Small-scale structure of spacetime and its implications

2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (06) ◽  
pp. 1950079
Author(s):  
Dawood Kothawala

If there exists a lower bound [Formula: see text] to spacetime intervals which is Lorentz-invariant, then the effective description of spacetime that incorporates such a lower bound must necessarily be nonlocal. Such a nonlocal description can be derived using standard tools of differential geometry, but using as basic variables certain bi-tensors instead of the conventional metric tensor [Formula: see text]. This allows one to construct a qmetric [Formula: see text], using the Synge’s world function [Formula: see text] and the van Vleck determinant [Formula: see text], that incorporates the lower bound on spacetime intervals. The same nonanalytic structure of the reconstructed spacetime which renders a perturbative expansion in [Formula: see text] meaningless, will then also generically leave a non-trivial “relic” in the limit [Formula: see text]. We present specific results derived from [Formula: see text] where such a relic term manifests, and discuss several implications of the same. Specifically, we will discuss how these results: (i) suggest a description of gravitational dynamics different from the conventional one based on the Einstein–Hilbert Lagrangian, (ii) imply a dimensional reduction to [Formula: see text] at small scales and (iii) can be significant for the idea that the cosmological constant itself might be related to some nonlocal vestige of the small-scale structure of spacetime. We will conclude by discussing the ramifications of these ideas in the context of quantum gravity.

1988 ◽  
Vol 129 ◽  
pp. 255-256
Author(s):  
A. J. Kemball ◽  
P. J. Diamond ◽  
F. Mantovani

The apparent spot sizes of OH masers appear to be significantly broadened when seen through the inner galaxy or large extents of the galactic disk (Burke 1968). Bowers et al (1980) found evidence of small-scale structure (≲ 50 mas) in OH sources at distances of less than 5 kpc but this was characteristically absent in very distant sources (≳ 8kpc) at galactic longitudes 1 ≲ 40°. This result is typically explained in terms of interstellar scattering (ISS) by intervening diffuse HII regions.


2003 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Poggi ◽  
A. Porporato ◽  
L. Ridolfi

1983 ◽  
Vol 130 (-1) ◽  
pp. 411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc E. Brachet ◽  
Daniel I. Meiron ◽  
Steven A. Orszag ◽  
B. G. Nickel ◽  
Rudolf H. Morf ◽  
...  

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