About this Research Topic
A particular motivation for this broad collection of articles lies in the diversity of the research field: Due to the severe difficulty of reaching the Planck scale experimentally, many different approaches to quantum gravity are being developed simultaneously. Various important insights have been reached on the quantum structure of spacetime in diverse models, and a key challenge is to understand whether and how a point of convergence between different approaches can be reached. In order to study this, a common language between various approaches should be developed, and coarse graining techniques have become a novel link between different approaches over the last few years. This collection aims at strengthening this link by soliciting introductory reviews to each topic. All authors of the collection will be invited to submit questions to the authors of the reviews. The editorial team will make a selection of these to forward to the author. Thereby, each review will contain a question-section at the end that will provide answers to questions posed from experts of other quantum-gravity approaches. This will contribute to stimulating a sustained dialogue, and ensure a fair and open representation of the state-of-the-art, including an assessment of the open questions and problems.
Specifically, the collection will contain introductory reviews on coarse graining/Renormalization Group flows in asymptotically safe gravity, holographic settings, group field theories, Loop Quantum Gravity, spin foams and tensor models. Invited articles should focus on the conceptual and technical questions of the application of coarse-graining techniques in quantum gravity. In particular, we welcome articles aiming at bridging the gap between various approaches to quantum gravity, based on the common use of coarse-graining techniques.
Keywords: quantum gravity, renormalization group, coarse graining
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.