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淺談「大爆炸」 - C. Moskowitz
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若有所思

The Big Bang: Solid Theory, But Mysteries Remain

 Clara Moskowitz, Senior Writer, SPACE.com

The Big Bang was the beginning of the universe as we know it, most scientists say. But was it the first beginning, and will it be the last?

A popular picture of the early universe imagines a single Big Bang, after which space blew up quickly like a giant bubble. But another theory posits that we live in a universe of 11 dimensions, where all particles are actually made of tiny vibrating strings. This could create a universe stuck in a cycle of Big Bangs and Big Crunches, due to repeat on loop.

Which scenario is closer to the truth remains to be seen, but scientists say new experiments underway could provide more answers soon.

The Big Bang

According to the Big Bang theory, the universe began extremely hot and extremely dense. Around 14 billion years ago, space itself expanded and cooled down, eventually allowing atoms to form and clump together to build the stars and galaxies we see today.

On this, most scientists are agreed.

"I would say that there is 100 percent consensus, really," University of Pennsylvania particle physicist Burt Ovrut said of the Big Bang theory. "There is overwhelming evidence – all of the predictions are true."

For example, this theory predicted that the universe today would be filled with pervasive light left over from the Big Bang. This glow, called the cosmic microwave background radiation, was discovered in 1964, almost 20 years after it was forecast.

However, what caused the Big Bang, what happened at that exact moment, and what came immediately after it, are much more open to debate.

A giant bubble

A dominant idea that connects the dots between the Big Bang and the universe we find today is called inflation. This is the notion that during the first roughly 10 to the minus 34 seconds (0.0000000000000000000000000000000001 seconds), the universe underwent exponential expansion, doubling in size at least 90 times. During this early stage, matter was in a much different state than it is now.

This theory could explain some of the main conundrums posed by the Big Bang: Why does the universe appear mostly flat, with roughly the same amount of stuff spread smoothly throughout it in all directions?

"If you imagine the matter was in that different state in the early universe, the whole story changes," said Andreas Albrecht, a theoretical physicist at the University of California, Davis and one of the initiators of inflation. "The physics can create the smoothness for you. Inflation also makes it flat. It all fits beautifully into this story told by inflation."

But Albrecht and others admit the theory doesn't yet explain the whole picture.

"Inflation is easily the most popular theory in cosmology," said theoretical physicist Neil Turok, director of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Ontario, Canada. "It's a good theory, but it has some weak points. It can't describe the moment of the Big Bang."

The Big Bang theory envisions the universe beginning from a singularity – a mathematical concept of infinite temperature and infinite density packed into a single point of space. But scientists don't think this is what actually happened.

"It wouldn't really be infinite," explained physicist Paul Steinhardt, director of the Princeton Center for Theoretical Science at Princeton University in Princeton, N.J., and another architect of inflation. "Infinity just means a mathematical breakdown. It's a statement that you shouldn't have extrapolated your equations back that far because they just blew up in your face."

Neither Big Bang theory nor inflationary theory can describe what happened at that moment.

And inflation has other problems, in some people's view. Because of quantum fluctuations, different parts of the universe could inflate at different rates, creating "bubble universes" that are much larger than other regions. Our universe may be just one in a multiverse, where different scales and physical laws reign.

"It means everything and anything that can happen, will," Steinhardt told SPACE.com. "So basically everything could be a prediction of inflation. This to me is a fundamental problem and we don't know how to get away from it."

Others say that while inflation may not be complete yet, it's still the most useful thing we've got to describe the origin of the universe.

"Even if all things are possible it could turn out that some things are much more possible than others, and you could still have a prediction," Albrecht said. "The real excitement to me is that there's so much data supporting inflation that it really makes it seem worth thinking about these questions."

Cycles and cycles

In 2001, Steinhardt and Turok proposed an idea called the cyclic model, based on an earlier concept called the ekpyrotic universe that they'd conceived with Ovrut.

