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			Nature Website 
 
			 that physics will not be complete until it can explain not just the behavior of space and time, 
			but where these entities come from. 
 But for Mark Van Raamsdonk, a physicist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, this scenario is a way to think about reality. 
 If it is true, he says, 
 
			That would make our Universe, with its 
			three spatial dimensions, a kind of hologram, projected from a 
			substrate that exists only in lower dimensions. 
 
			If nothing else, they say, neither of 
			the two great pillars of modern physics - general relativity, which 
			describes gravity as a curvature of space and time, and quantum 
			mechanics, which governs the atomic realm - gives any account for 
			the existence of space and time. Neither does string theory, which 
			describes elementary threads of energy. 
 They argue that such a radical reconceptualization of reality is the only way to explain what happens when the infinitely dense 'singularity' at the core of a black hole distorts the fabric of space-time beyond all recognition, or how researchers can unify atomic-level quantum theory and planet-level general relativity - a project that has resisted theorists' efforts for generations. 
 Finding that one huge theory is a daunting challenge. 
 
			Here, Nature explores some promising 
			lines of attack - as well as some of the emerging ideas about how to 
			test these concepts. 
 
 
 
 
 
			 
 Other physicists quickly determined that this phenomenon was quite general. Even in completely empty space, they found, an astronaut undergoing acceleration would perceive that he or she was surrounded by a heat bath. The effect would be too small to be perceptible for any acceleration achievable by rockets, but it seemed to be fundamental. 
 
			If quantum theory and general relativity 
			are correct - and both have been abundantly corroborated by 
			experiment - then the existence of Hawking radiation seemed 
			inescapable. 
 And so it is with black holes: 
 But there was a difference. In most objects, the entropy is proportional to the number of atoms the object contains, and thus to its volume. 
 
			But a
			
			black hole's entropy turned out to 
			be proportional to the surface area of its event horizon - the 
			boundary out of which not even light can escape. It was as if that 
			surface somehow encoded information about what was inside, just as a 
			two-dimensional hologram encodes a three-dimensional image. 
 From that, he found, the mathematics yielded Einstein's equations of general relativity - but using only thermodynamic concepts, not the idea of bending space-time.1 
 
			In particular, the laws of 
			thermodynamics are statistical in nature - a macroscopic average 
			over the motions of myriad atoms and molecules - so his result 
			suggested that gravity is also statistical, a macroscopic 
			approximation to the unseen constituents of space and time. 
 Padmanabhan is currently extending the thermodynamic approach in an effort to explain the origin and magnitude of dark energy: 
 Testing such ideas empirically will be extremely difficult. 
 
			In the same way that water looks 
			perfectly smooth and fluid until it is observed on the scale of its 
			molecules - a fraction of a nanometer - estimates suggest that 
			space-time will look continuous all the way down to the Planck 
			scale: roughly 10-35 meters, or some 20 orders of 
			magnitude smaller than a proton. 
 One often-mentioned way to test whether space-time is made of discrete constituents is to look for delays as high-energy photons travel to Earth from distant cosmic events such as supernovae and γ-ray bursts. In effect, the shortest-wavelength photons would sense the discreteness as a subtle bumpiness in the road they had to travel, which would slow them down ever so slightly. 
 Giovanni Amelino-Camelia, a quantum-gravity researcher at the University of Rome, and his colleagues have found 4 hints of just such delays in the photons from a γ-ray burst recorded in April. 
 The results are not definitive, says Amelino-Camelia, but the group plans to expand its search to look at the travel times of high-energy neutrinos produced by cosmic events. 
 He says that if theories cannot be tested, 
 Other physicists are looking at laboratory tests. 
 In 2012, for example, researchers from the University of Vienna and Imperial College London proposed 5 a tabletop experiment in which a microscopic mirror would be moved around with lasers. 
 They argued that Planck-scale granularities in space-time would produce detectable changes in the light reflected from the mirror (see Nature, Single photon could detect quantum-scale black holes). 
 
 
 
			 
 If space-time is a fabric, so to speak, then what are its threads? One possible answer is quite literal. 
 The theory of loop quantum gravity, which has been under development since the mid-1980s by Abhay Ashtekar and others, describes the fabric of space-time as an evolving spider's web of strands that carry information about the quantized areas and volumes of the regions they pass through. 6 
 
			The individual strands of the web must 
			eventually join their ends to form loops - hence the theory's name - 
			but have nothing to do with the much better-known strings of string 
			theory. The latter move around in space-time, whereas strands 
			actually are space-time: the information they carry defines the 
			shape of the space-time fabric in their vicinity. 
 This quantum of area is a patch roughly one Planck scale on a side. Try to insert an extra strand that carries less area, and it will simply disconnect from the rest of the web. 
 It will not be able to link to anything else, and will effectively drop out of space-time. 
 
