Big Bang Breakthrough Team Back-Pedals On Major Result 127
An anonymous reader writes A few months ago researchers announced they had discovered proof of the big bang. Now they're not so sure. Further research suggests cosmic dust might have skewed the results. "Back in March, the BICEP2 team reported a twisted pattern in the sky, which they attributed to primordial gravitational waves, wrinkles in the fabric of the universe that could have been produced when the baby universe went through an enormous growth spurt. If correct, this would confirm the theory of inflation, which says that the universe expanded exponentially in the first slivers of a second after the big bang – many believe that it continues to expand into an ever-growing multiverse. Doubts about the announcement soon emerged. The BICEP2 team identified the waves based on how they twisted, or polarised, the photons in the cosmic microwave background (CMB), the earliest light emitted in the universe around 380,000 years after the big bang. Other objects, such as the ashes of exploding stars or dust within our galaxy, can polarise light as well."
Not the Big Bang (Score:5, Informative)
There's a ton of evidence for the Big Bang, the existence of the CMB at all being one of them. That result was meant to be evidence for Inflation [wikipedia.org], which is used to explain why the universe appears evenly distributed everywhere you look, among other things.
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Cosmic inflation has always puzzled me - so the distance between particles of matter is slowly widening, without the particles themselves actually moving, why can't we observe this at the molecular level? Or do we? Even if its only a miniscule expansion at the smallest scales it must surely show some sign, and wouldn't it have some effect on say chemical interactions?
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many estimates place it much closer in time, 17 to 22 billion years from now. The universe is already half past time splan to blow! OMG!
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/... [harvard.edu]
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small correction. We really don't have a good handle on why it appears that the molecular forces aren't changing over time. We're fairly confident that it's been extremely close to unchanged for at least 12 billion years, as what we see in the Hubble Deep Field appears very similar to closer parts of the galaxy. We can stretch that back with a little less confidence to 15 billion years with globular clusters, but beyond that, we don't have much empirical evidence. If the basic atomic forces are changing ove
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One itsy bitsy correction if you don't mind. That's not 10^36, 10^33, and 10^32 seconds. It's 10^-36, 10^-33, and 10^-32 seconds. It makes the difference between the big bang lasting far longer than the present estimated ag
Re:Not the Big Bang (Score:5, Informative)
Cosmic inflation has always puzzled me - so the distance between particles of matter is slowly widening, without the particles themselves actually moving, why can't we observe this at the molecular level? Or do we? Even if its only a miniscule expansion at the smallest scales it must surely show some sign, and wouldn't it have some effect on say chemical interactions?
There are three different expansive phenomenon in modern cosmology - the initial inflation of the original symmetry breaking event, the subsequent vastly longer and slower expansion (measured by the Hubble Constant) that followed where the Universe coasted under influence of gravity alone, and then the recently discovered (and cosmically more recent) cosmic acceleration.that is now offsetting gravity.
The first event lasting a trillionth of a trillionth of a trillionth of a second did indeed push all the particles then existing apart very fast, while creating lots of new particles.
The second phase of coasting, and the modern phase when cosmic acceleration kicked in, is currently pushing things apart on a cosmic scale, but not gravitationally bound structures, much less the far more strongly bound electromagnetically bound ones (atoms and molecules, and molecular agglomerations) or nuclear force bound structures.
Eventually, under current models, cosmic acceleration will strengthen to the point where it will start ripping apart these galaxy clusters. then galaxies, then star systems, then stars and bulk matter, then molecules and atoms, then nuclei,and finally composite subatomic particles themselves.
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The Usenet Physics FAQ has a page covering this, although it doesn't answer your question directly:
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/... [ucr.edu]
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As I understand it, chemical reactions, electron orbital sizes, etc, will all be the same even after space has expanded many times. While space is still expanding slowly, it's not having much effect on anything - the other forces (not that expansion is really a force, though it has similar effects) acting between molecules in close proximity will be overwhelming.
Again AIUI, an electron could continue happily in its orbit while space expands 10, 100 or 1000 times - as long as the expansion remains relatively
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It's not the simple fact that space is expanding that might cause a big rip, but the fact that the expansion is accelerating, and will - one day - be so fast that it will outpace light, at which point no forces will be able to act over even a Planck distance (because by the time they've propogated, that Planck distance will have expanded too much).
And what happens when that happens? I'm going to guess the result is universal and cataclysmic. We could even give it a name. Let's call it The Big Bang.
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It already has a name [wikipedia.org].
