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Space Science

Is the Universe a Hall of Mirrors? 395

PhysicsWeb is running an article by one of the researchers who has developed the theory that the universe may be finite, rather small, and soccer-ball shaped. The question is still open; it's one theory that fits cosmic microwave data from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP). Apparently testing the theory by looking in the indicated way through the WMAP data would so far be computationally prohibitive. From the article: "The Poincaré dodecahedral space can be described as the interior of a 'sphere' made from 12 slightly curved pentagons. However, there is one big difference between this shape and a football [soccer ball] because when one goes out from a pentagonal face, one immediately comes back inside the ball from the opposite face after a 36 degree rotation. Such a multiply connected space can therefore generate multiple images of the same object, such as a planet or a photon. Other such well-proportioned, spherical spaces that fit the WMAP data are the tetrahedron and the octahedron."
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Is the Universe a Hall of Mirrors?

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 17, 2006 @03:57AM (#17275276)
    Everyone knows the universe is banana shaped.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by ozmanjusri ( 601766 )
      Everyone knows the universe is banana shaped.

      Not a chance man. If it was, the elephants would have eaten it already.

      • Re:This is silly (Score:4, Insightful)

        by bitingduck ( 810730 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:24AM (#17275410) Homepage
        Not a chance man. If it was, the elephants would have eaten it already.

        No, that would be if it were peanut shaped.

        Monkeys would eat a banana shaped universe. And there just may not be enough monkeys far enough back in time when the universe was small for them to eat it.
        • by DynaSoar ( 714234 ) * on Sunday December 17, 2006 @01:30PM (#17278044) Journal
          >> Not a chance man. If it was, the elephants would have
          >> eaten it already.

          > No, that would be if it were peanut shaped.

          > Monkeys would eat a banana shaped universe. And there
          > just may not be enough monkeys far enough back in time
          > when the universe was small for them to eat it.

          Whether space-time is infinite, or finite but spheroidal (space-time circling back on itself), the effect is the same: any number of monkeys has the effect of an infinite number of monkeys. A banana shaped universe would be eaten by them, and not exist, but then they would not and so could not eat it. Paradox. Or so the traditional physical thinking would go. But you can't have the paradox occur until some time during the first go round. For the paradox to occur, as it must given the infinities, the first universe must exist. The infinite number of monkeys must even now be eating the universe. While doing so they are generating an enormous amount of waste in the form of metabolized entropy, which is information. I offer as evidence a Google search for "a" resulting in "about 6,560,000,000" hits, as well as the volume of /. article replies, including this one.

          The counter argument that something must be informative to be information is obviously flawed, as the evidence shows that non-informative /. replies generate informative ones.

          The counter argument that we are not monkeys, whether finite or infinite, is an argument regarding evolution, and is off topic here. It would be moderated out of existence, but the moderation would be generative information replacing it, supporting the first assertion against counter argument.

          On the other hand, elephants eat bananas too.

          On the gripping hand, turles eat neither bananas nor peanuts. This accomplishes in one sentence reference to two different science fiction entities, the geek value of which makes it appropriate to /. reply form. And coming from fiction, represents information generated from imaginary or false information, again supporting the first assertion.

          You may all now resume typing. We have a long way to go. I'll start.

          "What a piece of work is Man,..."

  • by Che Guevarra ( 85906 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:05AM (#17275310)
    Bable Fish translation: "You, the reader of this article, are not nearly as smart as you thought you were. Don't feel bad about not being able to grasp anything in this article other than the word "the". Go to bed and do not look up at the sky at night for a very long time."
  • It's turtles, all the way down...

  • the radiation left over from the Big Bang - suggest that we live in a finite universe that is shaped like a football or dodecahedron, and which resembles a video game in certain respects.

    If our universe resembles a video game, could it actually be a video game?

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by servognome ( 738846 )
      If our universe resembles a video game, could it actually be a video game?

