1. Introduction
Feynman propagators encode more information than meets the eye. Let us for simplicity consider a massive scalar particle on a
D-dimensional manifold
. When the latter is Minkowskian flat space
, it has been found [
1,
2,
3] that inertial scalar propagators suffice in order to derive the thermal properties of the Rindler horizon. A slight modification of Schwinger’s proper-time representation of the scalar propagator turns out to provide an ultraviolet completion of the scalar theory, both in flat spaces [
4,
5] and in spaces of constant nonzero curvature [
6]; this ultraviolet completion amounts to the existence of a quantum of length
L. These are just a few examples of (in principle unexpected) quantum-gravity properties of Feynman scalar propagators,
the latter considered in the absence of gravity.
In the naive path-integral approach to quantum gravity one has to sum over all metrics on the given manifold . In the presence of several inequivalent differentiable structures and/or topologies one has to sum over them: one integrates over more than one manifold structure. This raises the question of summing over all possible dimensions as well.
In this letter we consider a free scalar particle in the spacetime , the latter endowed with its standard topology, differentiable structure, and Euclidean or Minkowskian metric, and perform a sum of scalar Feynman propagators over all dimensions . Each one of these summands is free of quantum-gravity effects; but the sum of all summands will turn out to produce quantum-gravitational effects on the scalar particle. This will provide yet another unexpected example of quantum-gravity effects that are encoded within flat-spacetime, inertial Feynman propagators. As will be explained in more detail below, the quantum-gravity effects under consideration are those arising from the existence of a quantum of length L.
We present our analysis first in Euclidean
in
Section 2. In
Section 3 we Wick-rotate back to Minkowskian
, the latter with signature
. In
Section 4 we report an alternative derivation of the same results due to Padmanabhan (private communication). In our use of Bessel functions we follow the conventions and notations of [
7]. We use natural units throughout.
3. Quantum-Gravitational Properties of Inertial Propagators: Minkowski Space
D-dimensional Minkowskian and Euclidean propagators are related as per
the superindices
referring to Minkowski and Euclidean space, respectively. By Equation (
2) one thus finds
where
is a Hankel function of the second kind [
7]. With the understanding that we will henceforth work in Minkowski space, we will drop the superindex
M from our notations. Also, for simplicity we will restrict our attention to timelike vectors and denote
so
. In the units of Equation (
12), the gravity-free propagator Equation (
16) simplifies to
The quantum-gravity corrected Feynman propagator in Minkowski space
is readily obtained from the above: following [
4,
5], it suffices to make the replacement
. This yields in Equation (
16)
which, in the units of Equation (
12), becomes
Again, the role of the quantum of length is to mollify the singularity of the propagator at the origin.
We now proceed to show that the effects of including a quantum of length
L can be equivalently obtained as a sum over all dimensions
higher than the given dimension
D, all summands in the absence of gravity. Following the same reasoning as in the Euclidean case, first we need an identity similar to Equation (
8) for the Hankel functions
. Happily, Equations (5) and (13) on p. 141 of the standard reference [
8] provide us with the sought-for identity:
Next we solve Equation (
18) for the Hankel functions
in terms of the gravity-free Feynman propagators
G, and substitute the result into Equation (
21). With
in the latter, this produces
Let us now set
. Then
will hold provided that
, and Equation (
22) reads
which for very large
r becomes
We recall that the variable
r on both sides of the above equation is defined through
It should be observed that one
cannot derive Equation (
24) from a Wick rotation of Equation (
14); the reason is twofold. Not only does a factor of
in Equation (
24) replace a factor of
in Equation (
14). More importantly, the sum over Euclidean dimensions in Equation (
14) is based on the identity Equation (
8). The latter requires
, a condition which is violated under multiplication by
. Although the Feynman propagators themselves can be Wick-rotated, the identity satisfied by the corresponding Bessel functions cannot. In other words: The operations of Wick rotation and ultraviolet completion do not commute.
