Our Universe Might Be a Giant Three-Dimensional Donut (livescience.com) 182
fahrbot-bot shares a report from Live Science: Imagine a universe where you could point a spaceship in one direction and eventually return to where you started. If our universe were a finite donut, then such movements would be possible and physicists could potentially measure its size. "We could say: Now we know the size of the universe," astrophysicist Thomas Buchert, of the University of Lyon, Astrophysical Research Center in France, told Live Science in an email.
Examining light from the very early universe, Buchert and a team of astrophysicists have deduced that our cosmos may be multiply connected, meaning that space is closed in on itself in all three dimensions like a three-dimensional donut. Such a universe would be finite, and according to their results, our entire cosmos might only be about three to four times larger than the limits of the observable universe, about 45 billion light-years away.
Examining light from the very early universe, Buchert and a team of astrophysicists have deduced that our cosmos may be multiply connected, meaning that space is closed in on itself in all three dimensions like a three-dimensional donut. Such a universe would be finite, and according to their results, our entire cosmos might only be about three to four times larger than the limits of the observable universe, about 45 billion light-years away.
Is there an actual paper associated with this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, where's the paper, because this writeup reads like fluff. Show me the data.
Re:Is there an actual paper associated with this? (Score:5, Informative)
Right here I *think* is whats being referenced;-
https://arxiv.org/abs/2106.132... [arxiv.org]
That would be the pre-print. Unsure if tis been submtted to a more tightly moderated journal, but as best as I can work out Ralf Aurich and Thomas Buchert are legit physicists and this isn't a crank paper.
But like a lot of these more far out claims, I wouldn't put too much weight on it. Until more research to vaidate the idea happens, treat it as "nice idea, possibly not true".
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Based on just the summary a hypersphere would be a better model than a donut...at least if you think a donut is a torus. (A doughnut would have a different path length around it in almost every single direction. Most paths would curve through the hole in the center. )
And at best calling the universe a donut (doughnut?) doesn't handle all four dimensions. You need to explain which two dimensions you are mapping together (e.g. two spacial dimensions).
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"Tell me again how sheep's bladders may be used to prevent earthquakes."
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It's not as out there as multiverse or String Hypothesis and P-branes for that matter, and at least here, they're claiming they derived from observation, unlike the other theoretical untestable extrapolations.
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filled donuts are certainly a common subtype and available at any bakery but not the "default" donut. In the US at least the default would probably be a plain sugar glazed donut like this. https://assets.epicurious.com/... [epicurious.com]
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Known here as Simpsons' donut.
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Re: Is there an actual paper associated with this? (Score:4)
Donut is a pretty common name for torus internationally
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just a story that some guy from somewhere doing an analysis found some tiny discrepancy they couldn't immediately explain
Actually some guy doing some analysis found a discrepancy which could be explained by a theory which has been making the rounds for many years. Seriously I attended a guest lecture at university decades ago which promoted this kind of theory.
It's not some guy making some wildly outlandish claim anymore than there's only one dude out there proposing the universe is held together by strings. Even Steven Hawking once toyed with the idea of a donutiverse :-)
Three-Dimensional Donut? (Score:2)
What is a Two-Dimensional Donut?
Re: Three-Dimensional Donut? (Score:2)
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A 2D donut is a regular donut, a 1D donut is a circle.
They should have called it a hyperdonut, it sounds cooler. Hypercops love them.
Re:Is there an actual paper associated with this? (Score:5, Funny)
"Tell me you are old without telling me that you are old."
Re: Is there an actual paper associated with this? (Score:2)
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You might be reading the wrong website. This one has started carrying a lot of US political crap, but its original purpose was stories about science and technology.
https://www.walmart.com/ [walmart.com] or https://www.bestbuy.com/ [bestbuy.com] have a good listing of products that are fully realized and available to the market. https://www.mcmastercarr.com/ [mcmastercarr.com] covers a pretty good selection of devices that exploit known and practical natural phenomena.
I doubt ut (Score:2)
I mean, a donut (hyper-donut (3D curved through a 4D space I guess), is a weird topology. It has axis for example. If our universe is a closed topology a hypersphere would be the most expected topology.