      World peace can be achieved by transferring to a carebear universe
    • Re:Simulation? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by suv4x4 ( 956391 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:35AM (#17275484)
      If our universe resembles a video game, could it actually be a video game?

      That logic is fallacious, even if the observable universe is a "simulation", then this simulation runs inside a real universe, and we're at the start again figuring out what the universe is.

      Plus I subscribe to another logic: if the universe is similar to a video game, then it's because as video games increase in complexity they start to approach the model of a little universe :D
      • Yes but this "simulation" universe in all likelihood is a simplified version of the real universe and so we'd have a lot more facts to work with in trying to work out the nature of the parent universe.
      • Re:Simulation? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by DarthChris ( 960471 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @10:21AM (#17276876)
        That logic is fallacious, even if the observable universe is a "simulation", then this simulation runs inside a real universe, and we're at the start again figuring out what the universe is
        Why is it a fallacy?

        If we live inside a simulation, then, to us, that simulation *is* the universe. What lies "outside" of it can only be determined if the creators of such a simulation wanted us to do so. Is it possible for a video game character to leave a computer game and enter the real world (or at least what we consider to be the real world)? Only through the intervention of it's creators (i.e. us). The same would occur if we ourselves are constructs of a simulation.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by freeweed ( 309734 )
          It's less a fallacy and more "OMG I watched the Matirx, and like, it was deeeeeep, man!"

          Amazing how many armchair philosophers come out of the woodwork when a movie has kung-fu and guns in it.
    • Re:Simulation? (Score:4, Informative)

      by Troed ( 102527 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @05:06AM (#17275602) Homepage Journal
      Yes, maybe it's even likely.

      http://www.simulation-argument.com/ [simulation-argument.com]



      • Re:Simulation? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by FailedTheTuringTest ( 937776 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @08:51AM (#17276430)

        Hm. That's an interesting idea. One of the articles [simulation-argument.com] at that site includes the observation that such a simulation wouldn't have to simulate everything down to the greatest level of detail at all times, but could conserve computing power by just simulating things that are under direct observation.

        "If the book you are holding in your hands is a simulated book, the simulation would only need to include its visual appearance, its weight and texture, and a few other macroscopic properties, because you have no way of knowing what its individual atoms are doing at this moment. If you were to study the book more carefully, for example by examining it under a powerful microscope, additional details of the simulation could be filled in as needed. Objects that nobody is perceiving could have an even more compressed representation. Such simplifications would dramatically reduce the computational requirements."

        Isn't that what actually happens in quantum-level experiments? If we are observing the double slits, the photons do one thing, but if we're not watching the slits, they do something else?

  • by Antony-Kyre ( 807195 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:23AM (#17275400)
    If you can infate a soccer ball and make it grow, certainly I would imagine the Universe can grow.

    Maybe there is currently a finite amount of material. Who says that material can't get relatively further apart from itself? Either things can be moving away from each other occupying more space, OR the material itself, the "dots", are getting smaller and smaller making it appear we are gaining space.

    Isn't there a multi-big bang theory that states that new material can enter our Universe in this fashion? Perhaps our current Universe had no single beginning, but new stuff is being added to it all the time. How many mutli-player online gamers have an ever-expanding world? New levels are constantly being added.
    • by IWannaBeAnAC ( 653701 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:35AM (#17275486)

      Who says that material can't get relatively further apart from itself?

      Of course it can, and the universe is expanding in exactly this way.

      Isn't there a multi-big bang theory that states that new material can enter our Universe in this fashion? Perhaps our current Universe had no single beginning, but new stuff is being added to it all the time.

      The steady-state theory proposed that new matter was being created all the time, at a very slow rate. This was disproved by the cosmic microwave background, that instead agrees exactly with the preductions of the big-bang theory. I think, the inflation theories allow new material to enter at any time, but the idea there is that the initial expansion of the universe was so fast, that any other matter (say, from another big-bang) would be so far away that it would not ever be possible to detect it. But if the universe is finite, and it is possible to see the periodic boundaries, then surely it disproves inflation? cosmologists out there?

