Name | Graviton |
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Composition | Elementary particle |
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Statistics | Bosonic |
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Group | Gauge boson |
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Interaction | Gravitation |
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Antiparticle | Self |
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Status | theoretical |
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Theorized | 1930sThe name is attributed to Dmitrii Blokhintsev and F.M. Gal'perin in 1934 |
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Discovered | hypothetical |
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Symbol | G |
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Mass | 0 |
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Mean lifetime | Stable |
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Electric charge | 0 e |
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Spin | 2 |
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In
physics, the
graviton is a hypothetical
elementary particle that mediates the force of
gravitation in the framework of
quantum field theory. If it exists, the graviton must be
massless (because the gravitational force has unlimited range) and must have a
spin of 2. This is because the source of gravitation is the
stress-energy tensor, a second-rank
tensor, compared to
electromagnetism, the source of which is the
four-current, a first-rank tensor. Additionally, it can be shown that any massless spin-2 field would be indistinguishable from gravitation, because a massless spin-2 field must couple to (interact with) the stress-energy tensor in the same way that the gravitational field does. This result suggests that if a massless spin-2 particle is discovered, it must be the graviton, so that the only experimental verification needed for the graviton may simply be the discovery of a massless spin-2 particle.
Gravitons are postulated because of the great success of quantum field theory (in particular, the Standard Model) at modeling the behavior of all other known forces of nature as being mediated by elementary particles: electromagnetism by the photon, the strong interaction by the gluons, and the weak interaction by the W and Z bosons. The hypothesis is that the gravitational interaction is likewise mediated by a – yet undiscovered – elementary particle, dubbed the graviton. In the classical limit, the theory would reduce to general relativity and conform to Newton's law of gravitation in the weak-field limit.
However, attempts to extend the Standard Model with gravitons have run into serious theoretical difficulties at high energies (processes with energies close to or above the Planck scale) because of infinities arising due to quantum effects (in technical terms, gravitation is nonrenormalizable). Since classical general relativity and quantum mechanics are incompatible at such energies, from a theoretical point of view the present situation is not tenable. Some proposed models of quantum gravity attempt to address these issues, but these are speculative theories.
Gravitons and renormalization
When describing graviton interactions, the
classical theory (i.e. the
tree diagrams) and
semiclassical corrections (
one-loop diagrams) behave normally, but
Feynman diagrams with two (or more) loops lead to
ultraviolet divergences; that is, infinite results that cannot be removed because the quantized
general relativity is not
renormalizable, unlike
quantum electrodynamics. That is, the usual ways physicists calculate the probability that a particle will emit or absorb a graviton give nonsensical answers and the theory loses its predictive power. These problems, together with some conceptual puzzles, led many physicists to believe that a theory more complete than just general relativity must regulate the behavior near the
Planck scale.
Experimental observation
Unambiguous detection of individual gravitons, though not prohibited by any fundamental law, is impossible with any physically reasonable detector. The reason is the extremely low
cross section for the interaction of gravitons with matter. For example, a detector with the mass of
Jupiter and 100% efficiency, placed in close orbit around a
neutron star, would only be expected to observe one graviton every 10 years, even under the most favorable conditions. It would be impossible to discriminate these events from the background of
neutrinos, since the dimensions of the required neutrino shield would ensure collapse into a
black hole.
Comparison with other forces
Unlike the
force carriers of the
other forces, gravitation plays a special role in
general relativity in defining the
spacetime in which events take place. Because it does not depend on a particular space-time background, general relativity is said to be
background independent. In contrast, the Standard Model is
not background independent. A theory of
quantum gravity is needed in order to reconcile these differences. Whether this theory should be background independent or not is an open question. The answer to this question will determine if gravitation plays a special role in the universe.
Gravitons in speculative theories
String theory predicts the existence of gravitons and their well-defined
interactions. A graviton in
perturbative string theory is a
closed string in a very particular low-energy vibrational state. The scattering of gravitons in string theory can also be computed from the
correlation functions in
conformal field theory, as dictated by the
AdS/CFT correspondence, or from
Matrix theory.
An interesting feature of gravitons in string theory is that, as closed strings without endpoints, they would not be bound to branes and could move freely between them. If we live on a brane (as hypothesized by some theorists) this "leakage" of gravitons from the brane into higher-dimensional space could explain why gravitation is such a weak force, and gravitons from other branes adjacent to our own could provide a potential explanation for dark matter. See brane cosmology.
Gravitons in popular culture
In the
Star Trek universe,
Federation ships have graviton emitters that provide synthetic gravity. This eliminates the need for rotating rings or similar mechanisms that use
centrifugal force to mimic gravity. The
Borg also use gravimetric torpedoes, which utilize the force of graviton particles to tear ships apart.
In the show Quantum Leap (1989–1993), the accelerator physicist Sam Beckett steps into, accelerates supercharged gravitons which then emanates energy and thus mass gravitational fields that then are able to warp space and time into interconnecting loops. These particles then allow displacement into past or future, however because we are embodied by fermions, whatever energy (mass) is hyper accelerated into time will then be replaced by whoever it is Sam leaps into (i.e. Pauli Exclusion Principle).
In the Dead Space (series), graviton manipulation is a key technology that allows corporations to mount planetary mining operations by literally lifting sections of a planet's crust into the sky.
In the MMORPG OGame, one can research Graviton technology to unlock the use of a Deathstar, the game's most powerful ship.
See also
Gravitomagnetism
Gravitational wave
Planck mass
Gravitation
Static forces and virtual-particle exchange
External links
References
Category:Bosons
Category:Gauge bosons
Category:Quantum gravity
Category:String theory
Category:Hypothetical elementary particles