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Indeed. All our observations are consistent with the universe being isotropic and homogeneous.
A hypersphere explains that better than a donut.
Cosmological principle [wikipedia.org]
Re: I doubt ut (Score:2)
Think of Pac-Man and how leaving the screen on one side lands you at the opposite side. The Pac-Man playing arena is topologically the same as the surface of a donut, and it's called a 2D torus. Note that you don't need anything 3-dimensional to describe the dynamics of Pac-Man.
If you imagine now a cube with the same feature of leaving one side bringing yo
Re: I doubt ut (Score:2)
This is a great analogy. I'm confused though why that's a 3D torus. When I imagine what the Pac-Man screen is doing - basically wrapping the 2D flat world around on itself to make a shell, but correct me if I have that wrong - wouldn't the 3D version of that become something like a 4D sphere? I guess the basic question is what's the difference between a 3D torus and 4D sphere?
I'm sure that question reflects my lack of understanding, so please correct me if I'm envisioning this incorrectly.
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To put it another way, if you cut and flatten a sphere, then going east & west circles around the sphere without intersecting, but all north & south paths get you to a single point before going around; that doesn't happen in a torus.
If you make a "north & south" with parallels like the the east & west latitudes, those don't all cross all of the east-west latitudes; in a torus they do.
Since it's t
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)
There. You dropped that.
So if I follow this correctly.. (Score:5, Funny)
Is there extra-dimensional coffee to go along with that? Or is the coffee-shaped Universe an alternate Universe?
In other science news:
Scientists at the NASA Ames Research Center have discovered that dude, we can totally power our starship off of shrooms!
Re:So if I follow this correctly.. (Score:5, Funny)
Parallel Universe theory is a box of doughnuts.
Eat one and you still have 11 left.
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LOL no wonder the extra-dimensional Universe-eating cop is so fat, he has infinte Cosmic Doughnuts to eat!
I guess you've never seen The Langoliers (Score:3)
Or read the book by Stephen King.
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Oh hello everyone, allow me to introduce myself, I'm Viol8 and I have no detectable sense of humor whatsoever!
Have a doughnut and lighten up, dude. xD
Re: So if I follow this correctly.. (Score:2)
Two words: vacuum decay :-)
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Whoa, what was that, that just flew straight over my head?
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If the universe is a donut... (Score:2)
Re:If the universe is a donut... (Score:5, Funny)
...then what's in the middle?!?
Another donut.
It's donuts all the way in.
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The universal timbit
Yeah, the Hawking Donut (Score:3)
Simpsons did it.
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Yummy (Score:2)
Now we can feed the entire planet several time over.
Why not a sphere? (Score:2)
A simpler shape with the same behavior.
Re: Why not a sphere? (Score:2)
Longitudinal lines lines are not parallel on a sphere, they converge. From previous papers, and math and observations I donâ(TM)t understand, such lines never converge in our universe, which rules out a spherical topology. Donuts and infinite topologies satisfy the âflat geometryâ(TM) that is observed. These guys are now saying a donut is more consistent with the frequencies observed in cosmic background radiation.
Sphere or torus is still flat (Score:2)
Longitudinal lines lines are not parallel on a sphere, they converge. From previous papers, and math and observations I donâ(TM)t understand, such lines never converge in our universe, which rules out a spherical topology. Donuts and infinite topologies satisfy the âflat geometryâ(TM) that is observed. These guys are now saying a donut is more consistent with the frequencies observed in cosmic background radiation.
Suppose you have a 3d universe of points where each point is a struct (as in C) with 6 pointers to its neighboring points. You can construct a large cube of such points and connect them such that everything appears Euclidean - everything connects at right angles, space is flat, with no curvature.
Now consider the left side plane of such a cube. For those points, where do the left pointers go?
If the pointers go nowhere (NULL), then your universe has a hard boundary and objects will bump into the boundary when
Call the helpline? (Score:3, Funny)
So the universe might be something like a vertical dipole antenna radiation pattern?
Hmmm.
Maybe with the right transmatch we might *finally* be able to get through to speak with Management. Or at least Management's voicemail system:
Press 1 for all Starfaring Extra Plus questions.
Press 2 for routing problems.
Press 3 for how to set up your Starfaring Basics account.
