Doughnut-Shaped Universe Back In the Race 124
SpaceAdmiral writes "The once-popular idea that the universe could be small and finite is making a comeback. Many researchers thought that a 'wraparound' universe would mean that distant objects would be seen multiple times in the sky, but new research suggests that a '3-torus' (or 'doughnut universe'), as well as other shapes, could fit our actual observations, particularly the WMAP data."
That's silly. (Score:4, Insightful)
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1. how has it been decided that conservatism has failed since it was the government who has been slowly abandoning it? conservative ideals created the infrastructure of the country, and only since we've gotten so rich and fat and happy have there been such large steps away from those ideals, and look at what we're getting ourselves into now.
2. communism and conservatism are nearly polar opposites, so what is the ideal solution?
feel free t
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Besides delicious, delicious doughnuts? Mmmmmmmmmmmm . . . Forbidden Doughnut.
Re:That's silly. Or, that's totally... (Score:1)
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Re:That's silly. (Score:5, Informative)
A torus gives periodic boundary conditions in two dimensions. Periodic boundarty conditions for one axis can be thought of as curling a piece of paper around to make a cylinder. For someone on this paper, picture running on a soccer field, and if you run out of bounds on the left side you pop back in in the right side, aka pacman's tunnel. To make a torus, you'd need to wrap the top exposed circular edge to the bottom circular edge, in a donut way. You'd need to bend the paper to do this, so you'd really need something like a rubber membrane. But once you connect this, then you have a soccer field where when you kick a ball behind your opponent's goal, it comes out from behind your goal. That is 2-D boundary conditions. The simplest shape that can manifest these boundary conditions of a two-dimensional system is a torus, which exists in 3-D.
Now extend this one step further. Take a 3-D space, and add periodic boundary conditions for left/right, back/front, and also top/down. This is the 3-torus that is discussed in the article. Someone confined to this 3-D surface has a full three independent degrees of freedom for movement, but the manifestation of this shape would look more complicated in four or five dimensions. But that is what is being talked about here.
Of course in quantum cosmology there are other dimensions, such as the warped 5th dimension of the Randall-Sundrum model [wikipedia.org], which may or may not be periodic, and add to very peculiar topologies of the universe.
Re:That's silly. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:That's silly. (Score:5, Insightful)
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I don't remember the details, but one of Rudy Rucker's 'ware series involves a character being flipped on the W-axis as you describe.
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Here it is! (Score:4, Informative)
That was written in 1896, putting it 12 years after Flatland [google.com] which I think was the first treatment of the theme of the consequences of differing numbers of dimensions. Nothing new under the sun, eh?
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Wow to HG Wells if he did it first (anyone know the name of the story?), though I would consider the general themes of 'consequences of different numbers of dimensions' as having been laid out in Flatland before that.
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SPOILER ALERT
The protagonist has an alien entity riding (mostly benignly) inside him that needed to be rotated in the 4th dimension in order to become fully functional. It's a really bizarre and fun book, so it's not worth going any further than that with isolated plot-oids.
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A torus doesn't have a boundary, hence it doesn't have boundary conditions.
What you are probably trying to say is that if you take a square and impose certain periodic boundary conditions, then you get something that behaves more or less like a torus. But what you have is a square with boundary conditions; the "boundary conditions" are related to how you choose to represent the torus, not to the torus itself.
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It simply seems to me that if there was a big bang why wouldn't that bang simply produce a roundish or oval shaped universe? All other observable explosions expand from the center in a roughly uniform pattern.
We're simulated inside a computer (Score:2)
but now we've also proven that it doesn't check for integer overflows ?
Man, our universe is just such a buggy piece of code. Probably hacked together in Perl [xkcd.com].
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(If you didn't follow the metaphor, the raindrop impact would be viewed as the big-bang, and the edges would be formed by water surface tension, so the universe would continue to expand but not forever... eventually it would "pop" or disperse as the surface tension becomes too weak to fold things togethe
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Doughnuts, silly. (Score:2)
Mmm, doughnuts...
Now cue new prophets going on about the impending arrival of the Great Homer, whereupon our entire universe will be rendered into bite-size chunks and slowly masticated into elementary particles of deep-fried pastry goodness.
Cheers,
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How many cells in your body have a bipedal shape? How many things in your car look like your car itself? How many 2x4 lego bricks look like a castle or death-star or robot?
"Greenness dissolves" applies outward as well.
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cue religious revisionism. (Score:2)
While scientists disagree over exactly what the universe's origins are, religion has provided a consistent answer since the Earth's beginnings, over 6,000 years ago.
