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New Research Suggests the Universe May Be a Giant Loop
www.popularmechanics.com ^ | By Jennifer Leman Nov 5, 2019

Posted on 11/08/2019 6:41:15 AM PST by Red Badger

Picture Credit: ESA and the Planck Collaboration

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New, contested research suggests our universe may actually be a closed loop instead of a vast, never-ending expanse.

The theory has drawn sharp criticism from other cosmologists.

Confirmation of this theory could completely unravel everything scientists know and understand about our universe.

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Imagine jetting out into the universe. You sail past Mars, Neptune, and Pluto, far out past the milky way and into the frothy nothingness of space. What might you find if you travelled far enough?

Well, you might actually end up right back where you started.

There's a small chance the universe may actually be a big loop, a team of researchers report in a new paper published in Nature Astronomy. The scientists—University of Manchester cosmologist Eleonora Di Valentino, Sapienza University of Rome cosmologist Alessandro Melchiorri, and Johns Hopkins University cosmologist Joseph Silk—reanalyzed data from cosmic background radiation—the oldest observable stuff in the universe and left over signals from the Big Bang—and found a puzzling anomaly.

A review of data from the European Space Agency’s Planck Experiment revealed significantly more instances of gravitational lensing of the microwave light that makes up cosmic background radiation than expected. This is particularly puzzling, because scientists aren’t currently able to explain how gravity would be able to bend this much microwave light.

To account for the discrepancy in their calculations, the scientists added a variable, called A_lens, to their model of the universe. But that variable comes out of left field and is difficult to reconcile with known parameters such as Einstein’s theory of general relativity, the scientists admit. And here’s the thing: According to Live Science, the team reached its conclusion with a standard deviation of 3.5 sigma, far below the 5 sigma confidence interval that physicists rely on in order to confirm a theory.

Recently, another paper came to a similar conclusion, but with even less statistical confidence. A paper recently posted to the pre-print server arXiv by University of Cambridge cosmologists George Efstathiou and Steven Gratton, for example, analyzed a smaller portion of the same Planck Collaboration data, and found that evidence for a closed loop system, according to Live Science. When the duo compared their results with other datasets, however, evidence pointed supported a flat, infinite universe.

Confirmation of this theory would pose a massive problem for physicists, and unravel much of what we know about the universe. Only time and more research will help us better understand what shape we’re in.


TOPICS: Astronomy; Astronomy Picture of the Day; History; Science; UFO's
KEYWORDS: apod; astronomy; ggg; history; quantumloopgravity; science; stringtheory
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To: _Jim

There’s no oops there. Do you really think the problem I’m talking about disappears if you use radians? Do you think radians are magical and make the equations work out differently?

Any unit of measurement is intrinsically arbitrary, since we are the ones who assign them (except perhaps for quantum units). The math doesn’t change because you change the unit of measurement.


81 posted on 11/08/2019 10:47:50 AM PST by Boogieman
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To: Boogieman
As the ratio of two lengths, the radian is a "pure number" that needs no unit symbol.

A complete revolution is 2π radians. It follows that the magnitude in radians of one complete revolution (360 degrees) is the length of the entire circumference divided by the radius, or 2πr / r, or 2π. Thus 2π radians is equal to 360 degrees, meaning that one radian is equal to 180/π degrees.

It follows, via observation, that the 'Radian' relates to pi in a unique way ...

82 posted on 11/08/2019 10:57:19 AM PST by _Jim (Save babies)
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To: Red Badger

“It’s a ‘natural’ derived measurement, with no need for a physical or literal standard to represent it.”

Yes, but it’s still arbitrary. A standard being arbitrary or not doesn’t depend on whether it’s related to a physical object. We can choose to use radians or degrees (or some other standard) to measure angles, and all of them accomplish exactly the same thing. Therefore, our use of one or the other as a standard is by definition arbitrary.

“A ‘degree’ can be anything, of any size value...”

No, by definition it can’t. If you decide to make a “degree” that is 1/100 of the angular total of a circle, then it’s not a “degree” anymore, it’s something else. Either way, no matter what we would decide to subdivide the circle into in order to get a “degree”, it would also give us something that had “no need for a physical or literal standard to represent it”. You don’t need a physical circle or any material object to derive a degree, it’s a purely mathematical concept, just like a radian.

“The trigonometry would be the same, jut with a different set of standards.”

Yes, exactly correct. So to get back to the point, since the math is exactly the same no matter what standard of measurement you use, what exactly is the relevance of you suggesting that I use radians? The problem remains exactly the same.


83 posted on 11/08/2019 10:57:59 AM PST by Boogieman
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To: Boogieman

Radians are now the ‘SI’ unit of angular measurement.

In the future, we will all be using Radians along with the Metric System of measurements.

The term ‘degree’ will be relegated to temperature measurements only............


84 posted on 11/08/2019 11:03:02 AM PST by Red Badger (Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain...................)
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To: _Jim

“As the ratio of two lengths, the radian is a “pure number” that needs no unit symbol.”

The degree is also similarly mathematically derived. Whether we assign it a unit symbol or not is really purely a subjective decision by humans.

“It follows, via observation, that the ‘Radian’ relates to pi in a unique way ...”

Well, really, it follows that the ratio of a circle’s radius to its circumference is a unique and defining characteristic of a circle. Pi is what is unique, radians are just a unit that we invented to measure angles in relation to that ratio, rather than any other mathematical relationship we might have chosen.


85 posted on 11/08/2019 11:04:44 AM PST by Boogieman
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To: Red Badger

Ah, so it’s just pointless posturing and your suggestion has no real relevance to the problem. Thanks for clearing that up.


