Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
Quantum General Relativity (QGR) or Quantum Gravity for short is, by definition, a Quantum (Field) Theory of Einstein's geometrical interpretation of gravity which he himself called General Relativity (GR). It is a theory which synthesises the two fundamental building blocks of modern physics, that is, (1) the generally relativistic principle of background independence, sometimes called general covariance and (2) the uncertainty principle of quantum mechanics.
The search for a viable QGR theory is almost as old as Quantum Mechanics and GR themselves, however, despite an enormous effort of work by a vast amount of physicists over the past 70 years, we still do not have a credible QGR theory. Since the problem is so hard, QGR is sometimes called the ‘holy grail of physics’. Indeed, it is to be expected that the discovery of a QGR theory revolutionises our current understanding of nature in a way as radical as both General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics did.
What we do have today are candidate theories which display some promising features that one intuitively expects from a quantum theory of gravity. They are so far candidates only because for each of them one still has to show, at the end of the construction of the theory, that it reduces to the presently known standard model of matter and classical General Relativity at low energies, which is the minimal test that any QGR theory must pass.
One of these candidates is Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG). LQG is a modern version of the canonical or Hamiltonian approach to Quantum Gravity, originally introduced by Dirac, Bergmann, Komar, Wheeler, DeWitt, Arnowitt, Deser and Misner.
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