A little more than 100 years ago most people—and most scientists—thought of matter as continuous. Although since ancient times some philosophers and scientists had speculated that if matter were broken up into small enough bits, it might turn out to be made up of very tiny atoms, few thought the existence of atoms could ever be proved. Today we have imaged individual atoms and have studied the particles that compose them. The granularity of matter is old news.

In recent decades physicists and mathematicians have asked if space is also made of discrete pieces. Is it continuous, as we learn in school, or is it more like a piece of cloth, woven out of individual fibers? If we could probe to size scales that were small enough, would we see "atoms" of space, irreducible pieces of volume that cannot be broken into anything smaller? And what about time: Does nature change continuously, or does the world evolve in a series of very tiny steps, acting more like a digital computer?

The past 30 years have seen great progress on these questions. A theory with the strange name of "loop quantum gravity" predicts that space and time are indeed made of discrete pieces. The picture revealed by calculations carried out within the framework of this theory is both simple and beautiful. The theory has deepened our understanding of puzzling phenomena having to do with black holes and the big bang. Best of all, it is possible that current experiments might be able to detect signals of the atomic structure of spacetime—if this structure actually exists—in the near future.

Quanta

My colleagues and I developed the theory of loop quantum gravity while struggling with a long-standing problem in physics: Is it possible to develop a quantum theory of gravity? To explain why this is an important question—and what it has to do with the granularity of space and time—I must first say a bit about quantum theory and the theory of gravity.

The theory of quantum mechanics was formulated in the first quarter of the 20th century, a development that was closely connected with the confirmation that matter is made of atoms. The equations of quantum mechanics require that certain quantities, such as the energy of an atom, can come only in specific, discrete units. Quantum theory successfully predicts the properties and behavior of atoms and the elementary particles and forces that compose them. No theory in the history of science has been more successful than quantum theory. It underlies our understanding of chemistry, atomic and subatomic physics, electronics and even biology.

In the same decades that quantum mechanics was being formulated, Albert Einstein constructed his general theory of relativity, which is a theory of gravity. In his theory, the gravitational force arises as a consequence of space and time (which together form "spacetime") being curved by the presence of matter. A loose analogy is that of a bowling ball placed on a rubber sheet along with a marble that is rolling around nearby. The balls could represent the sun and the earth, and the sheet is space. The bowling ball creates a deep indentation in the rubber sheet, and the slope of this indentation causes the marble to be deflected toward the larger ball, as if some force—gravity—were pulling it in that direction. Similarly, any piece of matter or concentration of energy distorts the geometry of spacetime, causing other particles and light rays to be deflected toward it, a phenomenon we call gravity.

Quantum theory and Einstein's general theory of relativity have each separately been fantastically well confirmed by experiment—but no experiment has explored the regime where both theories predict significant effects. The problem is that quantum effects are most prominent at small size scales, whereas general relativistic effects require large masses, so it takes extraordinary circumstances to combine both conditions.

Allied with this hole in the experimental data is a huge conceptual problem: Einstein's general theory of relativity is thoroughly classical, or nonquantum. For physics as a whole to be logically consistent, there has to be a theory that somehow unites quantum mechanics and general relativity. This long-sought-after theory is called quantum gravity. Because general relativity deals in the geometry of spacetime, a quantum theory of gravity will in addition be a quantum theory of spacetime.

Physicists have developed a considerable collection of mathematical procedures for turning a classical theory into a quantum one. Many theoretical physicists and mathematicians have worked on applying those standard techniques to general relativity. Early results were discouraging. Calculations carried out in the 1960s and 1970s seemed to show that quantum theory and general relativity could not be successfully combined. Consequently, something fundamentally new seemed to be required, such as additional postulates or principles not included in quantum theory and general relativity, or new particles or fields, or new entities of some kind. Perhaps with the right additions or a new mathematical structure, a quantumlike theory could be developed that would successfully approximate general relativity in the nonquantum regime. To avoid spoiling the successful predictions of quantum theory and general relativity, the exotica contained in the full theory would remain hidden from experiment except in the extraordinary circumstances where both quantum theory and general relativity are expected to have large effects. Many different approaches along these lines have been tried, with names such as twistor theory, supergravity and string theory. After many years of study, however, none of these ideas has led to unambiguous predictions that can be tested experimentally. Thus, many physicists are reconsidering whether quantum theory and general relativity might be compatible after all.