Press 3 for billing questions (what, you thought any of this would be free?
For all other questions press 4, or wait for a Team Member to assist you or your successor civilisation.
We are currently experiencing median waits of -- 3.15576 E 16 -- Hydrogen transition times.
You call is important to us, please stay on the line.
Press 5 to hear this menu again.
Nah (Score:2)
Iain M. Banks had it right! (Score:2)
This is similar to the topology of the universe described by Iain M. Banks in the Culture series, which is kinda cool.
Homer was right. (Score:5, Funny)
Obligatory Simpsons clip https://youtu.be/Mje7frMYzcY [youtu.be]
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Get your "Homer was Right!" T-shirts right here, folks!
Sorry, we're sold out of the "Homer was a Dope" T-shirts.
If finite . . . (Score:2)
What's on the outside? If they're saying our universe has a definitive shape and boundaries, what is beyond that boundary? What is our universe "sitting" in?
This is the question no one ever answers. It's the same one about the Big Bang. If we assume some fluctuation in the fabric of spacetime caused our universe to spring into existence, where was the spacetime fabric located? You can't say, "It always existed" or some such because then you're falling down the theological rabbit hole.
Even if our universe
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Thanks to modern memory protection you can rest assured that even if there were other processes running on our cluster, you'll never know about it.
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What's on the outside?
Asking this is like asking what’s north of the North Pole - our sense of space is determined by our placement within it - the “outside” is just what’s inaccessible behind a horizon like that of a black hole or “the beginning” of time.
If they're saying our universe has a definitive shape and boundaries, what is beyond that boundary? What is our universe "sitting" in?
It’s probably more abstract than this as it assumes as the notion of space has an absolute perspective. If you had two people Alice and Bob each at an opposite “edge” of our visible universe, Alice wouldn’t exist y
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It is funny isn't it? The way humans just can not handle the concept of infinity but, at the same time, we just can't handle the idea that things could just end and there's nothing after that.
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Actually, that's the difference between the analogies and the more-or-less incomprehensible mathematics. The universe doesn't have to be "sitting" in anything to have a definitive shape, i.e. topology.
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A torus doesn't have boundaries, that's the point. It's like a pac-man universe: the "edges" are connected so you don't fall off, you just wrap around to the other side. It's finite in size, with no boundaries.
Grigori Perelman (Score:3)
3D D (Score:3)
It's called a fuck'n torus.
And a donut IS three dimensional.
Where's my pencil gone?
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> It's called a fuck'n torus.
Yeah, everything about this universe exists relative to a torus / hyperboloid.
Did you know that the method discovered for error correction in quantum computing is the same as doing an FFT over a bitfield on a torus?
None of this is reasonable in an intuitive or natural sense.
The Universe Hyperboloid is mythologically known as the "Tree of Life".
So like the old computer RPGs (Score:2)
3 dimensional? (Score:2)
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Flatness (Score:2)
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You have to be careful with the concept of "flat." It doesn't mean the universe is a plane sitting in some higher dimensional space. Topologically flat means that parallel lines don't converge or diverge.
One possibility for a flat, unbounded universe is that it is infinite. An approximation of this would be a very large universe that isn't actually flat but seems flat to the precision of our measurements.
The other possibility is a torus, which is finite, flat, and unbounded. The surface of a doughnut doesn'
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I'm not sure exactly what you're talking about. Both the toroidal and the infinite space models are flat. This story is about an observation of the cosmic microwave background that is more consistent with the toroidal model.
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Conway's "Game of Life" (Score:2)
Isn't the universe used Conway's "Game of Life" usually described as a torus/donut? This means that when you go off to the right, you end up at the left and when you go off to the top, you end up at the bottom.
If it is, then this really seems like more of an observation worthy of Douglas Adams than a physical fact.
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Pac-man is like this. Conway's Game of Life is an infinite plane.
Problem with relativity. (Score:2)
Relativity says that there is no difference between me flying away from you at near light speed going "up" and you flying away from me at near light speed gong "down".
The only way we can meet up again to see which one us 'aged' and which one of took advantage of near light speed time effects, is that one of us has to reverse direction. In effect, this direction reversal is the determinant of the aging.