4. An Alternative Derivation due to Padmanabhan
After the first version of this paper appeared in the arXiv, we learn from Padmanabhan (private communication) that he has obtained this result [
10] around the time he did the work in path integral duality by an alternative approach. His derivation is as follows: The Schwinger proper-time representation of the QG-corrected propagator, in D-dimensional Euclidean sector, is given by the integral:
with
as in Equation (
2). Note that the dependence on the dimension arises only from the factor
. We now expand the factor
in the integrand in a Taylor series. The
n-th term in the series will introduce the factor
, which will change the original
factor to
, which occurs in the standard (uncorrected) propagator
for the dimension
. So we immediately get:
The QG corrected propagator can therefore be expressed as the sum of standard propagators for the dimensions
. The simplicity of this derivation is noteworthy. It is obvious that the approach also works in the Lorentzian sector.
5. Conclusions
Our conclusions are summarized by Equations (
14) and (
24), again collected below for convenience: in Euclidean
we have
whereas in Minkowskian
we have
In both cases we find that a quantum-gravity corrected propagator in
D dimensions can be expressed as an infinite sum over all gravity-free propagators in dimension
. Under
quantum-gravity corrections we understand, as already explained, the ultraviolet completion obtained by the inclusion of a minimal length [
4,
5]. In the latter papers, the existence of a quantum of length
L has been shown to be equivalent to the requirement of invariance under the duality Equation (
7), the dimensionality of spacetime being kept fixed. The equivalent viewpoint that emerges from our analysis is that a smallest distance
L results from summing over an infinite number of higher dimensions.
Ultraviolet completions of standard theories have been the subject of many analyses, too numerous to quote here; see however [
9] for a sample of different standpoints. As it turns out, UV completions are related to quantum gravity. We do not claim equivalence between these two issues. However, the duality symmetry Equation (
7) that implements our particular UV completion turns out to be equivalent to the existence of a quantum of length;
this is a crucial link between quantum gravity and UV completions.
In this letter we have concentrated on the case of a massive scalar in flat
, either Euclidean or Minkowski. The particular ultraviolet completion studied here, Equation (
5), is usually regarded as enforcing the duality Equation (
7). Our approach in this letter interprets this same completion on the basis of the generating function Equation (
3) for the modified Bessel functions
(and similar identities satisfied by their close cousins the Macdonald functions
, the Hankel functions
, etc.) Alternatively but equivalently, these identities (Equations (
3), (
8) and (
21)) amount to a sum over an infinite number of virtual dimensions. On the basis of the aforementioned identities we have derived the expansions’ Equations (
28) and (
29) for Feynman propagators.
Even in flat space there is a remnant of quantum gravity, through the presence of a quantum of length L. The very existence of L is a zeroth-order, quantum gravity effect. Of course there are higher-order corrections due to curvature; but even flat space can feel the existence of a quantum of length. This quantum is commonly expected to equal the Planck length . Now can be expressed in terms of G, c and ℏ, all of which are perfectly well defined in flat space. This additional fact supports the statement that flat space still bears some imprint of quantum gravity.
Altogether, our analysis somehow places the dimensionality of spacetime on an equal footing with other variables that are integrated over in quantum gravity, such as the metric and the topology of the spacetime manifold
. That the notion of dimensionality might not be as fundamental as believed has also been hinted at in various settings such as string theory [
11] and others. It is an intriguing question to ask, if our expansions’ Equations (
28) and (
29) could possibly find a thermal analogue in the fact that thermal scalar Green functions can be written as an infinite, imaginary-time sum of the corresponding zero-temperature Green functions [
2].
There is an interesting physical interpretation to our sum over dimensions. Namely, the sharply-defined concept of dimension in classical spacetime might be subject to some sort of quantum uncertainty once one enters the realm of quantum gravity. We can foresee an analogy with Heisenberg’s principle of uncertainty: Classical trajectories become diffuse in quantum theory, all possible classical trajectories are summed over in the Feynman path integral. It also points toward a possible interpretation of the notion of dimension in thermodynamical terms: some values of the dimension might be more densely populated than others, and the sharply-defined classical dimension might emerge as some sort of thermal average. We hope to report in the future.