EMERGENT RELATIVITY
- 10 March 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by World Scientific Pub Co Pte Ltd in International Journal of Modern Physics A
- Vol. 18 (06) , 831-853
- https://doi.org/10.1142/s0217751x03014071
Abstract
A possible resolution of the incompatibility of quantum mechanics and general relativity is that the relativity principle is emergent. I show that the central paradox of black holes also occurs at a liquid-vapor critical surface of a bose condensate but is resolved there by the phenomenon of quantum criticality. I propose that real black holes are actually phase boundaries of the vacuum analogous to this, and that the Einstein field equations simply fail at the event horizon the way quantum hydrodynamics fails at a critical surface. This can occur without violating classical general relativity anywhere experimentally accessible to external observers. Since the low-energy effects that occur at critical points are universal, it is possible to make concrete experimental predictions about such surfaces without knowing much, if anything about the true underlying equations. Many of these predictions are different from accepted views about black holes — in particular the absence of Hawking radiation and the possible transparency of cosmological black hole surfaces.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quantum phase transitions and the breakdown of classical general relativityPhilosophical Magazine Part B, 2001
- Liquid-gas phase transition in Bose-Einstein condensates with time evolutionPhysical Review A, 2000
- Quantum gravity as a dissipative deterministic systemClassical and Quantum Gravity, 1999
- Event horizons and ergoregions inPhysical Review D, 1998
- Propagation of Sound in a Bose-Einstein CondensatePhysical Review Letters, 1997
- Path integrals in the theory of condensed heliumReviews of Modern Physics, 1995
- Ab InitioCalculations for Helium: A Standard for Transport Property MeasurementsPhysical Review Letters, 1995
- The renormalization group and critical phenomenaReviews of Modern Physics, 1983
- Zero-temperature properties of matter and the quantum theorem of corresponding states. II. The liquid-to-gas phase transition for Fermi and Bose systemsPhysical Review B, 1977
- Ground State of LiquidPhysical Review B, 1965