martes, 26 de abril de 2011

Post Big-Bang 'Weirdness' --Radical New Theory Says the Early Universe had Only 1 Dimension (and that a 4th exists today)



Post Big-Bang 'Weirdness' --Radical New Theory Says the Early Universe had Only 1 Dimension (and that a 4th exists today)




OneDimensionUniverse

Scientists have outlined a test to discover if the early universe had just one spatial dimension. This mind-boggling concept is at the heart of a theory that University at Buffalo physicist Dejan Stojkovic and colleagues proposed that suggests that the early universe -- which exploded from a single point and was very, very small at first -- was one-dimensional before expanding to include two dimensions and then three -- the world in which we live today.

The theory, if valid, would address important problems in particle physics. Stojkovic and Loyola Marymount University physicist Jonas Mureika have described a test that could prove or disprove the "vanishing dimensions" hypothesis.



Because it takes time for light and other waves to travel to Earth, telescopes peering out into space can, essentially, look back into time as they probe the universe's outer reaches. Gravitational waves can't exist in one- or two-dimensional space. So Stojkovic and Mureika have reasoned that the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA), a planned international gravitational observatory, should not detect any gravitational waves emanating from the lower-dimensional epochs of the early universe.



Stojkovic, an assistant professor of physics, says the theory of evolving dimensions represents a radical shift from the way we think about the cosmos -- about how our universe came to be. The core idea is that the dimensionality of space depends on the size of the space we're observing, with smaller spaces associated with fewer dimensions. That means that a fourth dimension will open up (and may have already) as the universe continues to expand.



The theory also suggests that space has fewer dimensions at very high energies of the kind associated with the early, post-big bang universe. If Stojkovic and his colleagues are right, they will be helping to address fundamental problems with the standard model of particle physics, including the following:



*The incompatibility between quantum mechanics and general relativity. Quantum mechanics and general relativity are mathematical frameworks that describe the physics of the universe. Quantum mechanics is good at describing the universe at very small scales, while relativity is good at describing the universe at large scales. Currently, the two theories are considered incompatible; but if the universe, at its smallest levels, had fewer dimensions, mathematical discrepancies between the two frameworks would disappear.



*The mystery of the universe's accelerating expansion:  Physicists have observed that the expansion of the universe is speeding up, and they don't know why. The addition of new dimensions as the universe grows would explain this acceleration. Stojkovic says a fourth dimension may have already opened at large, cosmological scales.



*The need to alter the mass of the Higgs boson:  The standard model of particle physics predicts the existence of an as yet undiscovered elementary particle called the Higgs boson. For equations in the standard model to accurately describe the observed physics of the real world, however, researchers must artificially adjust the mass of the Higgs boson for interactions between particles that take place at high energies. If space has fewer dimensions at high energies, the need for this kind of "tuning" disappears.



"What we're proposing here is a shift in paradigm," Stojkovic said. "Physicists have struggled with the same problems for 10, 20, 30 years, and straight-forward extensions of the existing ideas are unlikely to solve them."



"We have to take into account the possibility that something is systematically wrong with our ideas," he continued. "We need something radical and new, and this is something radical and new."



Because the planned deployment of LISA is still years away, it may be a long time before Stojkovic and his colleagues are able to test their ideas this way.



However, some experimental evidence already points to the possible existence of lower-dimensional space. Specifically, scientists have observed that the main energy flux of cosmic ray particles with energies exceeding 1 teraelectron volt -- the kind of high energy associated with the very early universe -- are aligned along a two-dimensional plane.



If high energies do correspond with lower-dimensional space, as the "vanishing dimensions" theory proposes, researchers working with the Large Hadron Collider particle accelerator in Europe should see planar scattering at such energies.



Stojkovic says the observation of such events would be "a very exciting, independent test of our proposed ideas."

Image  below is a combined radio/optical image showsthe galaxy cluster Abell 3376 today in visible ligh(blue) and radio (red) images. The giant radioarcs surrounding the cluster were discovered using the Very Large Array. The visible-light image is from the Digitized Sky survey. Credit: Joydeep Bagchi, IUCAA, NRAO/AUI/NSF

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Provided by The Daily Galaxy / The University at Buffalo