Before the Big Bang: A Twin Universe? 212
esocid writes "Until very recently, asking what happened at or before the Big Bang was considered by physicists to be a religious question. General relativity theory just doesn't go there — at T=0, it spews out zeros, infinities, and errors — and so the question didn't make sense from a scientific view. But in the past few years, a new theory called Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG) has emerged. The theory suggests the possibility of a "quantum bounce," where our universe stems from the collapse of a previous universe. This may be similar with beliefs of Physicist Neil Turok of Cambridge University who has theorized about a cyclic universe, constantly expanding and compressing."
Before the big bang... (Score:5, Funny)
The Alternative Factor? (Score:4, Funny)
Thanks for furthering your agenda! (Score:2, Insightful)
If the likes of stephen hawking and albert einstein with general reletivity cant work it out how are illiterate goat herders from 2000 years ago supposed to have done it?
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http://xkcd.com/285/ [xkcd.com]
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Surprising finding, actually (assuming we take 1998's results as fairly representative of what today's should be).
I'd say the breakdown of scientists that I've known is more like 50-50.
Re:Thanks for furthering your agenda! (Score:5, Funny)
There are different kinds of intelligence. Some people can solve complicated problems like getting laid but can't handle simple problems like calculating pi to 15 places using a couple of paper clips a rubber band and a slinky. This doesn't make them useless to society, and I think we should celebrate our differences.
To look at it another way, Einsein supposedly intuited a lot of his work and then proved it later. He had that kind of mind. If Einstein had been a goat herd 2000 years ago, the accepted mode of proof would have been vastly different, so proof from them rates as primitive religion now just as general relativity is the superstitious mumbo jumbo of the future. I'd take you in my time machine to prove it, but it only seats one and I know you're prone to not returning them... or will be on July 12th, 2017.
Also, Einsein was wrong about a whole lot of stuff, but that doesn't make his contribution useless. Ditto for the goat herders.
If someone does finally work it out, kill him. Until then, being open to the idea that someone who can't read or write but can play world class lawn bowls probably has as much, if not more insight into the true nature of nature than Hawking et al is a healthy perspective.
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Or would it have been always his, he just didn't know the username and password until he went back in time and generated it...
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Considering approximately 5% of Physicists in the Unites States are religious
Every physicist I've ever met adheres to the cosmology of one religion or another, if only by way of personal suspicion about what science cannot answer.
And those friends of mine who have worked with far more physicists report that they often find fundamental reason for what is essentially religious belief in their work. You know, kind of like Einstein, who was "religious" in the sense that he believed in a fundamental and purposeful (deterministic) order, rather than the stark random chance esposed by th
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I, too, know many scientists who are actively religious. Most of them say things along the lines of "my studies in field X have opened up to my mind the glory of God" or "the un
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Many people forget that, and they assume that their version of the Bible is c
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There is also the simple point that if the laws of physics worked a different way, we wouldn't be here to talk about them working the way they do, but because they work this way in this universe, we are here and have the option to create magical
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This is a perfect example of junk thinking. You start out assuming something and then use it to base other statements on that. Do you have any evidence that "god" can manipulate these probabilities? If not then the rest of your statement is really worthless.
That i
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More specifically, he believed in the "cosmic religious feeling"...not necessarily God or a God-like figure.
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Some people take it to be the antonym of "atheist", while others take it to mean "a follower of a specific organized religion". When the OP said that 5% of physicists are "religious", did he mean that they follow an established religion, such as Methodists, Baptists, Catholics, Hindus, etc., or did he mean they were simply Deists, believing in some type of god but not being committed to any particular belief system a
Re:Thanks for furthering your agenda! (Score:5, Insightful)
By "religious question", they mean, "according to our current understanding of the laws of physics, it is impossible, even in theory, to generate a falsifiable hypothosis about what happened before the big bang. Therefore, any discussion of what happened 'before' cannot be scientific, and hence is religions/philisophical discussion, not science".
TFA is about some folks claiming "actually, we DO have a hypothosis that is, at least in theory, falifiable".
"Science" is about studying things that are measurable, empirical, and/or falsifiable, whether one beleives that's ALL there is in the universe or not. "Religion" includes things that are not always empirical and falsifiable, and that cannot, even in theory, be scientifically tested. "Philosophy" includes all of the above and then some.
Whether something is or is not science, and whether something is or is not real, are two seperate questions-- whether or not one feels both questions have the same answer.
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What? Oh yeah, and the zombies too.