In this scenario, the universe undergoes an endless sequence of "bangs" and "crunches" – i.e. periods of expansion followed by periods of contraction. At each transition, the universe would have some finite temperature and density, rather than the infinity of the singularity, and the expansion and contraction would be relatively slow, as opposed to the exponentially quick expansion proposed by inflation.

The idea is based on M-theory, a version of string theory which suggests that every particle is in fact a tiny loop of string whose vibration pattern determines what type of particle it will be. However, M-theory requires the universe to have 11 dimensions. So far, we can only detect four dimensions – three of space and one of time. But maybe the other seven are hidden, proponents say.

Scientists call the four-dimensional part of the universe we can see a brane, and suggest that other four-dimensional branes may also exist inside this 11-dimesnional space.

"If you have another brane living in higher dimensions, it's extremely likely to move and slam into our own brane," Ovrut said. "You have a brane with exactly the structure of our real world, and other branes that are likely to hit us, and all of the energy of colliding universes would come into play. Gee, that sounds a heck of a lot like the Big Bang to me."

Advocates of the idea say it offers an exciting way of addressing the issue of what prompted the Big Bang, and it avoids some of the pitfalls of inflation.

"In the cyclic theory you are not only describing the last bang, but the ones before it," Turok explained. "It's a bigger picture, more complete and hopefully more logically consistent."

But other researchers say the cyclic model just hasn't come far enough to offer a real alternative to inflation.

"Inflation runs into trouble when you try to make the big picture work, but I don't think the cyclic people have really worked that hard to make the big picture work any better," Albrecht said. "I think they have their hands full with technical issues."

Testing the models

Luckily, scientists may not have to wait too long to learn which theory is a better bet. The models make different predictions about certain aspects of the universe that are measurable today.

For example, inflation could have created gravitational waves – distortions of space-time caused by gravity – that should be observable.

Some new instruments, like the Planck satellite which launched in 2009, and an instrument called a polarimeter being built at the South Pole Telescope in Antarctica, could measure these waves.

"If we were to observe those gravitational waves, that would kill the cyclic-ekpyrotic-bouncing theories," Steinhardt said. "It would be very consistent with the inflation idea."

However, not finding the waves wouldn't really blow a death knell to either theory, since some versions of inflation don't require gravitational waves. Either way, it should be exciting, scientists say.

"The quality of astronomical data is just shooting up," Albrecht said. "The data will probably be collected in the next five to 10 years, and you can just see what happens."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/space/20100319/sc_space/thebigbangsolidtheorybutmysteriesremain



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宇宙年齡新估計:13.81BY - L. Hinnant/S. Borenstein
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Universe ages 80M years; Big Bang gets clearer

 

LORI HINNANT/ SETH BORENSTEIN, Associated Press, 03/22/13

 

PARIS (AP) -- New results from looking at the split-second after the Big Bang indicate the universe is 80 million years older than previously thought and provide ancient evidence supporting core concepts about the cosmos -- how it began, what it's made of and where it's going.

 

The findings released Thursday bolster a key theory called inflation, which says the universe burst from subatomic size to its now-observable expanse in a fraction of a second. The new observations from the European Space Agency's $900 million Planck space probe appear to reinforce some predictions made decades ago solely on the basis of mathematical concepts.

 

"We've uncovered a fundamental truth of the universe," said George Efstathiou, director of the Kavli Institute for Cosmology at the University of Cambridge who announced the Planck satellite mapping result in Paris. "There's less stuff that we don't understand by a tiny amount."

 

"It's a big pat on the back for our understanding of the universe," California Institute of Technology physicist Sean Carroll, who was not involved in the project, told The Associated Press. "In terms of describing the current universe, I think we have a right to say we're on the right track."

 

The Big Bang -- the most comprehensive theory of the universe's beginning -- says the visible portion of the universe was smaller than an atom when, in a split second, it exploded, cooled and expanded faster than the speed of light.

 

The Planck space probe looked back at the afterglow of the Big Bang, and those results have now added about 80 million years to the universe's age, putting it at 13.81 billion years old.