A Big Loophole

In the mid-1980s a few of us—including Abhay Ashtekar, now at Pennsylvania State University, Ted Jacobson of the University of Maryland and Carlo Rovelli, now at Aix-Marseille University in France—decided to reexamine the question of whether quantum mechanics could be combined consistently with general relativity using the standard techniques. We knew that the negative results from the 1970s had an important loophole. Those calculations assumed that the geometry of space is continuous and smooth, no matter how minutely we examine it, just as people had expected matter to be before the discovery of atoms. Some of our teachers and mentors had pointed out that if this assumption was wrong, the old calculations would not be reliable.

So we began searching for a way to do calculations without assuming that space is smooth and continuous. We insisted on not making any assumptions beyond the experimentally well tested principles of general relativity and quantum theory. In particular, we kept two key principles of general relativity at the heart of our calculations.

The first is known as background independence. This principle says that the geometry of spacetime is not fixed. Instead the geometry is an evolving, dynamical quantity. To find the geometry, one has to solve certain equations that include all the effects of matter and energy.

The second principle, known by the imposing name diffeomorphism invariance, is closely related to background independence. This principle implies that, unlike theories prior to general relativity, one is free to choose any set of coordinates to map spacetime and express the equations. A point in spacetime is defined only by what physically happens at it, not by its location according to some special set of coordinates (no coordinates are special). Diffeomorphism invariance is very powerful and is of fundamental importance in general relativity.

By carefully combining these two principles with the standard techniques of quantum mechanics, we developed a mathematical language that allowed us to do a computation to determine whether space is continuous or discrete. That calculation revealed, to our delight, that space is quantized. We had laid the foundations of our theory of loop quantum gravity. The term "loop," by the way, arises from how some computations in the theory involve small loops marked out in spacetime.

The calculations have been redone by a number of physicists and mathematicians using a range of methods. Over the years since, the study of loop quantum gravity has grown into a healthy field of research, with many contributors around the world; our combined efforts give us confidence in the picture of spacetime I will describe.

Ours is a quantum theory of the structure of spacetime at the smallest size scales, so to explain how the theory works we need to consider what it predicts for a small region or volume. In dealing with quantum physics, it is essential to specify precisely what physical quantities are to be measured. To do so, we consider a region somewhere that is marked out by a boundary, B [see box below]. The boundary may be defined by some matter, such as a cast-iron shell, or it may be defined by the geometry of spacetime itself, as in the event horizon of a black hole (a surface from within which even light cannot escape the black hole's gravitational clutches).

Credit: Nadia Strasser (illustration); Source: Area and Volume Data from Roberto de Pietri and Carlo Rovellihttp://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9602023

What happens if we measure the volume of the region? What are the possible outcomes allowed by both quantum theory and diffeomorphism invariance? If the geometry of space is continuous, the region could be of any size and the measurement result could be any positive real number; in particular, it could be as close as one wants to zero volume. But if the geometry is granular, then the measurement result can come from just a discrete set of numbers and it cannot be smaller than a certain minimum possible volume. The question is similar to asking how much energy electrons orbiting an atomic nucleus have. Classical mechanics predicts that an electron can possess any amount of energy, but quantum mechanics allows only specific energies (amounts in between those values do not occur). The difference is like that between the measure of something that flows continuously, like the 19th-century conception of water, and something that can be counted, like the atoms in that water.

The theory of loop quantum gravity predicts that space is like atoms: there is a discrete set of numbers that the volume-measuring experiment can return. Volume comes in distinct pieces. Another quantity we can measure is the area of the boundary B. Again, calculations using the theory return an unambiguous result: the area of the surface is discrete as well. In other words, space is not continuous. It comes only in specific quantum units of area and volume.

The possible values of volume and area are measured in units of a quantity called the Planck length. This length is related to the strength of gravity, the size of quanta and the speed of light. It measures the scale at which the geometry of space is no longer continuous. The Planck length is very small: 10−33 centimeter. The smallest possible nonzero area is about a square Planck length, or 10−66 cm2. The smallest nonzero volume is approximately a cubic Planck length, 10−99 cm3. Thus, the theory predicts that there are about 1099 atoms of volume in every cubic centimeter of space. The quantum of volume is so tiny that there are more such quanta in a cubic centimeter than there are cubic centimeters in the visible universe (1085).

Spin Networks

What else does our theory tell us about spacetime? To start with, what do these quantum states of volume and area look like? Is space made up of a lot of little cubes or spheres? The answer is no—it's not that simple. Nevertheless, we can draw diagrams that represent the quantum states of volume and area. To those of us working in this field, these diagrams are beautiful because of their connection to an elegant branch of mathematics.

To see how these diagrams work, imagine that we have a lump of space shaped like a cube [see box below]. In our diagrams, we would depict this cube as a dot, which represents the volume, with six lines sticking out, each of which represents one of the cube's faces. We have to write a number next to the dot to specify the quantity of volume, and on each line we write a number to specify the area of the face that the line represents.