 
			 
 
			This means that it cannot produce the 
			kind of singularities that cause Einstein's equations of general 
			relativity to break down at the instant of the Big Bang and at the 
			centers of 
			black holes. 
 
			But as it approached the fundamental 
			size limit dictated by loop quantum gravity, a repulsive force 
			kicked in and kept the singularity open, turning it into a tunnel to 
			a cosmos that preceded our own. 
 They found that an observer travelling deep into the heart of a black hole would encounter not a singularity, but a thin space-time tunnel leading to another part of space. 
 
			...who is working with other researchers 
			to identify signatures that would have been left by a bounce, rather 
			than a bang, on the cosmic microwave background - the radiation left 
			over from the Universe's massive expansion in its infant moments. 
 But Daniele Oriti, a physicist at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics in Golm, Germany, is hoping to find inspiration in the work of condensed-matter physicists, who have produced exotic phases of matter that undergo transitions described by quantum field theory. 
 Oriti and his colleagues are searching for formulae to describe how the Universe might similarly change phase, transitioning from a set of discrete loops to a smooth and continuous space-time. 
 
 
 
			 
 Pioneered by Rafael Sorkin, a physicist at the Perimeter Institute in Waterloo, Canada, the theory postulates that the building blocks of space-time are simple mathematical points that are connected by links, with each link pointing from past to future. Such a link is a bare-bones representation of causality, meaning that an earlier point can affect a later one, but not vice versa. 
 The resulting network is like a growing tree that gradually builds up into space-time. 
 In the late 1980s, Sorkin used this framework to estimate 9 the number of points that the observable Universe should contain, and reasoned that they should give rise to a small intrinsic energy that causes the Universe to accelerate its expansion. 
 A few years later, the discovery of dark energy confirmed his guess. 
 
 
 
			Causal dynamical 
			triangulations 
 
			Some physicists have found it much more 
			fruitful to use computer simulations. The idea, which dates back to 
			the early 1990s, is to approximate the unknown fundamental 
			constituents with tiny chunks of ordinary space-time caught up in a 
			roiling sea of quantum fluctuations, and to follow how these chunks 
			spontaneously glue themselves together into larger structures. 
 The space-time building blocks were simple hyper-pyramids - four-dimensional counterparts to three-dimensional tetrahedrons - and the simulation's gluing rules allowed them to combine freely. 
 The result was a series of bizarre 'universes' that had far too many dimensions (or too few), and that folded back on themselves or broke into pieces. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
			 
 After all, says Loll, the dimension of time is not quite like the three dimensions of space. 
 
			So the team changed its simulations to 
			ensure that effects could not come before their cause - and found 
			that the space-time chunks started consistently assembling 
			themselves into smooth four-dimensional universes with properties 
			similar to our own.10 
 
			Others have shown that a two-dimensional 
			phase in the early Universe would create patterns similar to those 
			already seen in the cosmic microwave background. 
 
 
 
			Holography 
 Inspired by the hologram-like way that black holes store all their entropy at the surface, this principle was first given an explicit mathematical form by Juan Maldacena, a string theorist at the Institute of Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, who published 11 his influential model of a holographic universe in 1998. 
 
			In that model, the three-dimensional 
			interior of the universe contains strings and black holes governed 
			only by gravity, whereas its two-dimensional boundary contains 
			elementary particles and fields that obey ordinary quantum laws 
			without gravity. 
 
			But that does not affect the 
			mathematics: anything happening in the three-dimensional universe 
			can be described equally well by equations in the two-dimensional 
			boundary, and vice versa. 
 He discovered that if every particle entanglement between two separate regions of the boundary is steadily reduced to zero, so that the quantum links between the two disappear, the three-dimensional space responds by gradually dividing itself like a splitting cell, until the last, thin connection between the two halves snaps. 
 Repeating that process will subdivide the three-dimensional space again and again, while the two-dimensional boundary stays connected. 
 
			So, in effect, Van Raamsdonk concluded, 
			the three-dimensional universe is being held together by quantum 
			entanglement on the boundary - which means that in some sense, 
			quantum entanglement and space-time are the same thing. 
 
			 
 References 
 
 
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