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“Deep Space of the Cosmos” –There’s a Mysterious Energy Latent In It Which Can Tell Us About Our...
The Daily Galaxy ^ | 8/15/18 (posted)

Posted on 08/16/2018 3:02:08 AM PDT by LibWhacker

“Deep Space of the Cosmos” –There’s a Mysterious Energy Latent In It Which Can Tell Us About Our Fate 

Posted on Aug 15, 2018

“Empty space seems to be nothing to us. By analogy, water may seem to be nothing to a fish – it’s what’s left when you take away all the other things floating in the sea. Likewise, empty space is conjectured to be quite complicated,” Martin Rees, Astronomer Royal and Emeritus Professor of Cosmology and Astrophysics at the University of Cambridge.

Philosophers have debated the nature of “nothing” for thousands of years, but what has modern science got to say about it? In an interview with The Conversation, Rees, explains that when physicists talk about nothing, they mean empty space (vacuum). This may sound straightforward, but experiments show that empty space isn’t really empty – there’s a mysterious energy latent in it which can tell us something about the fate of the universe.

Q: Is empty space really the same as nothing?

A: We know that the universe is very empty. The average density of space is about one atom in every ten cubic metres – far more rarefied than any vacuum we can achieve on Earth. But even if you take all the matter away, space has a kind of elasticity which (as was recently confirmed) allows gravitational waves – ripples in space itself – to propagate through it. Moreover, we’ve learned that there is an exotic kind of energy in empty space itself.

Q: We first learned about this vacuum energy in the 20th century with the rise of quantum mechanics, which governs the tiny world of atoms and particles. It suggests that empty space is made up of a field of fluctuating background energy – giving rise to waves and virtual particles that pop into and out of existence. They can even create a tiny force. But what about empty space on large scales?

A: The fact that empty space exerts a large-scale force was discovered 20 years ago. Astronomers found that the expansion of the universe was accelerating. This was a surprise. The expansion had been known for more than 50 years, but everyone expected that it would be slowing down because of the gravitational pull that galaxies and other structures exert on each other. It was therefore a big surprise to find that this deceleration due to gravity was overwhelmed by something “pushing” the expansion. There is, as it were, energy latent in empty space itself, which causes a sort of repulsion which outweighs the attraction of gravity on these large scales. This phenomenon – dubbed dark energy – is the most dramatic manifestation of the fact that empty space is not featureless and irrelevant. Indeed it determines our universe’s long term fate.

 

Q: But is there a limit to what we can know? At a scale of a trillion trillion times smaller than an atom, quantum fluctuations in spacetime can give rise to not just virtual particles, but to virtual black holes. This is a range that we cannot observe, and where we have to combine theories of gravity with quantum mechanics to probe what happens theoretically – something that’s notoriously difficult to do.

A: There are several theories that aim to understand this, the most famous being string theory. But none of these theories have yet engaged with the real world – so they are still untested speculation. But I think nearly everyone accepts that space itself could have a complicated structure on this tiny, tiny scale where gravitational and quantum effects meet.

We know that our universe has three dimensions in space: you can go left and right, backwards and forwards, up and down. Time is like a fourth dimension. But it’s a strong suspicion that if you were to magnify a little point in space so that you were probing this tiny, tiny scale … you would find that it is a tightly wound origami in about five extra dimensions that we don’t see. It’s rather as when you look at a hosepipe from a long way away, you think it is just a line. But when you look closer, you see that one dimension was in fact three dimensions. String theory involves complex mathematics – so do the rival theories. But that’s the kind of theory we’re going to need if we are to understand at the deepest level the nearest to nothingness that we can imagine: namely empty space.

Q: Within our current understanding, how can we explain our entire universe expanding from nothing? Could it really just start off from a bit of fluctuating vacuum energy?

A: Some mysterious transition or fluctuation could have suddenly triggered a part of space to expand – at least that’s what some theorists think. The fluctuations intrinsic to quantum theory would be able to shake the entire universe if it were squeezed to a sufficiently tiny scale. That would happen at a time of about 10-44 seconds – what’s called the Planck time. That’s a scale when time and space are intertwined so that the idea of a clock ticking away makes no sense. We can extrapolate our universe with high confidence back to a nanosecond, and with some confidence right back much closer to the Planck time. But thereafter, all bets are off because … physics on this scale has to be superseded by some grand, more complicated theory.

Q: If it is possible that a fluctuation of some random part of empty space gave rise to the universe, why couldn’t exactly the same thing happen in another part of empty space – giving birth to parallel universes in an infinite multiverse?

A: The idea that our Big Bang is not the only one and that what we see with our telescopes is a tiny fraction of physical reality is popular among many physicists. And there are many versions of a cyclic universe. It was only 50 years ago that strong evidence for a Big Bang first emerged. But there have ever since been speculations about whether this is just an episode in a cyclic universe. And there’s been growing traction for the concept that there’s far more to physical reality than the volume of space and time that we can probe – even with the most powerful telescopes.