Credit: Nadia Strasser

Next, suppose we put a pyramid on top of the cube. These two polyhedra, which share a common face, would be depicted as two dots (two volumes) connected by one of the lines (the face that joins the two volumes). The cube has five other faces (five lines sticking out), and the pyramid has four (four lines sticking out). It is clear how more complicated arrangements involving polyhedra other than cubes and pyramids could be depicted with these dot-and-line diagrams: each polyhedron of volume becomes a dot, or node, and each flat face of a polyhedron becomes a line, and the lines join the nodes in the way that the faces join the polyhedra together. Mathematicians call these line diagrams graphs.

Now, in our theory, we throw away the drawings of polyhedra and just keep the graphs. The mathematics that describes the quantum states of volume and area gives us a set of rules for how the nodes and lines can be connected and what numbers can go where in a diagram. Every quantum state corresponds to one of these graphs, and every graph that obeys the rules corresponds to a quantum state. The graphs are a convenient shorthand for all the possible quantum states of space. (The mathematics and other details of the quantum states are too complicated to discuss here; the best we can do is show some of the related diagrams.)

The graphs are a better representation of the quantum states than the polyhedra are. In particular, some graphs connect in strange ways that cannot be converted into a tidy picture of polyhedra. For example, whenever space is curved, the polyhedra will not fit together properly in any drawing we could do, yet we can still draw a graph. Indeed, we can take a graph and from it calculate how much space is distorted. Because the distortion of space is what produces gravity, this is how the diagrams form a quantum theory of gravity.

For simplicity, we often draw the graphs in two dimensions, but it is better to imagine them filling three-dimensional space because that is what they represent. Yet there is a conceptual trap here: the lines and nodes of a graph do not live at specific locations in space. Each graph is defined only by the way its pieces connect together and how they relate to well-defined boundaries such as boundary B. The continuous, three-dimensional space that you are imagining the graphs occupy does not exist as a separate entity. All that exist are the lines and nodes; they are space, and the way they connect defines the geometry of space.

These graphs are called spin networks because the numbers on them are related to quantities called spins. Roger Penrose of the University of Oxford first proposed in the early 1970s that spin networks might play a role in theories of quantum gravity. We were very pleased when we found, in 1994, that precise calculations confirmed his intuition. Readers familiar with Feynman diagrams should note that our spin networks are not Feynman diagrams, despite the superficial resemblance. Feynman diagrams represent quantum interactions between particles, which proceed from one quantum state to another. Our diagrams represent fixed quantum states of spatial volumes and areas.

The individual nodes and edges of the diagrams represent extremely small regions of space: a node is typically a volume of about one cubic Planck length, and a line is typically an area of about one square Planck length. But in principle, nothing limits how big and complicated a spin network can be. If we could draw a detailed picture of the quantum state of our universe—the geometry of its space, as curved and warped by the gravitation of galaxies and black holes and everything else—it would be a gargantuan spin network of unimaginable complexity, with approximately 10184 nodes.

These spin networks describe the geometry of space. But what about all the matter and energy contained in that space? How do we represent particles and fields occupying positions and regions of space? Particles, such as electrons, correspond to certain types of nodes, which are represented by adding more labels on nodes. Fields, such as the electromagnetic field, are represented by additional labels on the lines of the graph. We represent particles and fields moving through space by these labels moving in discrete steps on the graphs.

Moves and Foams

Particles and fields are not the only things that move around. According to general relativity, the geometry of space changes in time. The bends and curves of space change as matter and energy move, and waves can pass through it like ripples on a lake. In loop quantum gravity, these processes are represented by changes in the graphs. They evolve in time by a succession of certain "moves" in which the connectivity of the graphs changes [see box below].

Credit: Nadia Strasser (illustration); Sources: A andB adapted from Fotini Markopoulouhttp://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9704013; C adapted from Carlo Rovellihttp://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9806121

When physicists describe phenomena quantum-mechanically, they compute probabilities for different processes. We do the same when we apply loop quantum gravity theory to describe phenomena, whether it be particles and fields moving on the spin networks or the geometry of space itself evolving in time. Work by many people over the past 20 years has revealed an elegant set of rules for computing the probabilities of the different moves by which spin networks change in time. These rules express the quantum version of Einstein's equations of general relativity. With them, the theory is completely specified: we have a well-defined procedure for computing the probability of any process that can occur in a world that obeys the rules of our theory. It remains only to do the computations and work out predictions for what could be observed in experiments of one kind or another.