 

The probe, named for the German physicist Max Planck, the originator of quantum physics, also found that the cosmos is expanding a bit slower than originally thought, has a little less of that mysterious dark energy than astronomers had figured and has a tad more normal matter. But scientists say those are small changes in calculations about the universe, whose numbers are so massive.

 

Officials at NASA, which also was part of the experiment, said the Planck probe has provided a deeper understanding of the intricate history of the universe and its complex composition.

 

Krzysztof Gorski, a Planck scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab, said in a statement that the new results "are giving astronomers a treasure trove of spectacular data, and bringing forth a deeper understanding of the properties and history of the universe."

 

The Planck space telescope, launched in 2009, has spent 15 1/2 months mapping the sky, examining so-called "light" fossils and sound echoes from the Big Bang by looking at background radiation in the cosmos. The spacecraft is expected to keep transmitting data until late 2013, when it runs out of cooling fluid.

 

Scientists not involved in the project said the results were comparable on a universal scale to the announcement earlier this month by a different European physics group on a subatomic level -- with the finding of the Higgs boson particle that explains mass in the universe.

 

"What a wonderful triumph of the mathematical approach to describing nature," said Brian Greene, a Columbia University physicist who was not part of the new Planck research. "It's an amazing story of discovery."

 

"The precision is breathtaking," Greene said in an email Thursday after the announcement. "The satellite is measuring temperature variations in space -- which arose from processes that took place almost 14 billion years ago -- to one part in a million. Amazing."

Efstathiou marveled at how the Planck data was such "an extremely good match" to the theory of rapid inflation in the split-second after the Big Bang.

 

Inflation tries to explain some nagging problems left over from the Big Bang, which formed the universe in a sudden burst. Other space probes have shown that the geometry of the universe is predominantly flat, but the Big Bang said it should curve with time. Another problem was that opposite ends of space are so far apart that they could never have been near each other under the normal laws of physics, but early cosmic microwave background measurements show they must have been in contact.

 

So a few physicists more than 30 years ago came up with a theory to explain this: Inflation. That says the universe swelled tremendously, going "from subatomic size to something as large as the observable universe in a fraction of a second," Greene said.

 

Planck shows that inflation is proving to be the best explanation for what happened just after the Big Bang, but that doesn't mean it is the right theory or that it even comes close to resolving all the outstanding problems in the theory, Efstathiou said.

 

There was an odd spike in some of the Planck temperature data that hinted at a preferred direction or axis that seemed to fit nicely with the angle of our solar system, which shouldn't be, he said.

 

But overall, Planck's results touched on mysteries of the universe that have already garnered scientists three different Nobel prizes. Twice before scientists studying cosmic background radiation have won a Nobel Prize -- in 1978 and 2006 -- and other work on dark energy won the Nobel in 2011.

 

At the press conference, Efstathiou said the pioneers of inflation theory should start thinking about their own Nobel prizes. Two of those theorists -- Paul Steinhardt of Princeton and Andreas Albrecht of University of California Davis -- said before the announcement that they were sort of hoping that their inflation theory would not be bolstered.

 

That's because taking inflation a step further leads to a sticky situation: An infinite number of universes.

 

To make inflation work, that split-second of expansion may not stop elsewhere like it does in the observable universe, Albrecht and Steinhardt said. That means there are places where expansion is zooming fast, with an infinite number of universes that stretch to infinity, they said.

 

Steinhardt dismissed any talk of a Nobel.

 

"This is about how humans figure out how the universe works and where it's going," Steinhardt said Thursday. "And it's kind of a raucous time at the moment."

 

Efstathiou said the Planck results ultimately could give rise to entirely new fields of physics -- and some unresolvable oddities in explaining the cosmos.

 

"You can get very, very strange answers to problems when you start thinking about what different observers might see in different universes," he said.

 

Borenstein reported from Washington.

 

Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears . Lori Hinnant can be followed at http://twitter.com/lhinnant .

