In a groundbreaking advancement poised to redefine core principles in theoretical physics, researchers from Kyushu University and esteemed international collaborators have unveiled insights into the nature of continuous parameters within quantum gravity. This study challenges the long-standing assumption that such parameters are freely adjustable external inputs by demonstrating—under particular theoretical conditions—that they inherently originate from operators embedded within the physical theory itself. This resolution not only revitalizes Albert Einstein’s century-old assertion regarding the intrinsic completeness of physical laws but also propels forward our comprehensive understanding of the quantum structure of spacetime.
Central to this revelation is the concept of exactly marginal operators within the framework of conformal field theory (CFT), a pivotal branch of modern physics that explores systems invariant under scale transformations. CFT serves as a formidable bridge between quantum theory and gravitational physics, especially through the lens of the anti-de Sitter/conformal field theory (AdS/CFT) correspondence. This correspondence posits a deep equivalence between gravitational theories in a curved AdS spacetime and lower-dimensional CFTs residing at its boundary, rendering CFT an indispensable tool to probe quantum gravity’s elusive traits.
At the heart of the research lies the structure known as the conformal manifold—an abstract space parameterizing a continuous family of CFTs interconnected via exactly marginal deformations. These deformations represent operators that tweak a theory’s parameters without sacrificing its conformal symmetry. The pressing theoretical puzzle was whether the existence of such a manifold necessarily implies that continuous variations in the theory’s parameters emerge from operators already encoded within the theory, rather than arbitrary, external parameters appended to the formalism.
To rigorously examine this, the interdisciplinary team led by Associate Professor Yuya Kusuki embraced an innovative approach involving conformal interfaces, mathematical constructs that serve as boundary layers interpolating between two related CFTs situated on a conformal manifold. The researchers posited that as two nearby CFTs approach equivalence, the conformal interface connecting them should become trivial. Under the plausible assumption that certain correlation functions transition smoothly as this interface dissolves, they utilized the interface’s displacement operator—which quantifies the response of the interface to infinitesimal positional shifts—to reconstruct an exactly marginal operator governing motions on the manifold.
This reconstruction represents a monumental stride because it conclusively ties continuous parameters characterizing a family of theories not to arbitrary external dials but to concrete operators intrinsic to the theory’s internal dynamics. By examining the perturbative behavior of the conformal interface, the team effectively identified the fundamental origin of parameters that might otherwise have seemed freely tunable.
What does this imply for the broader quest of quantum gravity? Through the prism of AdS/CFT duality, the intimate relationship between conformal manifolds in CFT and the moduli space of vacua in quantum gravity theories becomes transparent. This newly established principle supports the profound conjecture that quantum gravity forbids arbitrary external parameters, with all continuous couplings traceable to internal degrees of freedom—a concept resonant with a widespread expectation but hitherto unproven with such clarity.
Importantly, the present findings apply specifically to two-dimensional CFTs, a fertile domain where theoretical control is well established. Nevertheless, the researchers have expressed optimism that their methods and conceptual revelations will motivate extensions to higher-dimensional CFTs and more general quantum gravity landscapes. Extending these results could illuminate the landscape of string theories and the parameters governing candidate quantum gravity models.
Moreover, these results have significant implications for the so-called “Swampland program,” a burgeoning field striving to delineate which consistent-looking effective field theories can be embedded into quantum gravity. By constraining continuous deformations to those generated by internal operators, this study offers fresh constraints on the space of viable theories and sharpens the boundaries between the “landscape” of consistent theories and the “swampland” of inconsistent ones.
The research underscores an increasingly vital notion: the parameters defining fundamental physics are not arbitrary selections but emergent phenomena anchored within the theory’s operator framework. This insight advances a vision in which the fabric of physical law is self-contained, avoiding unexplained fundamental constants, and aligning with Einstein’s aspiration for a theory without ad hoc inputs.
Led by Kusuki alongside collaborators Shota Komatsu of CERN, Marco Meineri from the University of Turin, and Hirosi Ooguri of the California Institute of Technology, the project utilized sophisticated computational simulations combined with analytic operator algebra techniques to bring these abstract mathematical objects into clearer physical focus.
Published in the prestigious journal Physical Review Letters on June 16, 2026, the paper titled “Continuous Family of Conformal Field Theories and Exactly Marginal Operators” delineates these technical breakthroughs and their broader theoretical implications, offering a compelling blueprint for future explorations in the intersection of quantum theory and gravity.
As the physics community absorbs the ramifications of this breakthrough, it heralds a renewed momentum for using conformal field theory and holographic dualities as guiding principles to unravel the enigmatic quantum nature of gravitation, spacetime, and the universe’s foundational constants.
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Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: Continuous Family of Conformal Field Theories and Exactly Marginal Operators
News Publication Date: 16-Jun-2026
Web References: Kyushu University Institute for Advanced Study, Kyushu University
References: Shota Komatsu, Yuya Kusuki, Marco Meineri, and Hirosi Ooguri, Physical Review Letters, 16 June 2026.
Image Credits: Yuya Kusuki/Kyushu University
Keywords
Quantum Gravity, Conformal Field Theory, Exactly Marginal Operators, Conformal Manifold, Quantum Moduli Space, AdS/CFT Correspondence, Operator Reconstruction, Displacement Operator, Conformal Interface, Fundamental Constants, Theoretical Physics, Swampland Conjecture
Tags: adjustable parameters in fundamental equationsAdS/CFT correspondence and quantum gravityconformal manifold in theoretical physicsEinstein’s completeness assertion in physicsembedding operators in physical theoriesexactly marginal operators in conformal field theoryintrinsic completeness of physical lawsKyushu University quantum gravity researchquantum gravity continuous parametersquantum structure of spacetimescale invariance in conformal field theorytheoretical physics breakthroughs 2024