Also naturally doughnut shaped:
Anii
Cheerios
Red blood cells
This. [gizmodo.com]
This too. [goatse.cx]
Can't forget this. [prostate.org.au]
There is also an argument to be made that earthworms are doughnut-shaped when viewed end-on, and further that most life form
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Obligatory Simpsons quote (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Obligatory Simpsons quote (Score:4, Funny)
Nichelle Nichols: "It's about that rip in space-time that you saw!"
Stephen Hawking: "I call it a Hawking Hole."
Fry: "No fair! I saw it first!"
Stephen Hawking: "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?"
Donut shaped? (Score:1, Funny)
Pay for the article? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd love to read it, but... what's with all these pay-to-read links lately?
$8 for an article? Most magazines cost less.
Re:Pay for the article? (Score:5, Interesting)
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(Moreover, I don't think the screen they provide is particularly useful - in fact, I think it's even harmful because it imposes a socially constructed restriction on one's exposure to new ideas - but that's just my own opinion).
In the case of Nature, I think most people pay to have their work in it because of the prestige of having an article published in Nature
Re:Pay for the article? (Score:4, Insightful)
So there are defiantly costs involved. There's also the salary for the folks working the presses making the dead-tree copies. Magic faeries also rarely run the journals website. I know I'd want to be paid for running it. Wouldn't you? So there are lots of costs involved. The publishing companies also want to make a profit on top of that. Now I won't argue with you about how much profit the publishing companies should make off it. Just wanted to point out that there are very real expenses involved in making a journal, even with free reviews.
Open Access (Score:2)
I could understand that rationale if the peer reviewers were paid employees, but they aren't, at least for most journals; they're unpaid volunteers.
The business model is on its way out, open access journals are taking over. There are several reasons for this:
1) Many scientist recognize open access [wikipedia.org] is the right way to do science.
2) Open access journals tend to have higher impact factors. The impact factor is a measure of how important the journal is, and is mostly measured from number of citations from the journal. Open access journals gets more citations, because they are easier to find with a web search.
3) Many funding agencies have started requir
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(Moreover, I don't think the screen they provide is particularly useful - in fact, I think it's even harmful because it imposes a socially constructed restriction on one's exposure to new ideas - but that's just my own opinion).
There is nothing to stop anybody from publishing an unreviewed journal. There are many laxly reviewed journals, but they are not widely read. There are also journals that specialize in speculative ideas. Again, they are not very widely read. The fact is that in science, as in most fields, ideas are cheap. Most scientists have more ideas than they have time to pursue. What is valued is ideas that are supported by well thought-out, carefully done experiments. Given limited time, most scientists favor a journ
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A pitiful route to extinction (Score:3, Funny)
"...new research suggests that a '3-torus' (or 'doughnut universe'), as well as other shapes, could fit our actual observations..."
Great...it all ends when we wind up being eaten by some fat-ass cop from the other side of a black hole.
your theory has a hole in it! (Score:5, Funny)
suggestion /. stop advertisementing for pay sites (Score:4, Insightful)
So what's the point in running this if we have to pay to RTFA? Supposedly anyone already paying is likely to read it anyway, so the only ones this posting is for is for those who do not already subscribe to the site. In a world where information wants to be free, I hardly see it as appropriate for Slashdot to hype up a pay site. Were there no interesting articles on any free sites today? Or did Slashdot get a payment for posting this advertisement for this pay site? Did paid subscribers to /. also see this ad sneakily disguised as an article (if so I bet they resent it even more than I do).
Re:suggestion /. stop advertisementing for pay sit (Score:2, Insightful)
I think it is completely reasonable for slashdot to assume a base level of resources available to its user base. In this case, the presumed user base is everyone who knows ANYBODY attending ANY college. Pretty much every university provides off-site journal access to their students (whether the students know about the service or not). I think that covers most everyone here.
Additionally, when a college subscribes to journals, it usually subscribes to hundreds or thousands. It seems a bit naive to say:
College (Score:1, Troll)
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Since neither of my posts seems to convey that I don't expect the entirety of /. to be in college, let me spell out my views even more clearly with a personal example.
To access an article for the next few decades, I won't even have to leave the family. I'll have a regular enough supply of college-age first cousins (assuming half of them go to college) to supply me with any journal access I might need for 2/3rds of the next couple decades. By that time, I expect to have produced a couple college age kids
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But if really think that single examples prove something, let me use myself as a counterexample.
I'm the only person in my extended family who is in college right now -- and my college is very small and doesn't provide access to stuff like that from outside the intranet. There's only one person in my family who does research, and he and I don't speak. My friends in college were mostly lit and b
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Additionally _every_ slashdot reader I know in person, all five of them, are either in the same position as myself, or are pre-collegiate children.
