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The universe before it began
Seed Magazine ^ | 5/22/06 | Maggie Wittlin

Posted on 05/24/2006 3:59:24 PM PDT by LibWhacker

Scientists use quantum gravity to describe the universe before the Big Bang.

Scientists may finally have an answer to a "big" question: If the Big Bang was the beginning of the universe, what could have caused it to happen?

Using a theory called "loop quantum gravity," a group led by Penn State professor Abhay Ashtekar has shown that just before the Big Bang occurred, another universe very similar to ours may have been contracting. According to the group's findings, this previous universe eventually became so dense that a normally negligible repulsive component of the gravitational force overpowered the attractive component, causing the universe to "bounce" apart. This big bounce is what we now know as the Big Bang. The group published its analysis in the April 12th issue of Physical Review Letters.

"These equations tell us that in fact there is another pre-Big Bang branch of the universe, and then we tried to understand what it looks like," Ashtekar said. "[Surprisingly], the universe again looks very much classical.

"So there is another universe on the other side which is joined to our universe in a deterministic way," he concluded.

Coauthor Parampreet Singh, a postdoc at Penn State, said that Einstein's theory of general relativity describes the current universe very well, but it breaks down when it encounters the extreme density of the universe around the time of the Big Bang.

"[General relativity] gives physical singularities when we ask questions about the physics near the Big Bang," he said. "Unless this problem is solved, or unless a solution of this problem is known, we do not have a complete description of the universe."

Physicists have developed theoretical systems, such as string theory, to unite general relativity with quantum mechanics and explain the very early universe. In the late 1980s, Ashtekar published the first paper on loop quantum gravity, a theory which applies quantum mechanical principles to examine the spacetime continuum. According to his model, there is no continuum: Smooth, continuous space is only an approximation of an underlying quantized structure, one that is made up of discrete units.

Loop quantum gravity also predicts a small repulsive component of gravitational force, which is a non-factor in other theories. At most densities, even the extremely high density of an atom's nucleus, this component has no significant effect. But as density increases, approaching 1075 times the nuclear density, this repulsion begins to dominate. According to the Ashtekar's equations, this appears to be what happened to the universe before ours: As it collapsed, it became so dense that gravity started to, in a sense, work backwards, birthing our universe.

Singh, Ashtekar's postdoc, noted that the group's conclusions are eerily similar to findings published by Princeton researcher Paul Steinhardt two weeks ago. Using string theory, Steinhardt concluded that the universe may be cyclic, with each crunch leading to a bounce.

But Steinhardt said the two papers are only distantly related:

"It is an idealized set-up which does not connect smoothly to realistic cosmology," he said via e-mail about the Penn State paper. "By contrast, our scenario is designed so that it connects smoothly to Einstein gravity and standard Hubble expansion, so that it reproduces the astronomical conditions we observe today."

Ashtekar acknowledge that his work addresses the idealized situation of a homogeneous, isotropic universe, one that is uniform in space and uniform in all directions—the model does not account for heterogeneities such as galaxies.

"This picture does hold up in kind of simple generalizations," he said. "The key question is really if this prediction is going to hold up with more and more realistic models."


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: abhayashtekar; ashtekar; astronomy; bang; before; began; big; bigbang; bigbounce; bigcrunch; bounce; cosmology; crunch; cyclic; einstein; expansion; force; goddooditamen; gravitational; gravity; hubble; idealized; india; loop; ludditebait; mechanics; model; mybrainhurtsfromthis; nothingfromnothing; quantum; repulsive; space; string; stringtheory; theory; thumperbait; universe
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To: Stone Mountain
Well one point that could be made is Newton thought gravity was equal to the product of the two objects in question, divided by the distance between the centers of mass squared. Now granted that's kind of archaic with todays modern physics but it's not to bad for and empirical first order approximation. So you have a constant divided by an ever increasing positive number. By that rational, all mass interacts with every other particle of mass and if the quantity of mass in the universe was just the proper amount, the expansion would cost toward a stop but never quite reach it (rather like Zeno's paradox). I take the liberty of describing the volume as fixed and finite even though we are talking about the limit as "T" approaches infinity.

In the real world, however, you would have to show that there is some reason not to get to zero when a function is decreasing constantly.

True, but the force causing the deceleration is not a constant. It is constantly decreasing (if you like Newton) at an inverse squared rate. Which means that doubling the separation between masses cuts the "attractive force" by 4 to 1.

Just looking at the "too little" mass, never ending expansion. Vs "too much" mass, cyclic expansion/collapse. There must be a just right case which would give you a finite volume solution. (Rather like balancing a pencil on it's point.) Defiantly meta stable since one scintilla more or less would inevitably tip the balance.

That's why I said that would be pretty strong proof of intelligent design starting with T=0 since it would be an almost unfathomable coincidence for such a stable outcome to happen by chance.

Regards,
GtG

121 posted on 05/26/2006 8:22:56 PM PDT by Gandalf_The_Gray (I live in my own little world, I like it 'cuz they know me here.)
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To: LibWhacker

I have a better question - from whence did matter/everything come?


122 posted on 05/26/2006 8:32:01 PM PDT by DennisR (Look around - God is giving you countless observable clues of His existence!)
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To: LibWhacker

Turtles all the way down.


123 posted on 05/26/2006 8:36:12 PM PDT by Sandy
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To: The_Reader_David

It's clear this universe had a beginning and its origins cannot be explained by those living inside it. To me placing faith that this universe came from another universe, where a different set of physics operate, and wherein the origins -can- be explained, makes more sense than an eternal God. There is absolutely no difference between declaring "God just was, He's eternal" and "matter just was, it's eternal".


124 posted on 05/26/2006 8:48:41 PM PDT by Seamoth (Kool-aid is the most addictive and destructive drug of them all.)
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To: Seamoth

I believe I had made the point that both another (and the theory usually posits
many other) universe, and a divine fiat were equally unscientific (in the Popperian sense).

I would still suggest, that having left the realm of science, theism gains the advantage over unscientific naturalism when Occam's razor is applied: positing that the ground-of-all-being is person-like enough to earn the traditional name God and to be attributed a will seems to 'multiply entities' less than positing another universe to explain ours (and another to explain it . . . ).


125 posted on 05/28/2006 6:57:45 PM PDT by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know. . .)
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126 posted on 06/10/2008 8:53:17 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_________________________Profile updated Friday, May 30, 2008)
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