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Re:Not the Big Bang (Score:4, Informative)
The speed of light is the ultimate speed limit relative to the underlying spacetime. If spacetime itself expands or contracts, that speed limit may not apply. That is, in fact, also the basis of the Alcubierre warp drive [wikipedia.org].
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Oh, I don't think that the Alcubierre warp drive is actually physically possible, and I sure don't think Harold White's experiments are going to show otherwise (although I would be delighted to be wrong). But I think Alcubierre's solution is a valid solution of General Relativity, and it shows that strong-field fluctuations in space-time can, at least in principle, go faster than light.
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How does spacetime know how fast something is going through it? If there is nothing else other than spacetime and a single photon, what regulates the photon's speed? What is the speed relative to?
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You are sat on a boat in a pool, with a motor capable of pushing it at 5m/s, and this is the only force applicable to the boat because physics. You cannot observe anything outside of the boat's speed in the water; There is only you, the boat, and the water. Now, put a current in the water of 50m/s in the direction of travel of the boat. How fast is the boat going? You can't know anything about the speed of the water
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How does spacetime know how fast something is going through it? If there is nothing else other than spacetime and a single photon, what regulates the photon's speed? What is the speed relative to?
The easiest way to answer that is by saying you're thinking about it incorrectly. Our every day experiences leads us to believe that distances are absolute. That time periods are absolute. And if we're talking about the relative speeds in human experience, that's a very, very good approximation.
Turns out reality is weirder. It's not that spacetime "knows" how fast something is traveling through it. It's that space and time don't behave like our senses lead us to believe. So, from our perspective, if e
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Doesn't the Alcubierre drive have the same causality issues as any other FTL form of propulsion?
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There is a lot of evidence for the universe being in an early, condensed, hot state - as you say, the CMB is a one of them, as is the success of Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN). If that is what is meant by the "Big Bang," then it is indeed well established. If, however, what is meant is there was some sort of singularity from which everything exploded than that, like the smile of the Cheshire Cat, seems to be receding into the distance or fading away.
This can be most clearly expressed by asking, how old is t
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All of the data that could support "Big Bang" is edge data, and therefore known to be inaccurate. For every sensor, the resolution drops off at the edge. If Big Bang is true, it would be like God theories that can't be proven, because you can only hope to get edge data.
That it is taught as a "fact" instead of as an unprovable hypothesis shows the difference between actual physics, and cosmology.
Actual physics is making predictions at the small scale that is not edge data, and where the predictions match obs
Re:Not the Big Bang (Score:5, Insightful)
There is tones of evidence against the Big Bang also.
It is one of MANY theories, they group it under the STANDARD THEORY, because that is politically they want to push as fact, when in fact, it is not fact, and they do not teach other theories that are equally as valid. THAT is the problem with academia.
The "tones" - frequencies and modulations in the cosmic medium - support the Big Bang model quite strongly.
The signal-to-noise ratio demonstrating the reality of the Big Bang in scientific data collected over decades is enormously higher than that of the posts appearing here today where numerous ACs spout contentless skepticism and derision, and to the extent they reference facts at all, they get them hilariously wrong.
Any AC who claims lots of evidence against a well-established scientific model, but it unable to cite a single scrap of same it simply polluting Slashdot and wasting everyone's time (including his/her own).
Re: Not the Big Bang (Score:2)
Oh darn, if only you had.more room to provide use with those equally valid "theories"
Just tune into Art Bell (Score:2)
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He would have, but the margins on his screen were too small to jot them down.
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Please provide some legitimate evidence against the Big Bang. I hate it when people just throw these types of comments out without backing them up.
The Standard Theory of particle physics is one of the best confirmed theories in science.
Calling it political tells me you must have certain beliefs which are in conflict with it. But that doesn't make the Big Bang theory political... only you.
The only other theory that is equally as valid as the Big Bang is Evolution.
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There's the standard model of particle physics.
and then there's the standard model of cosmology. They are rather different-- and while one may inform the other, they the validity of one does not say much about the validity of the other.
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By "standard theory" to you mean the standard model of particle physics? If so:
1) That's a different thing
2) It's probably the most correct model of anything ever invented
Re:This science does sound quasi-religious. (Score:4, Informative)
CMBR isn't a sketchy concept, it's there to be observed - as it has been for several years now. The question is whether it's uniform or undulated, which is hard to determine as we're swimming through it. It's like trying to determine the shape of a cloud when you're sitting inside it.
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I'm sure you meant "for several billion years."
