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arxiv: 2606.02729 · v1 · pith:HMI6RLWInew · submitted 2026-06-01 · ✦ hep-th · astro-ph.CO· gr-qc

Probabilistic Microcausality in a Thermal Bath of Gravitons

Pith reviewed 2026-06-28 13:14 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ✦ hep-th astro-ph.COgr-qc
keywords microcausalitythermal gravitonslightcone fluctuationsquantum gravityscalar commutatorprobabilistic causalitygraviton bath
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0 comments X

The pith

Thermal gravitons induce a Gaussian probabilistic spread around the lightcone with variance growing as t cubed.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The authors compute the commutator of a massless scalar field in a spacetime with small gravitational perturbations at lowest order in Newton's constant. They evaluate this operator on a thermal state of gravitons and derive the probability that the commutator is nonzero at a given separation. This probability turns out to be a Gaussian function of the squared spatial distance, peaked at the classical lightcone position, whose width grows with the cube of the time interval. The calculation subtracts a divergent vacuum piece that is universal but subdominant at late times. A reader would care because it provides a concrete way to see how quantum metric fluctuations make the notion of causality probabilistic rather than absolute.

Core claim

At lowest order in G_N in transverse-traceless gauge, the commutator receives operator contributions from graviton fluctuations; when the expectation is taken in a thermal graviton state at temperature T, the probability that this commutator fails to vanish is Gaussian in x², centered on the lightcone, with variance 16 G_N T t³ / 3 after subtracting the universal vacuum term.

What carries the argument

The probability distribution for the lightcone support of the scalar field commutator when evaluated in a thermal graviton state.

If this is right

  • The lightcone position acquires an uncertainty that increases with time separation as t³.
  • Standard sharp microcausality is recovered in the classical or coherent graviton limit.
  • The thermal effect dominates over the subtracted vacuum contribution at large times.
  • The vacuum lightcone spread is UV divergent and appears to depend on the choice of source or regulator.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The source dependence of the vacuum spread implies that different physical detectors could experience different amounts of lightcone fluctuation even in the absence of thermal gravitons.
  • One could test the t³ scaling by considering analog systems that simulate graviton baths or by extending the calculation to include finite-size effects explicitly.

Load-bearing premise

The entire result relies on a perturbative expansion to lowest order in the gravitational constant around flat space together with a manual subtraction of the divergent vacuum contribution.

What would settle it

A calculation of the same probability at next-to-leading order in G_N or in a different gauge that produces a variance with different time dependence would falsify the leading-order result.

read the original abstract

We compute the (operator-valued) commutator of a massless scalar field $\phi$ coupled to gravity. We work in perturbations around Minkowski space, in transverse-traceless gauge at the lowest order in $G_N$. The commutator is composed of different operators, including terms with Dirac delta derivatives supported on the lightcone. These are responsible for ``bending" the Minkowski lightcone when evaluated on a classical/coherent state of gravitons, which allows to recover standard microcausality in the fixed-background limit. On more general gravitational states, metric fluctuations induce an uncertainty in the causal structure. We compute this effect on a thermal state of gravitons at temperature $T$ by evaluating the probability that $[\phi(t, \vec x), \phi(0)] \neq 0$. We find that the probability is Gaussian in $\vec x^{\, 2}$, centered on the lightcone and with time-growing variance $$ {\rm Var}( \vec x^{\, 2}) = \frac{16 \, G_N T t^3}{3}\, .$$ This result is obtained by subtracting a universal vacuum contribution, which is log-divergent in the UV and subleading in the large-time limit. As a source of finite size can effectively serve as a regulator in this case, the lightcone spread in the vacuum appears to be source-dependent.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript computes the commutator of a massless scalar field coupled to gravity at linear order in G_N, working in transverse-traceless gauge around Minkowski space. It evaluates the probability that this commutator is nonzero when the metric is in a thermal graviton state at temperature T, reporting that the probability is Gaussian in ar x^2, centered on the light cone, with variance Var(ar x^2) = 16 G_N T t^3 / 3 after subtracting a universal UV-log-divergent vacuum contribution that is subleading at large t.

