By Hamish Johnston
While at the Convergence conference at the Perimeter Institute (PI), Physics World’s Louise Mayor and I had dinner with Sean Gryb. He did his PhD at the PI and is now doing a postdoc at Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands. In the above video he shares some of his highlights of the conference.
Gryb is working on “shape dynamics”, which is a new idea for re-evaluating Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity (GR). The idea was initiated by Julian Barbour and Gryb became involved in the development of shape dynamics while he was at PI. He now belongs to a small international band of physicists who are developing the concept. While shape dynamics is an alternative treatment of GR, the ultimate goal of their work seems to be the creation of a new framework for a theory of quantum gravity – an important goal of theoretical physics.
What I find most fascinating about Gryb’s work is that he only has a handful of colleagues to bounce ideas off, which must make the development of a new interpretation of a 100-year-old (and much loved) theory a very daunting task.
Indeed, just a few hours after we spoke to Gryb, the lecture theatre at the PI was packed with physicists and non-physicists alike who were there to hear Jürgen Renn explain how Einstein developed his theory. Renn is at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin and he explained how ongoing tensions between the physical realism of the emerging theory and its mathematical soundness led Einstein to his groundbreaking conclusions in 1915. It is interesting that a century later Gryb and colleagues are facing new physical/mathematical tensions in their re-evaluation of GR.
For more technically minded readers, Gryb and colleagues outline their ideas in a paper called “Einstein gravity as a 3D conformally invariant theory”.
And stay tuned to our video channel for more about Einstein from Jürgen Renn.