If I was _really_ interested I could pay the eight bucks, or find some student online to give me a proxy or something. I'm not however, but your post annoys me.
Not everyone here fits in your little world, sorry.
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I find it hard to believe that you think that the fact that an article is accessible by someone I know makes it accessible to me.
In the context of the World Wide Web, something is accessible if and only if it shows up in my browser.
And no, I don't know any recent college graduates, at least not on terms where I would comfortablely bug them to go
Re:suggestion /. stop advertisementing for pay sit (Score:3, Informative)
Re:suggestion /. stop advertisementing for pay sit (Score:2)
glass half empty (Score:2)
today's Zippy the Pinhead about donuts... (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/comics/Zippy_the_Pinhead_Color.dtl
-WtC
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Questions. (Score:2)
When talking about a closed (positive curvature) geometry like the one described here physicists say that the universe will have enough mass to eventually stop expanding and then begin to collapse on itself. However, when I imagine a 2D version of this I see a circle expanding on a sphere (or donut) until it wraps around, at which point the mass will recollect on the opposite side. In that model, the universe isn't so much stopping expansion, but continuin
Re:Questions. (Score:4, Interesting)
It isn't valid because a 3-torus is a 4 dimensional shape. To be more accurate it is valid, but not in a way you can conceive of.
Think of it in these terms; you are a two dimensional creature. Your world is defined solely by X and Y coordinates and is of a finite size. Take two opposite sides and bring them together and now your world is a tube. The only edges you can perceive are the ends of the tube. Take the two ends of the tube and bring them together. You are now living on a standard torus (not a 3-torus). As far as you are concerned there is no "edge" to the torus. Roam as much as you want to but you will never reach an edge. The only way for you to experience an "edge" would be if you stepped up one dimension and became three dimensional.
A 3-torus is a similar construct but instead of being a two dimensional world with the X edges and the Y edges brought together it is a three dimensional world in which the X edges, Y edges, and Z edges have all been brought together. From your three dimensional perspective there is no "edge" and the only way to perceive one is to step up a dimension and become a four dimensional entity.
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...step up a dimension and become a four dimensional entity.
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- RG>
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Unfortunately I can tell other people how to do this. It was the result of an irreproducible accident that involves a coronal mass ejection coinciding with two charged particle beams traveling in opposite directions, an intense magnetic field, a crossed proton stream and a case of non-dairy creamer.
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You equated expansion to a circle expanding along the surface of a torus, then meeting on the other side. Your example is of an object exploding within a toroidal surface. Similar to, but not the same as, a one dimensional universe expanding within a 2 dimensional toroidal surface of fixed size.
The expansion of the universe is the torus itself getting bigger. Draw a few dots on a balloon, put a C clamp in th
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Thanks for your input and vision, chief!
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No, it is not curved for all practical purposes, especially not for the purpose of postulating a doughnut universe.
Who are these modders? Why is this nonsense modded insightful? It's crap. If something is discrete, it is not continuous by definition. Since true curvature requires continuity and continuity leads to an infinite regress, all this business about doughnut universes and s
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The problem with curvature is that it imples continuity (infinite divisibility), which leads to an infinite regress. Therefore curvature is an unacceptable concept in physics.
There is no "rule" that infinities are unacceptable in physics. Whether infinities are realized in nature remains an open question. Even if there is some kind of inherent granularity to space, curvature can still be a valid approximation, just as we can talk about the curvature of physical objects that are made of discrete atoms.
What contra-experimental crap. (Score:2)
So are you denying that space-time can be bent by mass/energy? Well guess what, you're provably wrong, because we've measured the curvature of space. You can call it "unacceptable" all you want. It exists. So, given a hypothesis that curvature can't exist, and a experiment that says it does, which must be wrong? That's right, the h
Giant Telescopes... (Score:2, Interesting)
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Donut Discrimination! (Score:2)
Why not a hall of mirrors? please someone explain. (Score:2)
Re:Scientists (Score:5, Funny)
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It's insulting to humanity to fail to recognize the amazing accomplishments of the present theories. Not every chap can dream up something that predicts reality so accurately as Einsteinian relativity.
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Oh sure, that's entirely possible. One big problem in proving it, though, is the fact that these theories have undergone and passed extensive experimental verification. They make predictions, predictions we can verify in reality. While we haven't tested every aspect or prediction, we know that things like time dilation and space dilation do in fact exist, in the exact amounts predicted by Einstein to our limits of