Posted on 09 December 2009. Tags: antimatter, atom smasher, Big Bang, Cern, Chicago, Christine Sutton, dark matter, European Organization for Nuclear Research, Fermilab, Geneva, high-energy collisions, Large Haldron Collider, Physicists, protons, universe
By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS
GENEVA
The world’s largest atom smasher has recorded its first high-energy collisions of protons, a spokeswoman said Wednesday.
Physicists hope those collisions will help them understand suspected phenomena such as dark matter, antimatter and ultimately the creation of the universe billions of years ago, which many theorize occurred as a massive explosion known as the Big Bang. Read the full story
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Posted on 09 November 2009. Tags: Andrei Linde, Big Bang, multiverse, Physicists, possible universes, quantum, quantum fluctuations, space, Stanford, Vitaly Vanchurin
The strongest limit on the number of possible universes is the human ability to distinguish between different universes. Credit: Linde and Vanchurin.
In a new study, Stanford physicists Andrei Linde and Vitaly Vanchurin have calculated the number of all possible universes, coming up with an answer of 10^10^16. If that number sounds large, the scientists explain that it would have been even more humongous, except that we observers are limited in our ability to distinguish more universes; otherwise, there could be as many as 10^10^10^7 universes.
To work these numbers out, Linde and Vanchurin looked back to the time shortly after the Big Bang, which they view as a quantum process that generated lots of quantum fluctuations. Then during the period of inflation, the universe grew rapidly and these quantum fluctuations were “frozen” into classical perturbations in distinct regions. Today, each of these regions could be a different universe, having its own distinct laws of low energy physics.
By analyzing the mechanism (called “slow roll inflation“) that initially generated the quantum fluctuations, the scientists could estimate the number of resulting universes at 10^10^10^7 (a number which is dependent on the model they used). However, this number is limited by other factors, specifically by the limits of the human brain. Since the total amount of information that one individual can absorb in a lifetime is about 10^16 bits, which is equivalent to 10^10^16 configurations, this means that a human brain couldn’t distinguish more than 10^10^16 universes.
Requiring that the human brain must be able to count the number of parallel universes may seem inappropriate, if not arrogant, but Linde and Vanchurin explain that dealing with the quantum world is different than our everyday lives in which quantum effects can be safely ignored. A crucial part of their calculation here is an investigation of quantum effects on supergalactic scales. In this kind of scenario, the state of the multiverse and observations made by an observer are correlated (similar to the Schrodinger cat experiment, where the outcome can be determined only after it is registered by a classical observer).
“When we analyze the probability of the existence of a universe of a given type, we should be talking about a consistent pair: the universe and an observer who makes the rest of the universe ‘alive’ and the wave function of the rest of the universe time-dependent,” the scientists write.
As the scientists explain, the calculation of the number of universes is an important step toward an even larger goal: to find the probability of living in a universe with a particular set of properties. What are the chances that we live in a world in which the laws of physics are these laws that we currently observe? Answering this question requires finding probabilities that depend on knowing about other universes, among many other challenges.
http://www.physorg.com/
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Cogent Nirvana, History, J.K., Space
Posted on 05 October 2009. Tags: astronomy, Astrophysics, Big Bang, COnvection ROtation and planetary Transit satellite, COROT, CoRoT-7b, David Latham, Earth-like planets, HARPS, Harvard, Harvard-Smithsonian Center, jupiter, NASA, oxygen atoms, solar system, sun, universe, University of Colorado
2009-10-03
“It could happen almost any time now. We now have the technological capability to identify Earth-like planets around the smallest stars.”
David Latham -Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
To date, Planet hunters have spotted more than 300 planets beyond our solar system, but the vast majority are hot, Jupiter-sized planets that would dwarf the Earth and are almost certainly lifeless. Read the full story
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