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When Relativity Meets Quantum Mechanics: 2 Ways Physics Might Solve It #coreconcepts #quantum

2026-02-07 Science & Technology
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Arvin Ash
Arvin Ash
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This is something new on our channel where we summarize important scientific topics into one short, bite-sized video, This is the first of hopefully several more to come. I'd love to get your feedback. Thanks for your support! TALK TO ARVIN https://www.patreon.com/arvinash REFERENCES VIDEOS The Hardest Problem in Physics Explained: https://youtu.be/SztyY_NVXMc The Trouble with Gravity https://youtu.be/NsUm9mNXrX4 String Theory vs Loop Quantum Gravity https://youtu.be/3jKPJa-f3cQ CHAPTERS 0:00 The force of gravity 1:58 The universe is Quantum, that's a problem! 4:32 String theory 5:31 Loop Quantum Gravity SUMMARY Quantum gravity exists because our two best theories of nature describe different regimes of reality—and fundamentally disagree when those regimes overlap. At large scales, gravity is described by Einstein’s general relativity, where mass and energy curve spacetime itself. At small scales, the universe is governed by quantum mechanics, which successfully explains atoms, particles, and forces using probabilities and superposition. But when physicists try to apply both frameworks at once, the mathematics breaks down and even spacetime becomes uncertain. Classically, gravity is the most universal force we know. It binds planets to stars, stars to galaxies, and governs the evolution of the entire cosmos. Newton’s theory of gravity explained these motions with remarkable accuracy, but it was incomplete. Einstein’s general relativity replaced gravity as a force with gravity as the curvature of spacetime, resolving Newton’s shortcomings and accurately describing black holes, gravitational waves, and cosmic expansion. However, general relativity fails in extreme conditions where quantum effects dominate—such as at the beginning of the universe or inside black holes. When used to model the entire universe, it produces nonsensical infinities. This failure is not just technical, but conceptual. Gravity behaves differently from all other forces because it is not something that happens within spacetime—it is spacetime. Quantum mechanics, on the other hand, assumes a fixed background of space and time. Particles exist in superpositions, occupying multiple locations at once. But if a particle has mass and energy, it must curve spacetime. When a particle is in multiple locations simultaneously, it becomes unclear where that curvature should exist. This conflict explains why gravity does not appear in the Standard Model of particle physics. To resolve this, physicists pursue two leading approaches to quantum gravity. String theory modifies particle physics itself, replacing point-like particles with tiny vibrating strings. When treated quantum mechanically, certain string vibrations naturally behave like a graviton, allowing gravity to emerge as a force mediated by particles. Loop quantum gravity takes the opposite approach by quantizing spacetime itself. It removes the idea of a fixed background and replaces space with a discrete, granular structure. In this framework, spacetime has a smallest possible volume, preventing infinite densities. As a result, loop quantum gravity predicts that the universe did not begin with a singular Big Bang, but with a Big Bounce. #coreconcepts #quantummechanics Both theories remain unconfirmed. Quantum gravity ultimately forces us to rethink what space and time are made of. Whether gravity emerges from quantum strings or spacetime itself is quantized, only observation will decide which picture—if either—is correct.

Top Comments (10)

@Rapunzel879 2026-02-07

If only Quantum Mechanics could help us evaluate the probability of us ever solving Quantum Mechanics...

31 4 replies
@scotthumphrey6477 2026-02-07

Very clear, very concise. Thank you.

26
@einsteinalb75 2026-02-07

Definitely the best and most satisfactory explanation I've heard.

14
@davidsellon4580 2026-02-07

I love this channel because the videos are usually on topics that are at the bleeding edge of my scientific understanding, but are explained in a way that a layman can grasp (though most videos require at least two viewings before I get it).

12
@maestroarabiya7915 2026-02-07

Extraordinaire Thank you Arvin

10
@walid1997 2026-02-07

Another Arvin Ash video! 🎉🎉

8
@Jsnborn 2026-02-07

I see Arvin, I watch! 🎉

7
@msislam6751 2026-02-07

Yes. I am early. Thanks to youtube's algo

6
@thephilosophybook 2026-02-07

*A very good overview! Thanks!

5
@timhowell6929 2026-02-16

Wow! Mind blowing stuff! Very interesting! Thanks Arvin.

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