Number 562, October 23, 2001
by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein
Loop Quantum Gravity
Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG), rival of string theory in the quest to
unite quantum mechanics with general relativity, does not suffer from
certain mathematical "infinities" (corresponding to ephemeral,
but numerous, alternatives in the way that interactions take place in
spacetime), a new study shows. This clears up some doubts as to the
theory's usefulness.
What is LQG, and why has it been so difficult to quantize gravity?
To address this question, return to classical (pre-1900) physics, a
regime in which space was fixed. Then the relativity and quantum revolutions
changed everything utterly. With the advent of general relativity, space
was combined with time in an integrated, but deformable, spacetime.
Meanwhile, in quantum mechanics spacetime remains fixed but matter becomes
fuzzy; the whereabouts of particles can only be expressed in terms of
probability clouds. In a theory that would combine quantum and gravity
features, spacetime would then have to be both deformable and fuzzy,
and this has been difficult to do. In string theory, the merger is accomplished
by imagining that matter ultimately consists of tiny strings. In loop
theory, the merger is attempted by imagining that space itself consists
of moveable tiny loops.
Carlo Rovelli (Center for Theoretical Physics, Marseilles, rovelli@cpt.univ-mrs.fr,
33-0491-269644; also University of Pittsburgh) argues that loop theory
does not have to import the extra commodities (additional dimensions
and particles) needed by string theory and that it offers, in principle,
more testable predictions, such as the idea of quantized surface areas
(that is, regions of space would come in discrete chunks and there would
be a minimum possible size scale) and the notion that quantized spacetime
might manifest itself as a minute difference in the speed of light for
different colors. The new version of loop gravity studied by Rovelli
and his colleagues pictures spacetime as being foamy: points in space
sometimes grow into bubbles. The bubbles are not "in" space
but constitute space itself. The infinities pondered in the present
paper represent not difficulties posed by the reality of particles within
particles (a necessary complexity dealt with in Richard Feynman's quantum
electrodynamics theory) but rather, analogously, to those potentially
corresponding to interactions occurring on spacetime loops within loops.
(Crane et
al., Physical Review Letters, 29 October 2001.)
Implantable BioMEMs
Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), tiny devices crafted using microchip
technology, have appeared in a number of settings; examples include
micron-sized motors, gears, pumps, and detectors. One would also like
to use MEMS in implantable medical applications, but bio-compatibility
has been a problem. To address this obstacle Tejal Desai at the University
of Illinois-Chicago (tdesai@uic.edu, 312-413-8723) has developed a capsule
containing insulin-secreting cells. The capsule is covered with pores
as small as 7 nm which allow the release of insulin while blocking the
entrance of antibodies thrown up the immune system to counteract the
transplanted cells. Desai, who has tested her capsules on mice and rats,
will report her new results with nanopore capsules (including also compartmented
100-micron chips for drug delivery) at a meeting
co-sponsored by the AVS Science and Technology
Society in San Francisco, Oct 29-Nov 2; see Desai's
abstract and her
university website.)
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