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CMBR could also be caused by something else entirely that nobody has thought of yet. It could just be that old photons finally decompose after 14 billion years, and that old photons turn red. Since we only measure photons at very short distances here on Earth, we have no idea if red shift in photons emitted billions of years ago is due to the same causes as photons that we artificially redshift for fractions of a second. Just as there are different physical forces that can move a steel ball. If you don't kn
Uh-huh... (Score:4, Insightful)
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> CMB is based on data that can't be explained any other *reasonable* way
There are no parameters for defining reasonable or unreasonable things in a universe, if you happen to exist in the same universe, because you have no way to discover all the rules from the inside of it. I posit you have no way to discover any of the rules from the inside of it.
Science does not explain, science models.
Because for every chain of reasons that science can come up with, "the last element is "because it is that way".
Right... (Score:4, Insightful)
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(1) CMB is based on data that can't be explained any other *reasonable* way
Sounds very flat-Earther to me. "I dunno, so it must be the best of my ideas." No. If you don't know, it is probably NOT your best idea. ;)
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The good news, "Big Bang" is a cosmology thing not a physics thing. And unlike physicists, who are usually right, cosmologists are usually wrong.
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You derped all over yourself there. Right in your comment you point out that physics is a different field than cosmology, in your description of learning physics to apply it to cosmology! D'oh!
You seem a little... weak in your support of cosmology. Is it because you know it isn't held (by itself) to the same standards that physics holds itself to?
"It isn't directly observative science... (Score:2)
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They are all just theories. It's just that some are rather better confirmed than others.
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Saying just a theory is sort of like saying "that legal opinion is just a judge's". In some cases, it's like saying "just the supreme court's opinion.". Sure, it might still be wrong, so let's get an auto mechanic's opinion on what the law is - let's stop having juries and just ask a random plumber to decide who's guilty of what - maybe we could flip a Bible and if it lands face up the accused is innocent... .
Backpeddle? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Backpeddle? (Score:5, Insightful)
This.
Real science is always open to upending. If they weren't willing to listen to critics, they'd be called a religion.
Excersise for the reader: are there any other scientists not willing to listen to their critics?
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Scientists are human and can have the same flaws as any human. There are lots of scientists who have held onto their beliefs in the face of new evidence which is why it has been stated that for new scientific paradigms to be generally accepted needs a new generation of scientists to replace the old established ones. There is the ideal of a scientist, then there is the reality of humans playing scientist.
Famously there is Einstein refusing to accept quantum, Fred Hoyle refusing to accept the big bang and ins
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indeed, that's what science is - adjusting theories to fit observations. As opposed to religion - adjusting the data to conform to dogma.
Re:Backpeddle? (Score:5, Informative)
I am not sure "back pedal" is really the right word here. They did some research, published a result, other researchers pointed out potential problems with the conclusions, the original team listened to the criticisms and took them seriously.
Right... its even less serious that you make it out to be.
A dumbed down explanation of how it went:
Researchers: "We finally have conclusive evidence of Inflation!"
Critics: "That's pretty cool but did you consider X?"
Researchers: "Yes, but we're not ready to publish all the data yet. If we do, someone might beat us to some other stuff we're working on"
*data finally published*
Critics: "Ah, you did account for X. You're probably correct, but X could possibly be bigger than you accounted for in some rare cases."
Researchers: "Ah, we see your point now. Ok, this isn't conclusive evidence... but it's pretty darn close. There's another group that's very close to completing a study that will confirm our observation so we'll just wait for them as it will come sooner than anything we can do."
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Researchers: "We finally have conclusive evidence of Inflation!"
[runs off to make a viral video]
Critics: "That's pretty cool but did you consider X?"
tftfy
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Science isn't supposed to have an agenda and then set out to prove the agenda, nor is it supposed to sit around and wait for others to sit around and prove it either. The scientific method calls for the formation of a hypothesis and then doing a series of tests that will attempt to disprove that hypothesis. True science requires standing up to the scrutiny of scientists attempting to disprove their own thoughts and ideas not holding back fact
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I would modify that slightly. For "disprove", substitute "support or oppose". The solar eclipse observational experiments of Campbell, Eddington and others were undertaken in a thirst for knowledge to FIND OUT if one phenomenon predicted by general relativity was actually evident; not really to try to prove or disprove general relativity. If the measurements of positio
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Actually, they did some research, had a press conference, other researchers pointed out potential problems with the conclusions, and they put some weasel words in the actual published paper. It doesn't matter; the way they went about this, and the weakness of their dust calibration, means that no one will really believe the cosmological interpretation of their results* until more data comes along. That may not take long, according to Nature News [nature.com] :
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I do think they jumped the gun a bit by getting their background correction from a scraped conference figure rather than unambiguous published data, which seems to be the source of the problem.