 

http://news.yahoo.com/universe-ages-80m-years-big-bang-gets-clearer-111323707.html



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文章推薦:《「大爆炸」的簡易說明》
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Why I Am a Liar Straight from the 'Pit of Hell'

作者Ethan Siegel

 

http://www.realclearscience.com/2012/10/06/why_i_am_a_liar_straight_from_the_039pit_of_hell039_249381.html

 

本文解釋宇宙學中的「大爆炸理論」。對非理工科的網友來說,可能並不「簡易」。此文附有此處無法複製的圖片。請移駕瀏覽。文章題目的典故請看作者的解釋



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「大跳躍」vs「大爆炸」 - C. Kazan
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Before the beginging: The Big Bang Rheory Challenged

Casey Kazan . 08/07/07

New discoveries about another universe whose collapse appears to have given birth to the one we live in today as it traveled through a "Big Bounce," has been proposed by Martin Bojowald, assistant professor of physics at Penn State. The "Big Bounce" would replace the classical idea of a Big Bang as the beginning of our universe,

Bojowald's research also suggests that, although it is possible to learn about many properties of the earlier universe, we always will be uncertain about some of these properties because his calculations reveal a "cosmic forgetfulness" that results from the extreme quantum forces during the Big Bounce.

As described by Einstein's Theory of General Relativity, the origin of the Big Bang is a mathematically nonsensical state -- a "singularity" of zero volume that nevertheless contained infinite density and infinitely large energy.

Bojowald and other physicists at Penn State are exploring territory unknown even to Einstein -- the time before the Big Bang -- using a mathematical time machine called Loop Quantum Gravity. This theory, which combines Einstein's Theory of General Relativity with equations of quantum physics that did not exist in Einstein's day, is the first mathematical description to systematically establish the existence of the Big Bounce and to deduce properties of the earlier universe from which our own may have sprung.

For quantum physicists, "The Big Bounce" opens a breach in the huge wall that was the Big Bang.

"Einstein's Theory of General Relativity does not include the quantum physics that you must have in order to describe the extremely high energies that dominated our universe during its very early evolution," Bojowald explained, "but we now have Loop Quantum Gravity, a theory that does include the necessary quantum physics."

Loop Quantum Gravity was pioneered and is being developed in the Penn State Institute for Gravitational Physics and Geometry, and is now a leading approach to the goal of unifying general relativity with quantum physics. Scientists using this theory to trace our universe backward in time have found that its beginning point had a minimum volume that is not zero and a maximum energy that is not infinite. As a result of these limits, the theory's equations continue to produce valid mathematical results past the point of the classical Big Bang, giving scientists a window into the time before the Big Bounce.

Instead of vanishing into infinity as predicted by Einstein's Theory of General Relativity, the universe rebounded in the Big Bounce that gave birth to our expanding universe. The theory reveals a contracting universe before the Big Bounce, with space-time geometry that otherwise was similar to that of our universe today.

The Quantum Loop model's equations require parameters that describe the state of our current universe accurately so that scientists then can use the model to travel backward in time, mathematically "un-evolving" the universe to reveal its state at earlier times.

This discovery implies further limitations for discovering whether the matter in the universe before the Big Bang was dominated more strongly by quantum or classical properties.

"A problem with the earlier numerical model is you don't see so clearly what the free parameters really are and what their influence is," Bojowald said. "This mathematical model gives you an improved expression that contains all the free parameters and you can immediately see the influence of each one," he explained. "After the equations were solved, it was rather immediate to reach conclusions from the results."

Bojowald reached an additional conclusion after finding that at least one of the parameters of the previous universe did not survive its trip through the Big Bounce -- that successive universes likely will not be perfect replicas of each other. He said, "the eternal recurrence of absolutely identical universes would seem to be prevented by the apparent existence of an intrinsic cosmic forgetfulness."

Adapted from the Penn State University Press Release: "What happened before the Big Bang?"

http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2007/08/before-the-begi.html

 

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