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"Does parametric resonance solve the cosmological constant problem?"

14 Comments -

1 – 14 of 14
Blogger Michael Barnes said...

Thank you, that does help clear up some questions.

4:49 AM, May 31, 2017

Blogger manyoso said...

As one of the people asking for your input, thank you. So many complain about popular science journalism, but without actual experts commenting on these papers it is easy for us lay folk to be lead to believe a great breakthrough has happened. Sober analysis by experts such as yourself goes a long way to combating this. Again, thank you.

8:55 AM, May 31, 2017

Blogger Matthew Rapaport said...

You are great Dr. H. Diplomatic and thorough. Nice review here thank you and congratulations on your own paper.

10:56 AM, May 31, 2017

Blogger Daniel de França MTd2 said...

Verlinde got 5 million in total to get that equation. You did it better by solving it. Perhaps you should also be awarded a bit more! :-)

11:17 AM, May 31, 2017

Blogger Ambi Valent said...

Great explanations have the advantage that people get them easily - and the disadvantage that people may not realise they are fiddling with the data to get to the explanation. Usually observation can be used to test the different approaches to see which one is matched best by data, but in highly theoretical fields, even the choice of that data may be a problem.

I think your own approach to let go of the interpretation and re-derive the math is the better one here. (And such an approach might be successful in a few other spots as well)

5:09 PM, May 31, 2017

Blogger John Fredsted said...

I was curious concerning your Maple worksheet. Checking it out, I noted that you are using the old tensor package. Are you aware of the much more powerful GR-capabilities of the Physics package?, see for instance http://www.maplesoft.com/support/help/Maple/view.aspx?path=physics.

4:04 AM, June 01, 2017

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

John,

Yes, I am aware of it because the damn software tells me about this every single time I execute my worksheet. So thanks for adding to my pain. I have used it a few times, but it tends to get confused about coordinate transformations in rather non-transparent ways that have cost me a lot of time. Hence, I've been sticking with the old package.

5:56 AM, June 01, 2017

Blogger John Fredsted said...

I cannot say that I do not understand your sentiment, for the learning curve of the Physics package is quite steep, something I am fighting with as well.

Without any desire to intrude, I think, though, that you miss out on some nice software. For instance, most of your first three execution groups for the Schwarzschild case can be initialized/calculated by the following few lines:

with(Physics):
Setup(
signature = `-+++`,
metric = Schwarzschild
):

The Christoffel symbols, the Riemann tensor, the Ricci tensor, etc., are all calculated on the flight when loading the above few lines. All Christoffel symbols of the first and second kind, respectively, can be accessed as Christoffel[mu,nu,rho,array] and Christoffel[~mu,nu,rho,array] (note tilde). A specific component is readily accessed as Christoffel[1,2,1], say. Similar comments apply, of course, to all the other tensors.

Analogously, most of the first three execution groups of the FRW case may be initialized/calculated by the following few lines:

ga := exp(2*t*sqrt(Lambda)):
Setup(
signature = `-+++`,
metric = -dt^2 + ga*(dr^2 + r^2*dtheta^2 + r^2*sin(theta)^2*dphi^2)
):

10:05 AM, June 01, 2017

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

John,

As I said, I have used the package and I know that. But to me the points you mention are not an advantage. I often want to change one or the other component of the metric, so loading a default is pointless. And I can access the Christoffels just fine using this package. In any case, as I said, I am aware of the package. Thanks for mentioning. Honestly, your comment just makes me think I shouldn't share my worksheets.

10:15 AM, June 01, 2017

Blogger John Fredsted said...

"Honestly, your comment just makes me think I shouldn't share my worksheets."

Perhaps it was imprudent of me to pry in your worksheet. If that is the case, then I apologize.

10:32 AM, June 01, 2017

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

It's there for the benefit of the reader.

11:08 AM, June 01, 2017

Blogger Arun said...

Dear Bee,
Worksheet sharing needs to become the norm in science, IMO.
E.g., see slide 12 onwards here:
https://web.stanford.edu/~vcs/talks/BiostatsBerkeley2014-STODDEN.pdf
"Data and Code Sharing in Bioinformatics: From Bermuda to Toronto to Your Laptop
Victoria Stodden Department of Statistics, Columbia University UC Berkeley Statistics and Genomics Seminar March 13, 2014"

4:21 PM, June 01, 2017

Blogger Tom Andersen said...

Sabine,

Thanks for looking at this article. I like the paper more than you it seems.

You say: They are using classical gravity coupled to the expectation values of the quantum field theory, a mixture known as ‘semi-classical gravity’ in which gravity is not quantized.

The paper states:
The key difference from the usual semiclassical gravity is that we go one more step—instead of assuming the semiclassical Einstein equation, where the curvature of the spacetime is sourced by the expectation value of the quantum field stress energy tensor, we also take the huge fluctuations of the stress energy tensor into account.

These two statements are at odds with one another it would seem.

--Tom

9:40 PM, June 01, 2017

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Tom,

They use the expectation value in the stress-energy plus fluctuations in the stress-energy, but of course the expectation value thereof, so that it's a classical source again. That is still semi-classical because gravity is still classical. It's not the 'usual semiclassical gravity' as they write, because they use a different source. But In my opinion the statement you quote is a funny way to say the limit is inconsistent. Either way you put it, gravity isn't quantized.

12:11 AM, June 02, 2017

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