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by ozbird ( 127571 )
        If you over-inflate a soccer ball you get a big bang, then get a new soccer ball; I guess that ties together the inflation and cyclic universe theories.
        • I don't know what sort of soccer balls you use but I've never gotten a new soccer ball after exploding one.
    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @08:22AM (#17276354)
      Isn't there a multi-big bang theory

            Ahh, you are referring to the Gang Bang theory?
    • Gravity (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Antony-Kyre ( 807195 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @10:27AM (#17276902)
      I think the word I'm looking for is hypercube, but I mean to apply it to the number of sides a dodecahedron has.

      Going through one side will result ending up coming through another side. (Anyone ever have dreams of being stuck in a room, you go through the door, only to end up in the same room as before?)

      Picture yourself in an empty room like this. You can see through the sides, and you see yourself like in a hall of mirrors. You pass through the walls only to end up in the same room.

      Imagine release millions of tiny superballs, which we will call photons, in the room. Now, imagine there is another object, a big round object in the room, that isn't moving to start with.

      All these superballs going in every single direction start bouncing off you, pushing you around. However, since there were few, if any, superballs between you and the big round object to begin with, there is less "pressure" inbetween you and the object, so the superballs on the outside push you towards it.

      The big round object is moving slower as the superballs bounce off of it because it has more mass, however, you are pushed towards it ever quicker. More and more, you fall faster and faster towards it.
  • by keesh ( 202812 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:26AM (#17275424) Homepage
    If anyone's looking to understand this, the book you need is "How the Universe Got Its Spots" by Janna Levine. It covers all the apparently valid but actually nonsensical questions that people have when they first hear about this (what's the universe inside then? what happens at a boundary? etc), and it explains it in such a way that you don't need a degree in topology to understand it.
    • If anyone's looking to understand this, the book you need is "How the Universe Got Its Spots" by Janna Levine. It covers all the apparently valid but actually nonsensical questions that people have when they first hear about this (what's the universe inside then? what happens at a boundary? etc), and it explains it in such a way that you don't need a degree in topology to understand it.
      Given the history of human understanding, I'd wager the book is wrong.
      • Lets say your right (You probably are) does that mean that it's not worth learning? I mean think about how wrong our concepts were when Newton Galileo and Einstein were learning, should they have just said "it's not worth reading and thinking about since in the end it's probably wrong"
        • The issue I had with your original post was the statement the book covered "apparently valid but actually nonsensical questions that people have when they first hear about this."
          As if the book is the final authority in making those questions go away. We need to keep asking the "nonsensical" questions, because sometimes we end up with new answers.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by kfg ( 145172 )
      . . .it explains it in such a way that you don't need a degree in topology to understand it.

      Oh, great. Nooooooow you tell me.

      KFG
  • Old Article (Score:5, Informative)

    by Epicyon ( 777863 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:31AM (#17275462)
    The article mentioned is well over a year old. The outstanding analysis of data due in 2004 has been completed. The validity of the information is being questioned [physicsmyths.org.uk] Although it would be fun living inside a football.
    • The article mentioned is well over a year old. The outstanding analysis of data due in 2004 has been completed. The validity of the information is being questioned.
      The gentleman who wrote the linked article questions the validity of a lot of things - to the point that I wonder if he has valid questions, or is simply a crank.
    • Re:Old Article (Score:5, Informative)

      by krymsin01 ( 700838 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @07:50AM (#17276280) Homepage Journal
      Just to point out something that might be obvious if you look around the website you linked a bit more, that particular guy doesn't know what he's talking about.

