Title: How bizarre is our universe?
1How bizarre is our universe?
- The Past
- The Future
- Black Hole Evaporation
- Dark Energy
- What Caused the Big Bang?
- The Multiverse
2Four separate forces today(t13.75 billion years
after Big Bang)
- Particle with mass? Affected by gravity.
- Particle with colour charge? Affected by
strong force. - Particle with flavour charge? Affected by weak
force. - Particle with electric charge? Affected by
electromagnetic force. - (The above is a simplification, but useful.)
3(No Transcript)
4Only one force (we think)at tlt10-43 seconds
after Big Bang
- Particle with mass, colour, flavour or electric
charge? Affected by quantum gravity force.
5GUT Era lasts from Planck time (10-43 sec) to
end of GUT force (10-38 sec). At that point,
inflation occurs as the strong forces separates
from gravity releases energy (first kinetic,
then thermal)
6Two separate forcesat tlt10-38 seconds after Big
Bang
- Particle with mass? Affected by gravity.
- Particle with colour, flavour or electric charge?
Affected by GUT force.
7Three separate forcesat tlt10-30 seconds after
Big Bang
- Particle with mass? Affected by gravity.
- Particle with colour charge? Affected by
strong force. - Particle with flavour or electric charge?
Affected by electroweak force.
8Four separate forces today(t13.75 billion years
after Big Bang)
- Particle with mass? Affected by gravity.
- Particle with colour charge? Affected by
strong force. - Particle with flavour charge? Affected by weak
force. - Particle with electric charge? Affected by
electromagnetic force.
9The fate of Earth, and our universe
- 1 billion years runaway greenhouse effect on
Earth, making Earth as hot as Venus, unless
something is done (for example orbiting
sunshades changing Earths orbit) - Not to be confused with ongoing greenhouse
effect, which could be disastrous to many species
of life on Earth, but not to Earth itself.
10The fate of Earth, and our universe
- 1 billion years runaway greenhouse effect on
Earth, making Earth as hot as Venus - 6 billion years Sun becomes a red giant, Earth a
lava planet (unless something is done) - 8 billion years Sun becomes a slowly cooling
white dwarf, Earth a slowly cooling rock - 10 billion years Milky Way likely merges with
Andromeda other galaxies, forming a giant
elliptical galaxy (call it FMW - former Milky
Way Earths night sky will no longer have a
Milky Way)
11The fate of the former Milky Way (FMW)
- 100 billion years acceleration of universe
redshifts all light from beyond the FMW beyond
detection - 10 trillion years conventional star formation
stops - 100 trillion years lowest-mass stars stop
burning hydrogen (only white dwarfs brown
dwarfs left) - 1 quadrillion (1015) years star-star
collisions close encounters have disrupted all
solar systems - 1020 years star-star collisions have ejected
all stars from galaxies or sent them into
central BHs - 1025 years any remaining binary star or
planetary systems have merged via gravitational
radiation
12The fate of our universe
- 1040 years (?) protons and bound neutrons decay
(?) as a probable consequence of there being more
protons and neutrons than anti-protons and
anti-neutrons in the universe in the first place.
If such decay happens, universe left with only
photons, (anti)electrons, neutrinos, dark
matter?, black holes. - 1070 years stellar-mass black holes start
evaporating
13Hawking radiation black hole evaporation
- If nothing escapes a black hole, how can it
evaporate? - Remember quantum fluctuations
particle-antiparticle pairs can appear and
disappear, as long as they last for a short
enough time
14Quantum fluctuations
- On the smallest possible scales, the universe
doesnt play by normal rules. - Particle/antiparticle pairs can appear
disappear, if they last for a short enough time - electron-positron pairs can last for 10-22
seconds - proton-antiproton pairs have higher mass-energy
and can last for only 10-25 seconds (at most) - So on extremely short timescales and extremely
small spatial scales, the amount of energy in
existence at one time in one spot fluctuates
15Hawking radiation black hole evaporation
- If nothing escapes a black hole, how can it
evaporate? - Quantum fluctuations are stronger when gravity is
stronger, and the smallest black holes have the
strongest gravity at their event horizons - So what happens if a particle and antiparticle
both appear near the event horizon of a black
hole, but one falls in and one flies away?