Significance. If the result holds after proper regularization, the calculation supplies an explicit, parameter-free expression for the time-growing spread in causal structure induced by thermal metric fluctuations at linear order in G_N. The identification of the vacuum piece as both divergent and subleading, together with the recovery of fixed-background microcausality on coherent states, constitutes a concrete advance in the study of probabilistic causality in quantum gravity.

major comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract (paragraph on thermal-state evaluation): the variance is extracted only after a hand subtraction of the universal vacuum contribution. The same paragraph states that a finite-size source used as regulator renders the vacuum spread source-dependent. This directly raises the possibility that the subtracted term carries regulator dependence that is not controlled by the large-t limit alone, so that both the Gaussian form and the numerical coefficient 16/3 may change under a different consistent regularization of the graviton modes.
minor comments (1)
  1. The notation ar x^{\, 2} should be defined explicitly (e.g., as the square of the spatial separation vector) to avoid any ambiguity in the variance expression.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading, positive assessment of significance, and constructive comment. We address the major comment below and will incorporate clarifications and an explicit check in the revised manuscript.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract (paragraph on thermal-state evaluation): the variance is extracted only after a hand subtraction of the universal vacuum contribution. The same paragraph states that a finite-size source used as regulator renders the vacuum spread source-dependent. This directly raises the possibility that the subtracted term carries regulator dependence that is not controlled by the large-t limit alone, so that both the Gaussian form and the numerical coefficient 16/3 may change under a different consistent regularization of the graviton modes.

    Authors: We agree that the regularization procedure merits explicit verification to confirm robustness. The vacuum term is subtracted because it is state-independent, UV log-divergent, and subleading (constant or logarithmic) compared with the t^3 growth of the thermal contribution. The source dependence noted for the vacuum spread is an artifact of using a finite-size probe as regulator; the thermal graviton occupation numbers that generate the additional variance are IR-dominated and insensitive to the UV cutoff. To address the concern directly, the revised manuscript will include an appendix with an explicit hard-momentum cutoff regularization of the graviton modes. This calculation isolates the divergent vacuum piece and verifies that the finite thermal piece retains both the Gaussian form in x^2 and the coefficient 16/3. We therefore expect no change to the reported thermal result, but the explicit check will be added for completeness. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: commutator evaluation and thermal subtraction are independent of the reported variance

full rationale

The derivation proceeds by explicit computation of the operator commutator at linear order in G_N in TT gauge around Minkowski, followed by evaluation of the probability that it is nonzero on a thermal graviton state. The variance formula is extracted after subtracting an explicitly identified universal vacuum piece (log-UV divergent, subleading at large t). This is a standard isolation step, not a redefinition or fit of the target quantity. No equation reduces the final Var(x²) to an input by construction, no parameter is fitted then relabeled as prediction, and no self-citation chain is invoked to justify a uniqueness or ansatz. The result remains externally falsifiable through the operator algebra and state expectation.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on perturbative quantum gravity in flat space and an ad-hoc subtraction of the vacuum piece; no free parameters are fitted and no new entities are introduced.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption Perturbative expansion around Minkowski space in transverse-traceless gauge at lowest order in G_N
    Explicitly stated as the working framework in the abstract.
  • ad hoc to paper Subtraction of the universal vacuum contribution because it is log-divergent in the UV
    Described in the abstract as the step needed to isolate the thermal effect.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5779 in / 1516 out tokens · 29883 ms · 2026-06-28T13:14:05.148105+00:00 · methodology

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Forward citations

Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Indefinite Quantum Causality

    quant-ph 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 2.0

    A review of the process matrix formalism for indefinite causal order in quantum theory, covering methodology, key results, experiments, and recent advances.

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