      For instance, witness this "debunking" of curved space, also from his site:

      Curved Space: The concept of a 'curved space', which is essential for present cosmological models, is logically flawed because space can only be defined by the distance between two objects, which is however by definition always given by a straight line. Mathematicians frequently try to illustrate the properties of 'curved space' through the example of a spherical (or otherwise curved) surface and the associated geometrical relationships. However, a surface is only a mathematical abstraction within the actual (3-dimensional) space and one can in fact connect any two points on the surface of a physical object through a straight line by drilling through it.
      Strictly speaking, one can not assign any properties at all to space (or time) as these are the outer forms of existence and it makes as much sense to speak of a 'curved space' as of a 'blue space'. Any such properties must be restricted to objects existing within space and time.
      The concept of a distorted space around massive physical objects for instance, as promoted by General Relativity, is therefore also inconsistent and should be replaced by appropriate physical theories describing the trajectories of particles and/or light near these objects.
  • by CaptainCarrot ( 84625 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:45AM (#17275518)

    soccer-ball shaped

    I think these cosmic topologists are going to have to kick this theory around for a while before they achieve their goals.

  • WMAP 3-Year Data? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Jazzer_Techie ( 800432 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:50AM (#17275538)
    Before people start saying that these guys are crackpots (yes, I agree this does sound vaguely reminiscent of the Platonic solids), their research has been published in well-regarded, peer-reviewed journals (Nature, etc.) While this isn't necessarily a widely accepted idea, it's not TimeCube.

    This article is about 15 months old and discusses this in the context of 1 year of WMAP data. Since then, the WMAP 3-year data has been released. I would be curious to see how this affects the theory.
    Data from the European Planck Surveyor, which is scheduled for launch in 2007, will be able to determine Omega with a precision of 1%. A value lower than 1.01 will rule out the Poincaré dodecahedron model, since the size of the corresponding dodecahedron would become greater than the observable universe and would not leave any observable imprint on the microwave background. A value greater than 1.01, on the other hand, would strengthen the models' cosmological pertinence.
    I believe that the WMAP 3-year data gave something like Omega = 1.010 +/- 0.001. Thus this theory seems to balanced on the knife edge. It's an interesting idea, but I have my doubts.
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by lewp ( 95638 )
      While this isn't necessarily a widely accepted idea, it's not TimeCube.

      Fuck it, then.

      CAN'T YOU SEE THAT CUBE IS TRUTH???!!! IGNORE ME AND DIE!!!

    • Re:WMAP 3-Year Data? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by ClassMyAss ( 976281 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @05:39AM (#17275766) Homepage
      Sorry, -1 points because you aren't allowed to mention Timecube [timecube.com] without putting in a link [timecube.com] to [timecube.com] Timecube [timecube.com] so that everyone can experience cubic salvation [timecube.com]. Preferably several [timecube.com].

      Seriously, though, I understand something about these topics, and a) I wouldn't be surprised at all if that knifepoint was where the damn value stayed for another decade or so, seeing as Nature (the bitch, not the magazine) seems to quite enjoy placing these geometry-of-space constants so close to the critical values that we can't say a thing for sure. b) is that it's a cute theory and an interesting geometry, but frankly I haven't seen anything so far that convinces me that it's right.

      But either way, you're correct - this does not appear to be crackpot stuff (I haven't read the peer-reviewed article, but I'll trust that it's there). You can always tell, because the real loonies always talk about how wrong Einstein was.

      Timecube sig:
      Ignorance of 4 days is evil, Evil educators teach 1 day. 1 day will destroy humans.
    • You are ACADEMICALLY RETARDED!!!!

      Lameness filter encountered. Post aborted! Reason: Don't use so many caps. It's like YELLING.

      But I was trying to yell.

  • by d3m0nCr4t ( 869332 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:51AM (#17275544)
    God doesn't play dice, he plays soccer...
    • by pembo13 ( 770295 )
      It's called football - you kick it with your foot.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by gordo3000 ( 785698 )
        you know, I don't know of that many things you kick with something other than your foot.......
      • by Dunbal ( 464142 )
        It's called football - you kick it with your foot.