New scientist story leaves out a lot (Score:2)
These BICEP2 guys didn't back-pedal of their own accord, friends---how about citing the much more senior and respected people, such as WMAP guru Spergel [arxiv.org], who already DID the joint Planck analysis and showed them how hasty they had been? This is pretty poor reporting on NS's part.
BICEP2 were a bunch of young upstarts riding into town with guns a-blazing. The sheriff came down and told them to calm down, boys, calm down.
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They were for the bang before they were against it.
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You got that right. And the tender egos of the Planck team got hurt by the "young upstarts" outdoing them. Awww, how sad.
Fact is, the BICEP2 team got the result and published in a leading journal. The team hardly backtracked at all. For more on this, see the blog post by Lubos Motl: "BICEP2 gets published in PRL [blogspot.co.uk]".
It is pathetic how established scientists try to protect their egos from "young upstarts".
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If anyone had any doubt that Lubos Motl has no credibility at all, that post proves it IMHO.
Science by press conference (Score:2)
I still find it hard to believe that they would do a major press conference on results that depended (fairly crucially) on a calibration screen-scraped from a presentation from another scientific group. I would love to know the true back-story here - was knowledge of this dependency on screen-scraped data widespread within the BICEP2 group, or was this just some grad student who was being expedient? Didn't anyone try and contact the Planck group and ask for their best dust estimates?
While it is quite possib
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Planck has yet to release their polarization data, so BICEP2 couldn't use it. To be clear, they also didn't use just the Planck data: the paper lists five different models for dust polarization, only one of which (DDM1) was constructed from what little Planck data they had available. All of them showed fairly tiny amounts of polarization from dust compared to their signal, hence the conclusion that it was a cosmological polarization (there were other reasons for that conclusion as well, of course). They pub
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Yeah, but when you lead with a press conference, and then have to back-pedal, you are going to take a hit, and they have.
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Thank heaven for syndication - the 5th force (Score:2)
Quite simple really (Score:1)
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The advantage to science (Score:3)
Is that it admits when its wrong. Religion, not so much.
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Science: "The data doesn't fit the theory? Fine, we'll come up with another theory."
Religion: "The data doesn't fit the theory? THE DATA'S WRONG!"
Proof of the big bang? (Score:2)
They were actually looking for evidence of cosmic inflation, as this would account for how the universe is isotropic, or the same over vast distances, something big bang doesn't account for.
Good that it was "unconfirmed" back then (Score:2)
I remember that at the time this was annouced, and especially in slashdot and the linked article we were told to take the story with a grain of salt. Oh well, seems the slashdot blurb didn't but the article included : “These results are as extraordinary as they get, and they will require the most extraordinary scrutiny,” Kamionkowski said. (...)
Maybe slashdot comments were better at pointing out these were initial, preliminary etc. results. The general media failed to put any nuance and announc
Re:Inflation was BEFORE the big bang (Score:4, Informative)
No, it wasn't.
Never trust the bangking system (Score:1)
Well, we can't be completely sure. Possibly, before the Big Bang, the Central Bang Bank messed up the Bang interest rate stabilization calculations, and our universe ended up getting a lot less Bang for our buck...
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Re:I AM become DEATH destroyer of Universes (Score:2)
Nothing ever happens the way I expect it to. .
The bartender says "Why the long face?"
A tachyon flies into a bar . .
Horse flies like a banana.
How best to study the Big Bang? Make a Little Bang in the laboratory! Perhaps we will discover that the optimal conditions for the Big Bang arose when someone began to devise practical laboratory experiments to study and understand the previous one. Ad infinitum.
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Everyone repeat after me:
Science writers aren't scientifically literate. Inflation was BEFORE the big bang.
Everyone repeat after me. Anonymous Cowards aren't scientifically literally. It was AFTER the Big Bang. Try again.
Re: Were you there? (Score:1)
And The Silmarillion says "In the beginning Eru, the One, who in the Elvish tongue is named IlÃvatar..." What's your point?
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no, but my father was and he was forever complaining about "the old days" and how he always had to climb the gravity well, in both directions.
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no, but my father was and he was forever complaining about "the old days" and how he always had to climb the gravity well, in both directions.
In the snow. Never forget the snow.
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Ah user ter DREAM of walking through water ice snow. For us it were wading through methane slush, all day every day.