有些人看到弦,她却看到由分形构成的时空。
Where Some See Strings, She Sees a Space-Time Made of Fractals

原始链接: https://www.quantamagazine.org/where-some-see-strings-she-sees-a-space-time-made-of-fractals-20260311/

阿斯特里德·艾克霍恩探索着物理学的基本定律在最小尺度上的运作——“普朗克”尺度,在这个尺度上,现有的理解开始失效。当我们深入研究物质时,力会发生剧烈变化;通常较弱的引力会变得主导且不可预测。这种失效导致了理论,认为宇宙是由弦构成的,或者时空本身会瓦解。 然而,艾克霍恩支持一个不同的想法,称为“渐近安全性”。该理论认为,如果你足够深入地观察,物理定律不会继续变化,而是会稳定下来,从而解决引力的不规则行为。 艾克霍恩的研究重点是物质和时空在这种框架内的相互作用,使她成为引力-物质系统和渐近安全性的领先专家。她的研究旨在证明,即使在这些极小的尺度上,仍然可以存在一致且可预测的物理学,从而可能为超越当前粒子物理学的局限性提供一条途径。

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原文

Astrid Eichhorn spends her days thinking about how the laws of physics change at the tiniest scales.

Imagine zooming in closer and closer to the device on which you’re reading this article. Its apparently smooth screen quickly dissolves into a jiggling lattice of molecules, which in turn resolve into clouds of electrons buzzing around atomic nuclei. You dive into a nucleus, and atoms disappear as you enter the domain of quarks. It is here, where protons loom as large as solar systems, that Eichhorn’s explorations begin.

Past this point, the fundamental forces themselves shift. Electromagnetism and the weak interaction intensify, while the strong force slackens. The changes happen in a fairly regular way, so physicists have a good sense of how they work … until they don’t.

When an atom appears as large as the observable universe, the established laws of physics can no longer tell you what happens between particles separated by an atom’s width. Gravity, a force that’s too weak to notice at the scale of atoms, grows strong in an erratic way. You’ve just crossed over into the “Planck” realm.

The apparent breakdown of particle physics at this scale has inspired some dramatic theories. Some physicists argue that this failure point in our understanding tells us that the universe is fundamentally composed not of particles, but of vibrating strings and membranes. Others argue that at these smallest scales, space and time themselves must dissolve into structures such as loops.

Eichhorn and her colleagues are pursuing a different possibility. In 1976, Steven Weinberg, a theorist who would eventually earn a Nobel Prize, pointed out that if you zoomed in far enough, you might reach a place where the rules of physics would stop changing. New realms would stop appearing; the intensities of the forces would stabilize; and gravity would turn out to make perfect sense after all.

Eichhorn, a physicist at Heidelberg University in Germany, has over the last decade become a leading theorist investigating this idea, called asymptotic safety. In particular, Eichhorn has emphasized the importance of taking into account the ways in which matter affects space-time, and vice versa. “She is the expert of gravity-matter systems in asymptotic safety,” said Alessia Platania, a physicist at the University of Copenhagen who has worked with Eichhorn.

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