              It's called soccer, because the players wear soc...uh never mind.
  • Soccor Balls (Score:4, Interesting)

    by RedWizzard ( 192002 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:51AM (#17275548)
    Soccor Balls are not dodecahedra. They're truncated icosahedra [wolfram.com].
  • Not mirrors (Score:3, Funny)

    by bubbl07 ( 777082 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @04:58AM (#17275570) Homepage
    It's actually just a series of tubes, and it's definitely not a dump truck.
  • by Reed Solomon ( 897367 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @05:00AM (#17275582) Homepage
    The shape of the universe is... (rolls dice) dice shaped! It's all one big boring D&D game
  • If you leave one face and return via the opposite face, that ain't a mirror. It's transmission from the opposite "side" of the cosmos, not reflection back.
    • I think the hall of mirrors concept was that if you place a few lights in a room full of mirrors, you get the illusion of a significantly complex and varied system. However, it seems that they're mostly talking about some very distant edges, so that all we can see of the universe from such "edges" is faint and sporadic background noise.
  • no, only academia (Score:5, Insightful)

    by oohshiny ( 998054 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @05:20AM (#17275662)
    If you have noisy data and you keep analyzing it enough, you'll eventually find some bizarre model that fits it better than a more plausible model.

    It's probably best not to have a firm opinion on the shape of the universe until a lot more data is in.
  • Afte all the orther misconceptions about the shape of the universe, the ''infinite'' model could well be wrong again...

  • History (Score:5, Interesting)

    by dcollins ( 135727 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @05:28AM (#17275712) Homepage
    The freaky thing is that the dodecahedron has been associated since ancient times as representing "the Universe".

    http://www.kheper.net/topics/cosmology/solids.html [kheper.net]

    • by Aladrin ( 926209 )
      How do you think they got their theory?

      1: "Guys... We need a theory. Our funding is gonna get cut."
      2: "What about the shape of the universe, that hasn't been done for a while?"
      1: "What's Google say?"
      2: "Hmmm..." http://www.google.com/search?q=shape+of+the+univer se+dodecahedron+-wmap&btnG=Search&hl=en&lr= [google.com] (Because WMAP is the only other reference that says this, I removed it from the search.
      2: "Dodecahedron. But there's no proof, and it's an ancient myth-thing."
      1: "I think we could prove that
      • Yeah, 'cause we all "know" science is "just another opinion" up for sale. /sarcasm

        BTW: Your point numbering system is as fucked up as that old funding "joke".
        • by Aladrin ( 926209 )
          OMG. I knew I should have spelled it out so idiots could read it. 1 = scientist 1. 2 = scientist 2. It's SPEECH, not a 'point numbering system.'
  • Back in school, we did mathematical transforms on equations to make them easier to deal with. Z-transforms, S-transforms, imaginary numbers, etc. But the thing about mathematical transforms is that although they may make your engineering calculations (or in this case, physics equations) easier to deal with, that doesn't mean they represent an idea that means much physically, they're just convenient for the task at hand.

    Any insight from the physics nerds? Is this just a way of dealing with all the (so far
  • Hey.

    What was the name of that short story about a guy that was driving his car round a particular mountain bend and accidentally finds a tiny pocket universe?

    Anyone remember?

    I've been reminded of it by this story and now I NEED TO KNOW, dammit.

  • Obligatory reference (Score:5, Informative)

    by 12357bd ( 686909 ) on Sunday December 17, 2006 @01:33PM (#17278064)
    'The Road to Reality' (Roger Penrose) http://www.amazon.com/Road-Reality-Complete-Guide- Universe/dp/0679454438/ [amazon.com]
    Great discussion about physics laws and math, one of the bests titles of Mr Penrose, and yes, the ' dodecahedral/tetrahedral/octahedral space' possibilities are also explained from the ground up.

I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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