Publication | Open Access
Detecting gravitational decoherence with clocks: Limits on temporal resolution from a classical-channel model of gravity
18
Citations
30
References
2017
Year
EngineeringGeneral RelativityPhysicsCosmologyNatural SciencesNumerical RelativityDirect DetectionModified GravityClassical-channel ModelGravitational WaveTemporal ResolutionGravitation TheoryQuantum EntanglementGravitational DecoherenceFinite-dephasing RateQuantum CosmologyGeodesy
The notion of time is given a different footing in quantum mechanics and general relativity, treated as a parameter in the former and being an observer-dependent property in the latter. From an operational point of view time is simply the correlation between a system and a clock, where an idealized clock can be modeled as a two-level system. We investigate the dynamics of clocks interacting gravitationally by treating the gravitational interaction as a classical information channel. This model, known as the classical-channel gravity (CCG), postulates that gravity is mediated by a fundamentally classical force carrier and is therefore unable to entangle particles gravitationally. In particular, we focus on the decoherence rates and temporal resolution of arrays of $N$ clocks, showing how the minimum dephasing rate scales with $N$, and the spatial configuration. Furthermore, we consider the gravitational redshift between a clock and a massive particle and show that a classical-channel model of gravity predicts a finite-dephasing rate from the nonlocal interaction. In our model we obtain a fundamental limitation in time accuracy that is intrinsic to each clock.
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