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It's just like history... (Score:2)
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yeah, I heard about this (Score:3, Funny)
Galactus (Score:5, Funny)
Galactus, the Overmind, and the Stranger all came from the previous Universe, by one mechanism or another surviving the Big Crunch and the following Big Bang. There may be other previous universe types, but those 3 are the only ones I picked up on, back in my comic book days. (decades ago, even)
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http://www.marvel.com/universe/Galactus [marvel.com]
http://www.marvel.com/universe/Stranger [marvel.com]
http://www.marvel.com/universe/Overmind [marvel.com]
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I kind of drifted out of the Comics somewhere in high school, though I still have a few old ones laying around. (Including the "Batman vs Hulk" DC-Marvel crossover.) I also bought about a half-dozen Superman comics around the "Death of Superman" timeframe, just in case they gain collectors' value. Cheap investment, along with my 2 boxes of "Original Color" and 1 box of "New Wave" color Crayola 64-packs. (I bought the "
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Anyone can come up with all sorts of "it sounds logical" ideas but until you can back that idea with solid theory and mathematics all you have is wild conjecture. This idea of "twin" universes is based on a theory called Loop Quantum Gravity [einstein-online.info] which has made several important observations about the universe and has a very solid mathematical backing.
After all I can come up with the theory that the universe was
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Physicist Theory? (Score:3, Insightful)
Or Hindu belief...
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By the way, we're on the 5109th year of the Hindu calendar, but that's debatable due to local variations.
hurts my head (Score:5, Insightful)
not just loop quantum gravity (Score:5, Interesting)
There's nothing particularly special about loop quantum gravity that makes it possible to avoid having a singularity at the big bang. Loop quantum gravity is just one theory of quantum gravity. The best known theory of quantum gravity is string theory. In pretty much any theory of quantum gravity, the classical picture of the big bang singularity is going to get heavily modified. The conditions of the big bang are pretty much the only conditions under which you really need a theory of quantum gravity (unless you're really clever about finding some other situation, like black hole evaporation, where quantum gravitational effects come in). In all theories of quantum gravity, there's a scale called the Planck scale, and when you go beyond that scale (e.g., the universe is hot enough so that the wavelengths of particles are on the order of the Planck length), mysterious stuff happens. Because of this, it's reasonably plausible that the big bang singularity is eliminated in any theory of quantum gravity.
Old attempts to make a theory of a rebounding big bang (with, e.g., a cyclic universe) had various technical problems, which have been solved in recent years. In a rebounding big bang, there are issues to worry about such as what happens to causality, entropy, and the thermodynamic arrow of time. E.g., you could imagine that a universe cycles through a series of big bangs, and that each cycle is a lot like the one before, or you could imagine that the second law of thermodynamics operates across rebounds, so that each cycle has more entropy than the one before. You could imagine that there could be cause and effect relationships extending across rebounds, or that that could be prevented by the laws of physics. Some people believe that there's an unsolved "entropy problem" in the current standard big bang theory. Here [princeton.edu] is a good FAQ about cyclic models.
Re:not just loop quantum gravity (Score:5, Informative)
Actually there IS something special about loop quantum cosmology - it's theory actively predicts a big bounce instead of a big bang. This comes directly out of the loop quantization of a homogenous and isotropic cosmology. So far all other theories have had to put in a bounce "by hand" - adding extra physics at the singularity in order to get something out of the other side. LQC doesn't do that - it replaces the usual metric and curvature operators with holonomies and flux operators as done in loop quantum gravity (OK, the derivation isn't exact yet, and we've a lot more work to do here).
Once you do this, however (and by using other tricks like using a massless scalar field as your time variable), you see that a contracting branch naturally re-expands once you reach a critical matter density (something like 82% of the Planck density - Ashtekar has a good numerical reason for this IIRC). In these steps you end up replacing the Wheeler-deWitt equation (a continous differential equation) with a difference equation which needs to pick a certain super-selection sector of the theory - in simpler terms the timestep effectively becomes discrete.
The beauty of LQC is that it doesn't need us to speculate about what happens at singularities - it gives us an active way to look at them without needing to invent new physics that only apply there. Sure, it makes a few assumptions - that our basic observables are holonomies and fluxes - but there's no new input directly at the singularity, unlike in other theories (such as ekpyrotic scenarios where two branches are joined artificially across the singularity.
For an introduction, see Martin Bojowald's (one of the founders of LQC) living reviews site:
http://relativity.livingreviews.org/Articles/lrr-2005-11/ [livingreviews.org]
If you have questions, please reply and I'll see what I can do to answer them to the best of my ability. If there's enough interest, I might be able to get an "Ask Slashdot" type of thing put to Ashtekar/Bojowald although it'll probably be their post-docs and grad students who end up answering all the questions
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While you guys go off on quantum loop tangents, we're still trying to work through some 19th century problems like the Riemann hypothesis! Your latest theories aren't scheduled to be made rigorous until 2158 at the earliest.