To discover the precise rules for computing probabilities, we had to follow Einstein in shifting our perspective from space to spacetime. Einstein's special and general theories of relativity join space and time together into the single, merged entity known as spacetime. The spin networks that represent space in loop quantum gravity theory accommodate the concept of spacetime by becoming what we call spin "foams." With the addition of another dimension—time—the lines of the spin networks grow to become two-dimensional surfaces and the nodes grow to become lines. Transitions where the spin networks change (the moves discussed earlier) are now represented by nodes where the lines meet in the foam. The spin-foam picture of spacetime was proposed by several people, including Rovelli, Mike Reisenberger (now at the University of Montevideo in Uruguay), John Barrett of the University of Nottingham in England, Louis Crane of Kansas State University, John Baez of the University of California, Riverside, and Fotini Markopoulou, then at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Ontario.

In the spacetime way of looking at things, a snapshot at a specific time is like a slice cutting across the spacetime. Taking such a slice through a spin foam produces a spin network. But it would be wrong to think of such a slice as moving continuously, like a smooth flow of time. Instead, just as space is defined by a spin network's discrete geometry, time is defined by the sequence of distinct moves that rearrange the network [see box below]. In this way, time also becomes discrete. Time flows not like a river but like the ticking of a clock, with "ticks" that are about as long as the Planck time: 10−43 second. Or, more precisely, time in our universe flows by the ticking of innumerable clocks—in a sense, at every location in the spin foam where a quantum "move" takes place, a clock at that location has ticked once.

Credit: Nadia Strasser

Predictions and Tests

I have outlined what loop quantum gravity has to say about space and time at the Planck scale, but we cannot verify the theory directly by examining spacetime on that scale. It is too small. So how can we test the theory? An important test is whether one can derive classical general relativity as an approximation to loop quantum gravity. In other words, if the spin networks are like the threads woven into a piece of cloth, this is analogous to asking whether we can compute the right elastic properties for a sheet of the material by averaging over thousands of threads. Similarly, when averaged over many Planck lengths, do spin networks describe the geometry of space and its evolution in a way that agrees roughly with the "smooth cloth" of Einstein's classical theory? This is a challenging problem, but with the right rules for computing probabilities, we have made a lot of progress. During the past few years the work of several groups has made it possible to assert that when the elements of the discrete geometry are large, compared with the Planck scale, they behave in a way that is a good approximation of Einstein's equations of general relativity. In the same approximation, it has been shown that gravitons—the quanta associated with gravitational waves—travel and scatter from one another precisely as Einstein's general theory of relativity dictates.

Another fruitful test is to see what loop quantum gravity has to say about one of the long-standing mysteries of gravitational physics and quantum theory: the thermodynamics of black holes—in particular, their entropy, which is related to disorder. Physicists have computed predictions regarding black hole thermodynamics using a hybrid, approximate theory in which matter is treated quantum-mechanically but spacetime is not. A full quantum theory of gravity, such as loop quantum gravity, should be able to reproduce these predictions. Specifically, in the 1970s Jacob D. Bekenstein, now at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, inferred that black holes must be ascribed an entropy proportional to their surface area. Shortly after, Stephen Hawking of the University of Cambridge deduced that black holes, particularly small ones, must emit radiation. These predictions are among the greatest results of theoretical physics in the past 40 years.

To do the calculation in loop quantum gravity, we pick the boundary B to be the event horizon of a black hole. When we analyze the entropy of the relevant quantum states, we get precisely the prediction of Bekenstein. Similarly, the theory reproduces Hawking's prediction of black hole radiation. In fact, it makes further predictions for the fine structure of Hawking radiation. If a microscopic black hole were ever observed, this prediction could be tested by studying the spectrum of radiation it emits. That may be far off in time, however, because we have no technology to make black holes, small or otherwise.

Indeed, an experimental test of any quantum theory of gravity would appear at first to be an immense technological challenge. The problem is that the characteristic effects described by the theory become significant only at the Planck scale, the very tiny size of the quanta of area and volume. The Planck scale is 16 orders of magnitude below the scale probed in the highest-energy particle accelerators currently planned (higher energy is needed to probe shorter-distance scales). Because we cannot reach the Planck scale with an accelerator, many people have held out little hope for the confirmation of quantum gravity theories.

A few imaginative young researchers in the past 20 years have thought up new ways to test the predictions of loop quantum gravity that can be done now. These methods depend on the propagation of light across the universe. When light moves through a medium, its wavelength suffers some distortions, leading to effects such as bending in water and the separation of different wavelengths, or colors. These effects may also occur for light and particles moving through the discrete space described by a spin network.

