73 research outputs found
Combinatorial Quantum Gravity: Geometry from Random Bits
I propose a quantum gravity model in which geometric space emerges from
random bits in a quantum phase transition driven by the combinatorial
Ollivier-Ricci curvature and corresponding to the condensation of short cycles
in random graphs. This quantum critical point defines quantum gravity
non-perturbatively. In the ordered geometric phase at large distances the
action reduces to the standard Einstein-Hilbert term.Comment: Revised version to appear in JHE
Emergent Higgsless Superconductivity
We present a new Higgsless model of superconductivity, inspired from anyon
superconductivity but P- and T-invariant and generalizable to any dimension.
While the original anyon superconductivity mechanism was based on
incompressible quantum Hall fluids as average field states, our mechanism
involves topological insulators as average field states. In D space dimensions
it involves a (D-1)-form fictitious pseudovector gauge field which originates
from the condensation of topological defects in compact low-energy effective BF
theories. There is no massive Higgs scalar as there is no local order
parameter. When electromagnetism is switched on, the photon acquires mass by
the topological BF mechanism. Although the charge of the gapless mode (2) and
the topological order (4) are the same as those of the standard Higgs model,
the two models of superconductivity are clearly different since the origins of
the gap, reflected in the high-energy sectors are totally different. In 2D this
type of superconductivity is explicitly realized as global superconductivity in
Josephson junction arrays. In 3D this model predicts a possible phase
transition from topological insulators to Higgsless superconductors.Comment: Prepared for the proceedings of the XII Quark Confinement and the
Hadron Spectrum, 29 August to 3 September 2016, Thessaloniki, Greece. arXiv
admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1408.506
Higgsless superconductivity from topological defects in compact BF terms
We present a new Higgsless model of superconductivity, inspired from anyon
superconductivity but P- and T-invariant and generalizable to any dimension.
While the original anyon superconductivity mechanism was based on
incompressible quantum Hall fluids as average field states, our mechanism
involves topological insulators as average field states. In D space dimensions
it involves a (D-1)-form fictitious pseudovector gauge field which originates
from the condensation of topological defects in compact low-energy effective BF
theories. In the average field approximation, the corresponding uniform
emergent charge creates a gap for the (D-2)-dimensional branes via the Magnus
force, the dual of the Lorentz force. One particular combination of intrinsic
and emergent charge fluctuations that leaves the total charge distribution
invariant constitutes an isolated gapless mode leading to superfluidity. The
remaining massive modes organise themselves into a D-dimensional charged,
massive vector. There is no massive Higgs scalar as there is no local order
parameter. When electromagnetism is switched on, the photon acquires mass by
the topological BF mechanism. Although the charge of the gapless mode (2) and
the topological order (4) are the same as those of the standard Higgs model,
the two models of superconductivity are clearly different since the origins of
the gap, reflected in the high-energy sectors are totally different. In 2D this
type of superconductivity is explicitly realized as global superconductivity in
Josephson junction arrays. In 3D this model predicts a possible phase
transition from topological insulators to Higgsless superconductors.Comment: 12 pages, no figure
Combinatorial quantum gravity and emergent 3D quantum behaviour
We review combinatorial quantum gravity, an approach which combines
Einstein's idea of dynamical geometry with Wheeler's "it from bit" hypothesis
in a model of dynamical graphs governed by the coarse Ollivier-Ricci curvature.
This drives a continuous phase transition from a random to a geometric phase,
due to a condensation of loops on the graph. In the 2D case, the geometric
phase describes negative-curvature surfaces with two inversely related scales,
an ultraviolet (UV) Planck length and an infrared (IR) radius of curvature.
Below the Planck scale the random bit character survives: chunks of random bits
of the Planck size describe matter particles of excitation energy given by
their excess curvature. Between the Planck length and the curvature radius, the
surface is smooth, with spectral and Hausdorff dimension 2; at scales larger
than the curvature radius, particles see the surface as an effective Lorentzian
de Sitter surface, the spectral dimension becomes 3 and the effective slow
dynamics of particles, as seen by co-moving observers, emerges as quantum
mechanics in Euclidean 3D space. Since the 3D distances are inherited from the
underlying 2D de Sitter surface, we obtain curved trajectories around massive
particles also in 3D, representing the large-scale gravity interactions. We
shall thus propose that this 2D model describes a generic holographic screen
relevant for real quantum gravity
- …