A hallmark of non-perturbative theories of quantum gravity is the absence of a fixed background geometry, and therefore the absence in a Planckian regime of any notion of length or scale that is defined a priori. This has potentially far-reaching consequences for the application of renormalization group methods à la Wilson, which rely on these notions in a crucial way. We review the status quo of attempts in the Causal Dynamical Triangulations (CDT) approach to quantum gravity to find an ultraviolet fixed point associated with the second-order phase transitions observed in the lattice theory. Measurements of the only invariant correlator currently accessible, that of the total spatial three-volume, has not produced any evidence of such a fixed point. A possible explanation for this result is our incomplete and perhaps naïve understanding of what constitutes an appropriate notion of (quantum) length near the Planck scale.
CITATION STYLE
Ambjorn, J., Gizbert-Studnicki, J., Görlich, A., Jurkiewicz, J., & Loll, R. (2020). Renormalization in Quantum Theories of Geometry. Frontiers in Physics, 8. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2020.00247
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