16Timeincreasesupwards
17Hawking radiation black hole evaporation
- If nothing escapes a black hole, how can it
evaporate? - Quantum fluctuations are stronger when gravity is
stronger, and the smallest black holes have the
strongest gravity at their event horizons - So what happens if a particle and antiparticle
both appear near the event horizon of a black
hole, but one falls in and one flies away? - Then from our point of view, the black hole has
emitted a particle (or antiparticle) and has lost
mass! - So black holes should eventually evaporate
(Hawking radiation not observed, but accepted).
18Dark energy and the fate of our universe
- 100 billion years acceleration of universe
redshifts all light from beyond the FMW (former
Milky Way) beyond detection
19Dark energy and the fate of our universe
- 100 billion years acceleration of universe
redshifts all light from beyond the FMW beyond
detection - Beyond that, we dont know enough about dark
energy to know what it might do. Some ideas
20Dark energy and the fate of our universe
- 100 billion years acceleration of universe
redshifts all light from beyond the FMW beyond
detection - Beyond that, we dont know enough about dark
energy to know what it might do. Some ideas - Big Rip happens if dark energy is a phantom
energy which grows stronger with time and rips
apart planets, molecules, nuclei, nucleons.
21Dark energy and the fate of our universe
- 100 billion years acceleration of universe
redshifts all light from beyond the FMW beyond
detection - Beyond that, we dont know enough about dark
energy to know what it might do. Some ideas - Big Rip phantom energy grows stronger with
time and rips apart planets, molecules, nuclei,
nucleons. - Standard dark energy yields accelerating
universe but no big rip vacuum energy is
constant with time
22Dark energy and the fate of our universe
- 100 billion years acceleration of universe
redshifts all light from beyond the FMW beyond
detection - Beyond that, we dont know enough about dark
energy to know what it might do. Some ideas - Big Rip phantom energy grows stronger with
time and rips apart planets, molecules, nuclei,
nucleons. - Standard dark energy yields accelerating
universe but no big rip vacuum energy is
constant with time - Decaying dark energy acceleration stops,
reverses?
23Dark energy and the fate of our universe
- 100 billion years acceleration of universe
redshifts all light from beyond the FMW beyond
detection - Beyond that, we dont know enough about dark
energy to know what it might do. Some ideas - Big Rip phantom energy grows stronger with
time and rips apart planets, molecules, nuclei,
nucleons. - Standard dark energy yields accelerating
universe but no big rip vacuum energy is
constant with time - Decaying dark energy acceleration stops,
reverses? - Wont know fate of universe for sure until we
understand dark energy. (If then!)
24The (probable) fate of our universe
- 1040 years (?) protons and bound neutrons decay
(?) as a probable consequence of there being more
protons and neutrons than anti-protons and
anti-neutrons in the universe in the first place.
If such decay happens, universe left with only
photons, (anti)electrons, neutrinos, dark
matter?, black holes. - 1070 years stellar-mass black holes start
evaporating - 10100 years even the most supermassive black
holes have evaporated (by Hawking radiation) at
this point - Universe is cold, dark, nearly empty.
25So much for the end of the universethe universe
seems to go fromBig Bang to Big Whimper.But
what about the beginning?What caused the Big
Bang?
26What caused the Big Bang?
- Currently (always?), science runs out of answers
to why? questions at this point. - But cosmologists have lots of ideas!
27What caused the Big Bang?
- Currently (always?), science runs out of answers
to why? questions at this point. - But cosmologists have lots of ideas!
- Conservation of energy The universes positive
kinetic mass-energy plus its negative potential
energy (gravitational, electroweak, and
strong-force) can sum to zero.
28What caused the Big Bang?
- Currently (always?), science runs out of answers
to why? questions at this point. - But cosmologists have lots of ideas!
- Conservation of energy The universes positive
kinetic mass-energy plus its negative
gravitational, electroweak, and strong-force
potential energy can sum to zero. - Superstrings in this currently popular theory,
all particles are actually vibrating
1-dimensional strings of the minimum possible
size the Planck length (10-33 cm) - Superstring theory predicts there are 10
dimensions, not four (1 time, 3 space, and 6 very
tiny rolled up or 'compactified' space dimensions)
29A two-dimensional cylinder looks like
a1-dimensional line if the width of the cylinder
is much smaller than its length
30With 6 or 7 dimensions, you get weirder geometric
shapes, but the idea is the same
31A point in spacetime would not be t,x,y,zbut
t,x,y,z,a,b,c,d,e,f maybe g
32What caused the Big Bang?
