Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Fundamental ideas and general formalisms
- Part II String/M-theory
- Part III Loop quantum gravity and spin foam models
- Part IV Discrete Quantum Gravity
- Part V Effective models and Quantum Gravity phenomenology
- 22 Quantum Gravity phenomenology
- 23 Quantum Gravity and precision tests
- 24 Algebraic approach to Quantum Gravity II: noncommutative spacetime
- 25 Doubly special relativity
- 26 From quantum reference frames to deformed special relativity
- 27 Lorentz invariance violation and its role in Quantum Gravity phenomenology
- 28 Generic predictions of quantum theories of gravity
- Questions and answers
- Index
24 - Algebraic approach to Quantum Gravity II: noncommutative spacetime
from Part V - Effective models and Quantum Gravity phenomenology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Fundamental ideas and general formalisms
- Part II String/M-theory
- Part III Loop quantum gravity and spin foam models
- Part IV Discrete Quantum Gravity
- Part V Effective models and Quantum Gravity phenomenology
- 22 Quantum Gravity phenomenology
- 23 Quantum Gravity and precision tests
- 24 Algebraic approach to Quantum Gravity II: noncommutative spacetime
- 25 Doubly special relativity
- 26 From quantum reference frames to deformed special relativity
- 27 Lorentz invariance violation and its role in Quantum Gravity phenomenology
- 28 Generic predictions of quantum theories of gravity
- Questions and answers
- Index
Summary
Introduction
In this chapter we present noncommutative geometry (NCG) not as a ‘theory of everything’ but as a bridge between any future, perhaps combinatorial, theory of Quantum Gravity and the classical continuum geometry that has to be obtained in some limit. We consider for the present that NCG is simply a more general notion of geometry that by its noncommutative nature should be the correct setting for the phenomenology and testing of first next-to-classical Quantum Gravity corrections. Beyond that, the mathematical constraints of NCG may give us constraints on the structure of Quantum Gravity itself in so far as this has to emerge in a natural way from the true theory.
Also in this chapter we focus on the role of quantum groups or Hopf algebras as the most accessible tool of NCG, along the lines first introduced for Planck scale physics by the author in the 1980s. We provide a full introduction to our theory of ‘bicrossproduct quantum groups’, which is one of the two main classes of quantum group to come out of physics (the other class, the q-deformation quantum groups, came out of integrable systems rather than Quantum Gravity). The full machinery of noncommutative differential geometry such as gauge theory, bundles, quantum Riemannian manifolds, and spinors (at least in principle) has also been developed over the past two decades; these topics are deferred to a third article.
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- Information
- Approaches to Quantum GravityToward a New Understanding of Space, Time and Matter, pp. 466 - 492Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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