Unfortunately, the magnitude of the effects is proportional to the ratio of the Planck length to the wavelength. For visible light, this ratio is smaller than 10−28; even for the most powerful cosmic rays ever observed, it is about one billionth. For any radiation we can observe, the effects of the granular structure of space are very small. What the young researchers spotted is that these effects accumulate when light travels a long distance. And we detect light and particles that come from billions of light-years away, from events such as gamma-ray bursts.

Gamma-ray bursts contain photons of very different energies. According to Einstein's special theory of relativity, all photons travel at the universal speed of light. Consequently, the photons emitted by a burst should arrive in the order they are emitted. But a possible consequence of the light traveling through a discrete spacetime is to modify this law so that a photon's speed depends very slightly on its energy. This implies that the quantum structure of spacetime comes into conflict with Einstein's special theory of relativity. This conflict is very small on usual scales but becomes detectable when we study light that has traveled for enormous distances, over which time the effect is amplified so that more energetic photons tend to arrive earlier than their less energetic siblings.

There are actually two different possibilities. The first is that quantum spacetime violates the basic relativity principle that velocity and rest are relative concepts. This would mean that there is an observer for whom the atoms of spacetime appear to be at rest, just like the atoms of a solid body.

The second is that the relativity principle is preserved but the laws of special relativity are modified in such a way that the time it takes photons to travel from the burst to the detector depends on their energy. This second possibility is called doubly special relativity; recently it has been subsumed in a deeper concept called relative locality.

Several experiments currently have the sensitivity required to sort out the fate of Einstein's special theory of relativity in the presence of quantum spacetime. The most important of these has been the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope, in orbit since June 2008. Measurements it has already made limit the scope of such an effect to just about the quantum gravity scale. Other observations—of the behavior of polarized radio waves from galaxies and of the behavior of very energetic cosmic rays—appear to confirm the validity of the relativity principle even at scales of quantum geometry. Observations by Fermi could either rule out or confirm the possibility that special relativity is modified by quantum spacetime.

Does loop quantum gravity make predictions for these experiments? The short answer is not yet. In the 1990s several calculations pointed to a violation of the relativity principle, but these turned out to be based on incorrect forms for the laws of spin- network evolution. The laws now understood to be correct do not violate the relativity principle. Whether they lead to a modification of the laws of special relativity is under investigation.

The Cosmos

Loop quantum gravity has opened up a new window through which we can study deep cosmological questions such as those relating to the origins of our universe. We can use the theory to study the earliest moments of time just after the big bang. General relativity predicts that there was a first moment of time, but this conclusion ignores quantum physics (because general relativity is not a quantum theory). Models of the very early universe based on loop quantum gravity, however, indicate that the big bang is actually a big bounce; before the bounce the universe was rapidly contracting. Theorists are now hard at work developing predictions for the early universe that may be testable in future cosmological observations. It is not impossible that in our lifetime we could see evidence of the time before the big bang.

Another possible observational signature of loop quantum gravity would be a breaking of the symmetry between left and right, which could be detected in observations of polarization in the cosmic background radiation. If this effect is present, then the universe seen in a mirror would be distinguishable from the universe seen directly. As pointed out by João Magueijo of Imperial College London and his collaborators, this is a natural consequence allowed by loop quantum gravity, and it could be detected in observations by the Planck satellite and other observatories.

Recent research on loop quantum gravity also addresses the unification of gravity with the other forces found in nature. It is even possible to incorporate extra dimensions and supersymmetry in the theory, if needed. But as is the case with string theory, no principle has emerged that would predict a unique unification of gravity with particle physics.

Many open questions remain to be answered in loop quantum gravity. While there is now good evidence that general relativity emerges as an approximation to the theory within certain limits, we would like to better understand how robust is this key property. And we must go beyond it to know what modifications of relativity theory are implied, as these could lead to observable effects.

In addition to loop quantum gravity, there are a few other background, independent approaches to quantum gravity that have yielded interesting results. These include causal dynamical triangulations, causal sets, quantum "graphity," matrix models and shape dynamics. Loop quantum gravity occupies a very important place in the development of physics. It is arguably the quantum theory of general relativity because it makes no extra assumptions beyond the basic principles of quantum theory and relativity theory. The remarkable departure that it makes—proposing a discontinuous spacetime described by spin networks and spin foams—emerges from the mathematics of the theory itself, rather than being inserted as an ad hoc postulate.

Still, everything I have discussed is theoretical. It could be that in spite of all I have described here, space really is continuous, no matter how small the scale we probe. Because this is science, in the end experiment will decide. The good news is that the decision may come soon.