Best regards,
The mathematicians.
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I tried to follow along but I was lost somewhere around holonomies and flux operators, which I assume is related to the flux capacitor [wikipedia.org].
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In the other galaxy.. duh
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If it really is just nodes and links at the bottom (Score:5, Interesting)
A likely scenario is that "somewhere" long unreachable beyond our event horizons, there was a region of network sustaining chaotic inflationary expansion in which a bubble of more conservative physics emerged. Our conservative bubble only exhibits polynomial (near cubic) growth but that was enough to separate it from the exponentially growing seed graph.
My current betting is that Type 1a Supernovae [wikipedia.org], or at least some more precise analogue thereof in our parent cosmos, seed new outbreaks of chaotic inflation in which a new generation of more conservative bubble cosmoses arise, the whole process being susceptible to selection for fecundity and constrained only by the need for a viable history to some initial conditions simple enough to have just happened, presumably for no better reason than because nothing is unstable.
Re:If it really is just nodes and links at the bot (Score:2)
The problem with such theories is twofold:
First, we will likely never prove anything at the Planck scale. This means that without some radically better ideas, we may be stuck with current situation -- lots of theories but no proof.
Second, one cannot take a theory that is wrong in a measurable way, make some small adjustment, and end up with a theory that is right. In field theory if we get the strength of electromagnetism wrong, we can adjust it. It's just a number. If we find a new particle we didn
universe stems from the collapse of a previous uni (Score:4, Interesting)
Read this off http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmogony [wikipedia.org] the other day. Kinda similar idea in ways:
What if the big bang was just the explosion of all the crap that was in the event horizon of a black hole from a parent universe?
Questions I have are:
-How could there be such a massive black hole in a parent universe that our universe originated from? Subsequent universes would have smaller and smaller total mass/energy so it couldn't go on forever, and that would mean there was a starting point?
-Wtf is the collapsing of a black hole? I thought they evaporated...
Geometry of the universe (Score:2)
I remember that some calculations showed it to be either flat or almost so. Of course, the key could lie in the "almost"...
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Unless the universes before had significantly different masses, there's no way this happened.
It's irrelevant in any case. You can think, talk, have a beer while imagining all this stuff as much as you want. But unless you can tack a method of gathering data to TEST the theory it IS. NOT. SCIENCE.
Fun, yes. Science? Hell no.
Those Intelligent Design proponents are starting to reap the dama
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Of course there's a twin universe... (Score:2)
Well, duh! (Score:2)
Yes, it will crunch down again because gravity always wins, even against Chuck Norris.
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Turtles All The Day Down (Score:2)
Re:Fallacy of the Big Bang Theory (Score:5, Funny)
I have no response to that other than, um, sometimes its best to not post your thoughts in public where others can see...
Re:Fallacy of the Big Bang Theory (Score:5, Informative)
In fact space itself stretches. The separation of the material between pairs of distant (and near) galaxies comes from both their motion through space and the stretching (expansion) of the space between them.
The result is that sufficiently distant galaxies can be much farther apart than they could have traveled - even at the speed of light - through non-expanding space in the time since the big bang.
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Imagine space as a slightly inflated rubber balloon. Imagine two dots on the outside of that balloon. Then add air to the balloon, inflating it further.
What you get is two dots that are farther apart, more real distance between them but the same balloon.
Re:Fallacy of the Big Bang Theory (Score:5, Insightful)
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This is because we are IN the balloon so that is our frame of reference.
No, we are on the balloon. The surface of the balloon is a 2D representation of our 3D space. Talking about the inside of the balloon is nonsensical.
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You are trying to oversimplifying it and it is getting in the way. The balloon is our universe. Drawing a grid on the outside would be akin to cubing up a block of cheese. Get past the fact that it is drawn on a 2d surface. This represents cubes of space/time [wikipedia.org] within our universe.
In the end, the change in distance is offset by the change in time, which makes it a non-issue.
An unrelated, but equally technical post
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Re:You can go almost 3 times the speed of light? (Score:5, Informative)
Consider having two probes going away from Earth at 60%-lightspeed in opposite directions, and they want to communicate with each other. At 120%-c speeds, you might think it's impossible. But each of them could communicate back and forth with Earth at mere 60%-c speeds. If you do the actual math you work out that they appear to each other as moving away at something-like-80%c (that figure is totally made up, but you should get the idea anyway).