But if the universe is one large game of asteroids, as implied here, then there IS a difference between m
This is old news.... (Score:2)
...Phish explained this four years ago. [youtube.com]
Close (Score:2)
So Homer (Score:2)
is GOD !
Thought (Score:2)
If an object/matter could "circle" the universe and return to the same spot eventually, then it seems like it would be a valid assumption that light could do the same.
In that regard it could be that some of the "far away" galaxies we see at extreme distances could actually be repeats of galaxies that we've seen closer but at an earlier period in time. Hell one or more of the distant galaxies that we see could indeed be the Milky Way from a distance in the past. Sort of like seeing a reflection of ourselve
Says the universe author (Score:2)
famous last words: "45 bn ly should be enough for anyone"
>> our entire cosmos might only be about three to four times larger than the limits of the observable universe, about 45 billion light-years away.
Asteroids (Score:2)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]!
Because living in a sphere (Score:2)
Is boring and old hat
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Fear the time of The Coming of the Great Yellow Homer.
No, its doughnut (Score:2, Informative)
Yanks - learn to spell! :)
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(there is a law somewhere that all spelling/grammar flames contain such an error. Therefore I included a typo in the above post to appease the internet Gods. (oh dear, should I have capitalised "Internet"?))
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(there is a law somewhere that all spelling/grammar flames contain such an error. Therefore I included a typo in the above post to appease the internet Gods. (oh dear, should I have capitalised "Internet"?))
Behold Muphry's Law: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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American English doesn't have a "correct" spelling, just a commonly agreed upon spelling.
Many of the American English words are French, Spanish, German words that we mix into English Grammar. That is why we pronounce "Jalapeno" as Hallapayneo We decided to use the Spanish phonics into this word, and not transpose the letters to match English phonics. But then we also may have a spelling for different words that matches our accents such as American Color vs British Colour
That is why often when people in s
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Is there any other context in which "do" is pronounced "dough"? Can't immediately think of one.
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Judo?
Tae Kwan Do?
Kendo?
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Those are mis-transliterations though. Judo, for example, should actually be written as Juudou because both the u and the o are supposed to be elongated. Normally when transliterating with the romaji system they would either have a u added on or have a macron over them.
Same with Kendo, not sure about Tae Kwan Do. It's not uncommon with Japanese words, e.g. Tokyo should really be Toukyou or written with macrons over the two o's (but Slashdot doesn't seem to support macrons).
Maybe the donut error propagated.
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Don't discount donation, dodecahedron, or that docent who stole my Doberman.
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Yeah... Feel like the "do" in those is shorter than the "dough" in doughnut though. Like it's a hard stop after the o. I don't know the correct term for it.
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Those are adopted words, I believe. I don't think they should be counted as you work normal words that follow normal spelling convention. Qatar, for example, in the English dictionary doesn't follow normal spelling rules.
Re:No, its doughnut (Score:4, Funny)
Come on, this is Slashdot... Lando.
Yeah yeah, queue up the jokes that it should be spelled Landough for appearances in the final trilogy.
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Don't know..
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DO re mi fa sol la ti DO
DOdecahedron
DOlemite, Baby.
DOn't
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*ducks*
Re: No, its doughnut (Score:2)
I always pronounced it sourdough.
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You may jest, but yes, Homer said it first [youtube.com].
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It's a superposition of both at the same time until you taste it.
--Quantum mechanics is funny like that.
Then it will be the one you didn't want.
--God is still funnier.
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Pythagoras, Boole, Bayes, Turing and others made up some weird stuff..
At first they were entirely useless to humanity. But eventually they proved to be useful even far beyond what the original authors imagined.
Bayes himself never saw any practicality to his famous theorem. It was some guy looking through the old priest's papers that made it into a coherent theory. Who knew it would be at the heart of self-driving cars???
Basic science is often impractical. It's all about laying foundations for the future. As
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Wouldn't all the man hours and dollars spent on this have been better directed at improving life on the planet?
Not really since most of humanity wastes a lot more man hour and dollars for far stupider things that often actively degrade the human condition.
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They mean the surface of the doughnut is 3d. The surface of a regular doughnut is 2d.
The journalist clearly had very little interest in what they were writing about.