- Superstring theory predicts there are 10
dimensions, not four (1 time, 3 space, and 6 very
tiny compactified space dimensions) - Superstring theory might unify gravity and
quantum mechanics. In this theory, all particles
are actually vibrating 1-dimensional strings of
the minimum possible size the Planck length
(10-33 cm)
33What caused the Big Bang?
- Superstring theory might unify gravity and
quantum mechanics. In this theory, all particles
are actually vibrating 1-dimensional strings of
the minimum possible size the Planck length
(10-33 cm) - Superstring theory predicts there are 10
dimensions, not four (1 time, 3 space, and 6 very
tiny compactified space dimensions) - M-theory (M for membrane, a 2-D string) predicts
11 dimensions, with the 11th reached only by
gravity
34What caused the Big Bang?
- Superstring theory might unify gravity and
quantum mechanics. In this theory, all particles
are actually vibrating 1-dimensional strings of
the minimum possible size the Planck length
(10-33 cm) - Superstring theory predicts there are 10
dimensions, not four (1 time, 3 space, and 6 very
tiny compactified space dimensions) - M-theory (M for membrane, a 2-D string) predicts
11 dimensions, with the 11th reached only by
gravity - Big Bang caused by (mem)branes colliding in that
11th dimension? Cyclic Big Bangs?
35What caused the Big Bang?
- Did the Big Bang occur as a quantum fluctuation
in another universe?
36Quantum energy fluctuations quantum mass
fluctuations quantum spacetime fluctuations
37What caused the Big Bang?
- Did the Big Bang occur as a quantum fluctuation
in another universe? - or did the universe create itself? (Quantum
fluctuations at the Planck length might be able
to create a wormhole through which energy travels
back in time 10-43 seconds to create the
spacetime!)
38Wormhole in spacetime
39What caused the Big Bang?
40Just how bizarre is our universe?
- The Multiverse if our universe is finite, there
might be other universes beyond it (separated by
regions of eternal inflation)
41Duplicate universes?
- If our universe (or the multiverse) is infinite,
then any part of it must eventually repeat
itself. - The consequences may argue against
universe/multiverse being infinite! - No communication between island universes,
however.
42Just how bizarre is our universe?
- Regardless of whether our universe is finite or
infinite, quantum mechanics might allow parallel
universes to exist. - Such universe might overlap with ours yet be
impossible for us to perceive!
43Is any of this testable?
44Is any of this testable? Yes!
- (Though not all of it, and not easily)
- Analogs to Hawking radiation exist (e.g., high
acceleration substitutes for strong gravity) - Patterns in CMBR constrain amount of inflation,
cyclical Big Bang theories, bubble universes,
etc. - Quantum gravity theory would aid in understanding
both general relativity (wormholes) and quantum
mechanics (parallel universes) better - Measuring history of universes expansion will
tell us more about dark energy (e.g., Big Rip or
not)
45Just how bizarre is our universe?
- The Multiverse regions of eternal inflation
separating island universes where inflation
stopped?
46Just how bizarre is our universe?
- The Multiverse regions of eternal inflation
separating island universes where inflation
stopped? - Weak Anthropic Principle why are the physical
constants of our universe just right to allow
stars and planets to form and thus give life a
chance to develop?
47Just how bizarre is our universe?
- The Multiverse regions of eternal inflation
separating island universes where inflation
stopped? - Weak Anthropic Principle why are the physical
constants of our universe just right to allow
stars and planets to form and thus give life a
chance to develop? Because by definition, life
will develop only in universes that allow life to
develop (e.g., that dont have too much dark
energy or dark matter).
48Just how bizarre is our universe?
- The Multiverse if our universe is finite, there
might be other universes beyond it (eternal
inflation) - Weak Anthropic Principle why are the physical
constants of our universe just right to allow
stars and planets to form and thus give life a
chance to develop? Because by definition, life
will develop only in universes that allow life to
develop (e.g., that dont have too much dark
energy or dark matter). - Only universes that can support life will have
life in them wondering why the universe supports
life!