Re:You can go almost 3 times the speed of light? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:You can go almost 3 times the speed of light? (Score:5, Interesting)
Nope. You can't observe objects whose effective speed in your reference frame - combining inflation with velocity - is greater than C. The light from them never reaches you and light from you can never reach them. From your point of view they're "off the edge". It's as if you and they were each below the event horizon of a black hole relative to each other.
(And sorry about an error in my previous post. The correct buzzword for the stretching of space is "inflation".)
Or at least that's how I understand it. IANAP(hysicist)
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Oh, and buzzword isn't the same as a precisely-defined technical term. For a good litmus test, compare the precision of the definition of "Web 2.0" to the definition of "F
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Sure it is. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CMB [wikipedia.org]
Also, http://xkcd.com/54/ [xkcd.com]
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Re:Fallacy of the Big Bang Theory (Score:4, Interesting)
What you want is a specific "point" at which the big bang happened. That's not the case. When it happened - it WAS the universe - ie it was every single point at once. As the universe expands - anywhere you look from or to you'll be able to see this background radiation. Of course there will be fluctuations if the expansion of the universe isn't completely uniform - and why should it be? Matter distorts space and time, contributing to this non-uniformity.
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We DO "see" the remnants of the big bang. It's the nearly uniform 3K cosmic background radiation. That's what happens when you take an imensely energetic ball of stuff and stretch it to the current size of the universe.
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Otherwise they would have had to have travelled at 2C for the past hour...
Which if course, is impossible...
GrpA
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ObFuturama (Score:2)
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Everyone here is apparently rather stupid.
If I leave your house traveling at the speed of light, and look back an hour later, I'll see your house exactly as I left it. (Pretending that time would actually pass enough for me to 'see' anything.)
So, 'relatively', anyone who also left at the same time, in any direction, at any speed, looks like they're 'relatively' an hour away! Because they're standing at my starting point motionless!
Of course, as no one can actually do anything at the speed of light, even
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So is this older than the Kessel Run, or simply faster?
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Ah, I see. Because... when Gore and Clinton were in charge of NASA, there were plans in place and programs under way to have people on Mars by now, only 7 years later, and that got stopped cold by Teh Evil Bush. I wonder what else was under way while Clinton and Gore were running the executive branch? Say, the rapid build up of Al Queda tranining camps in Afghanistan, and the launching of pla
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Yeah, but then again, you're assuming he actually believes the stuff he spouts off, b/c in this universe, he refuses to debate ANYONE on the facts, and he owns the companies he buys 'carbon credits' from... weird, huh?
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Why? Because NASA would be forced to buy the carbon offsets from a business Gore owns...
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I keep looking at your reply, knowing that somewhere in there you'll point to how exactly President Gore would have had us on Mars by now. You must be really, really subtle, because I'm not seeing it. Or, maybe you're just full of crap on that subject, and were making a comment that is the very definition of a troll. Now, which part was I wrong about? Afghanistan? The recession that started in 1999? See, I can point at yo
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Unfortunately, we'd probably have gotten much stricter gun laws too under Gore, and increased cri
Re:Does anyone know ... (Score:5, Interesting)
The common view now is that the expansion of the universe is accelerating [wikipedia.org]. As the universe ages, galaxies will be spread further away, and the amount of hydrogen and helium in any given galaxy will start to decrease to the point that it would be difficult to produce any stars. Galaxies will be full of brown dwarfs, white dwarfs, and black holes. Over a long time frame, galaxies will start shedding some of their stars, and black holes will decay via the process of Hawking radiation [wikipedia.org]. Eventually, about a googol years from now, protons will start to decay [wikipedia.org]. As the universe runs out of ways to generate energy, there will be parts of the universe, starting with the large empty gaps left behind by the expansion, that will undergo a phase transition. Once some pockets of the universe undergo phase transition, they will act as seeds that spread the transition to other parts of the universe (like the process of water turning into ice). When the phase transition is complete, the laws of physics will change drastically, and there may be a new seed for a new universe.
As I mentioned earlier, it's WILDLY speculative, so don't take this comment as anything definitive. I just wanted to illustrate one of the many theories out there that share some of the most basic premises of the one in the story.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroweak_force [wikipedia.org]
There is tons of empirical evidence of the phase change between the combined Electroweak force and the forces of Electromagnetism and weak interaction.
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I gave you a link that shows experimental data. And there is no such thing as empty space, it's a froth of virtual particles. That's why the Casimir effect exists. But look, I don't want to go explaining all of modern physics to you. Ther
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No, just the two.
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