The crisis of quantum gravity

Is radical action needed?

The fact that a theory of quantum gravity hasn't been found reflects a crisis in physics. If we have a clearer understanding of the question “what is quantum gravity”, we will be better equipped to find our answer, writes Karen Crowther.

 

We are all familiar with gravity. We observe its effects in the drooping of our bodies, the falling of sand through an hourglass, and the passing of the years as the Earth orbits the Sun. Our best description of gravity is Einstein's theory of general relativity, which tells us that the effects we observe are due to the interaction of objects with spacetime. While this theory is remarkably successful at describing the universe, physicists have long wanted to do away with it. For more than 70 years, they have been trying to find its successor: a theory of quantum gravity.

The fact that a theory of quantum gravity hasn't been found reflects a crisis in physics. But it is not obvious what the crisis is. How might we "diagnose" it? Here, I explore this question, and suggest that the answer is connected to another question—what is quantum gravity?

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