified or ruled out using interferometers. A Planck-precision test of the classical coherence of space-time on a laboratory scale is now underway at Fermilab.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1208.3703,
  title  = {Quantum Geometry and Interferometry},
  author = {Craig Hogan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1208.3703},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

10 pages, Latex, to appear in proceedings of 9th LISA symposium

R2 v1 2026-06-21T21:52:23.220Z