Title: Emergent SpaceTime and and Induced Gravity
1Emergent Space-Time and and Induced Gravity
Madrid , November 17th, 2006
- Some (Speculative) Ideas on
- Strings versus Cosmology
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3Standard (inflationary) cosmology is
successfull.It uses low energy effective action,
and needs very little input from string theory.
Strings versus Cosmology
- My personal view
- Dont be satisfied to with using low energy
action, - but use the complete (microscopic) string theory
- to challenge the basic assumptions on which
- standard cosmology (including inflation) is
based.
4String theory needs concrete problems
Strings versus Cosmology
- Black Holes led to important progress
(AdS/CFT). - drastic departure from
old views. - (complementarity,
holography, unitarity.)
(collapse, information loss, baby universes.)
- Cosmology still in its infancy, no
breakthrough yet. - expect drastic
departure from old views. - (initial conditions,
inflation, multiverse.)
(complementarity, holography, unitarity.)
5String theory indicates that
Strings versus Cosmology
- Space-time is emergent
- Gravity is induced
- What does this mean for cosmology?
- What was the Big Bang? (if it ever
happened) - How does space-time emerge?
- Is the emergent space-time observer
dependent? - Is there a unitary quantum system underlying
all this? - Will this be at all important for
observations?
6Outline
- Part I Observer complementarity . Parikh ,
EV (04) - A Model for de Sitter space
- Part II Emergent Space-Time
- The Matrix Big Bang
Craps, Sethi, EV (05) - Part III Induced Gravity
- The Black Hole Farey Tail.
Dijkgraaf, Moore,Maldacena, EV (00) -
de Boer, Cheng,
Dijkgraaf, Manschot, EV (06) -
-
Part IV A Heretic View on Cosmology
7I A Model for de Sitter space
8Every eternal observer has complete knowledge
about the quantum state of the Universe.
Observer complementarity
No quantum states correspond to physics outside
the maximal causal diamant.
Observers agree on probabilities for events, but
not necessarily on their interpretation.
Classical space-time is only an approximate
notion and may be different for different
observers.
9Model for de Sitter space
- Every observer has a finite dimensional Hilbert
space
10Model for de Sitter space
- The Hilbert space is reps of SO(d-1)
forms a reps of SO(d,1).
- A concrete model can be made using a
- spinor field on the (d-1)-dim
spatial sphere
11II The Matrix Big Bang
weakly coupled strings
12Lightlike Linear Dilaton
10d metric dilaton
Lift to M-theory
in new lightcone coordinates
null singularity
13Matrix dual of lightlike linear dilaton in DLCQ
Matrix String (11)d super Yang-Mills
/
light-cone momentum
string coupling
14III The Black Hole Farey Tail
15Extremal Black Hole
Near horizon geometry
16Black holes in string and M-theory.
- M-theory on CY
-
- M2-branes wrapping 2-cycles
- M5-branes wrapping 4-cycles
- ? 5d black strings
- 4d black hole 5d black string wrapping circle.
- World volume theory 2d CFT
- (Maldacena, Strominger,Witten)
- Holographic dual to near horizon geometry
-
17An Exact Asymptotic Formula
Then we have
18Thermal AdS3 vs. BTZ
Periodic identification
19SL(2,Z) orbit of AdS Black Holes
- Different euclidean black holes distinguished
by non-contractible cycle - Euclidean action
Maldacena, Strominger
AdS3/CFT2
20Farey tail Z(t) sum over SL(2,Z) orbit of
black holes
contribution of each black hole geometry
subleading corrections black hole dressed
with light particle states that do not form black
holes
21IV A Heretic View on Cosmology
22Standard Big BangModel
23observer
past lightcone
Early Universe
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25Geometry of Universe is derived from OUR
OBSERVATIONS
From our perspective we are in the middle of our
Universe
Can one interprete the cosmological data in an
STATIC isotropic but non-homogenous (!)
cosmological model?
26brane worlds can live in a static
background.
one adds scale as fifth dimension.
Idea We live in a static five dimensional space.
The apparent expansion of the Universe is caused
by the fact that for more distant objects the
observed signals are coming from bigger scales.
27RULE at every time step re-throw one
dice.QUESTION What is the most likely state
at the following time
step?
previous
28The End