86 posted on 11/08/2019 11:05:35 AM PST by Boogieman
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To: Boogieman

Our children and grandchildren will be taught in radians, degrees will be archaic in 50 years............


87 posted on 11/08/2019 11:07:47 AM PST by Red Badger (Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain...................)
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To: Red Badger
This isn't that new. There's long been speculation that our universe is like the inside (the eaten part) of a donut. Other "parallel" universes would be the same. It would even be possible for these universes to interlock without touching, forming a chain or loop. If they touch, that would be where travel could happen from one universe to another.

Last time I formally studied Math, it was established that there's nothing inconsistent with this theory, or contradictory to what we know.

The nice thing (or horrible?) about this is it's possible other universes aren't as far away as we assume.

88 posted on 11/08/2019 11:08:50 AM PST by grania ("We're all just pawns in their game")
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To: grania

We have pics of galaxies merging, and their aftermath.

Universes would be a ‘problem’...................


89 posted on 11/08/2019 11:11:45 AM PST by Red Badger (Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain...................)
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To: Boogieman

re: “The degree is also similarly mathematically derived.”

Nop. Artificial, arbitrary selection of value.

You’re just not getting it. Maybe some day, you will ...


90 posted on 11/08/2019 11:25:59 AM PST by _Jim (Save babies)
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To: ArtDodger; Red Badger; G Larry
"...this theory could completely unravel everything scientists know and understand about our universe."

I said this to my husband years ago.

I said, "Someday somebody's going to discover that the calculations they based on the Doppler Red Shift are all wrong, and then --- bam! --- every $^#$ thing goes back to the drawing board."

Just you wait and see.

91 posted on 11/08/2019 11:27:45 AM PST by Mrs. Don-o (In theory, there's no difference between theory and practice. But in practice, there is. Yogi Berra)
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To: Red Badger

If we see Voyager going by in a few years, then we’ll know.


92 posted on 11/08/2019 11:32:24 AM PST by TangoLimaSierra (To the Left, The Truth is Right Wing Extremism.)
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To: Mrs. Don-o

That’s great!


93 posted on 11/08/2019 11:35:19 AM PST by G Larry (There is no great virtue in bargaining with the Devil)
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To: Mrs. Don-o

That’s great!


94 posted on 11/08/2019 11:35:19 AM PST by G Larry (There is no great virtue in bargaining with the Devil)
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To: Boogieman

The “Degree’ (angle measure)

From wiki -

The original motivation for choosing the degree as a unit of rotations and angles is unknown.

One theory states that it is related to the fact that 360 is approximately the number of days in a year.

Ancient astronomers noticed that the sun, which follows through the ecliptic path over the course of the year, seems to advance in its path by approximately one degree each day. Some ancient calendars, such as the Persian calendar, used 360 days for a year. The use of a calendar with 360 days may be related to the use of sexagesimal numbers.

Another theory is that the Babylonians subdivided the circle using the angle of an equilateral triangle as the basic unit and further subdivided the latter into 60 parts following their sexagesimal numeric system. The earliest trigonometry, used by the Babylonian astronomers and their Greek successors, was based on chords of a circle. A chord of length equal to the radius made a natural base quantity. One sixtieth of this, using their standard sexagesimal divisions, was a degree.

Aristarchus of Samos and Hipparchus seem to have been among the first Greek scientists to exploit Babylonian astronomical knowledge and techniques systematically. Timocharis, Aristarchus, Aristillus, Archimedes, and Hipparchus were the first Greeks known to divide the circle in 360 degrees of 60 arc minutes.[11] Eratosthenes used a simpler sexagesimal system dividing a circle into 60 parts.

The division of the circle into 360 parts also occurred in ancient India, as evidenced in the Rigveda


95 posted on 11/08/2019 11:38:37 AM PST by _Jim (Save babies)
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To: _Jim
Ancient astronomers noticed that the sun, which follows through the ecliptic path over the course of the year, seems to advance in its path by approximately one degree each day.

So if we were to attend geometry class on another planet, we'd be completely lost. Not withstanding the fact that if we were on another planet the LAST thing we'd want to be doing is sitting in geometry class....Biology class would be crazy.
96 posted on 11/08/2019 11:50:15 AM PST by mmichaels1970
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To: _Jim

“Nop. Artificial, arbitrary selection of value.”

Lol. Anything that humans do is “artificial”. We didn’t find “radian” written on a rock floating in space, you know. “Radian” is defined by a mathematical formula created by humans, and “degree” is defined by another formula created by humans. Yes, we could arbitrarily pick a different amount to subdivide a circle into in order to come up with a different kind of “degree”, but I could also decide that we should measure our “radians” based on the ratio of a circumference to the diameter of a circle instead of the radius, and thus I would arrive at a “radian” that is twice the value of the one we currently have. So they are both artificial and arbitrary.


97 posted on 11/08/2019 12:08:52 PM PST by Boogieman
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To: _Jim

Stop spamming the forum unless you have something actually useful to contribute. Anyone can look up articles and we have all learned this stuff way back in high school anyway.


98 posted on 11/08/2019 12:09:38 PM PST by Boogieman
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To: Boogieman

Get a grip - its NOT spam, and you started it. Did you learn somethning yet?


99 posted on 11/08/2019 1:07:31 PM PST by _Jim (Save babies)
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To: Boogieman

If’n you had a ‘brain’ in your head (you apparently don’t) you would know that calculus and the sciences use the natural radian unit ALMOST exclusively in formulas and calculations ... used to drive me crazy -

what is 60 Hz in Radians? 376.991 Radians/sec.


100 posted on 11/08/2019 1:11:37 PM PST by _Jim (Save babies)
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