So we’ve no idea whether there was one Big Bang or many – there are scenarios which predict many Big Bangs and some which predict one. I think we should explore them all.

Q: How will the universe end?

A: The most straightforward long range forecast predicts that the universe goes on expanding at an accelerating rate, becomes ever emptier and ever colder. The particles in it may decay, making the dilution proceed indefinitely. We would end up with, in a sense, a huge volume of space, but it would be even emptier than space is now. That is one scenario, but there are others that involve the “direction” of dark energy reversing from repulsion to attraction, so that there will be a collapse to a so-called “Big Crunch”, when the density heads towards infinity again.

There’s also an idea, due to physicist Roger Penrose, that the universe goes on expanding, becoming ever more dilute, but somehow – when it’s got nothing in it apart from the photons, particles of light – things can be “re-scaled”, so that after this huge dilution, space becomes in a sense the generator of some new Big Bang. So that’s a rather exotic version of the old cyclic universe – but please don’t ask me to explain Penrose’s ideas.

Q: How confident are you that science can ultimately crack what nothing is? Even if we could prove that our universe started from some strange fluctuation of a vacuum field, don’t we have to ask where that vacuum field came from?

A: Sciences try to answer questions, but every time we answer them, new ones come into focus – we’ll never have a complete picture. When I was starting research in the late 1960s, it was controversial whether there had been a Big Bang at all. Now that’s no longer controversial, and we can say with about 2% precision what the universe was like all the way back from the present 13.8 billion years to a nanosecond. That is huge progress. So it’s not absurdly optimistic to believe that in the next 50 years, the challenging issues about what happens at the quantum or “inflationary” eras will be understood.

But of course this raises another question: how much of science is going to be accessible to the human brain? It could turn out, for instance, that the mathematics of string theory is in some sense a correct description of reality, but that we will never be able to understand it well enough to check it against any genuine observation. Then we may have to await the emergence of some kind of post-humans to get a fuller understanding.

But everyone who ponders these mysteries should realise that the physicist’s empty space – vacuum – is not the same as the philosopher’s “nothing”.


TOPICS: Astronomy; Science
KEYWORDS: empty; martinrees; quantum; rees; space; stringtheory
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To: rightwingcrazy
What a vacuous question.


21 posted on 08/16/2018 5:46:24 AM PDT by Bloody Sam Roberts (Get in the Spirit! The Spirit of '76!)
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To: LibWhacker

In the words of a great musical physicist,

“Nuthin from nuthin leaves nuthin”


22 posted on 08/16/2018 5:54:12 AM PDT by blueunicorn6 ("A crack shot and a good dancer")
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To: LibWhacker

“except for this maddening connection problem I’ve been having.”

Serves you right for posting in the middle of the night ;)

I was thinking about how long you could survive with basic needs. Several weeks without food, several days without water, a few minutes without oxygen, maybe two minutes without air (in a vacuum). How long could you live without space? You couldn’t live without nothing, if that were all that space is.


23 posted on 08/16/2018 5:57:23 AM PDT by rightwingcrazy
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To: LibWhacker

Try this for starters:

Empty space has more energy than everything in the Universe, combined

http://scienceblogs.com/startswithabang/2012/07/26/empty-space-has-more-energy-than-everything-in-the-universe-combined/


24 posted on 08/16/2018 6:11:34 AM PDT by Moonman62 (Give a man a fish and he'll be a Democrat. Teach a man to fish and he'll be a responsible citizen.)
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To: LibWhacker

Roger Penrose, not to be confused with Jonathan Penrose. Penrose-Tal 1960:

1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 c5 4.d5 exd5 5.cxd5 d6 6.e4 g6 7.Bd3 Bg7 8.Nge2 O-O 9.O-O a6 10.a4 Qc7 11.h3 Nbd7 12.f4 Re8 13.Ng3 c4 14.Bc2 Nc5 15.Qf3 Nfd7 16.Be3 b5 17.axb5 Rb8 18.Qf2 axb5 19.e5 dxe5 20.f5 Bb7 21.Rad1 Ba8 22.Nce4 Na4 23.Bxa4 bxa4 24.fxg6 fxg6 25.Qf7+ Kh8 26.Nc5 Qa7 27.Qxd7 Qxd7 28.Nxd7 Rxb2 29.Nb6 Rb3 30.Nxc4 Rd8 31.d6 Rc3 32.Rc1 Rxc1 33.Rxc1 Bd5 34.Nb6 Bb3 35.Ne4 h6 36.d7 Bf8 37.Rc8 Be7 38.Bc5 Bh4 39.g3 1–0


25 posted on 08/16/2018 8:23:22 AM PDT by ChessExpert (NAFTA - Not A Free Trade Agreement)
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To: LibWhacker

It’s an interesting topic that reminds us that our knowledge and understanding are limited.

I believe in things that I experience but that are not amenable to the senses: self-awareness, free-will, right and wrong, etc.. Some people can not explain these things and consider them illusory. However I experience these things as much as I experience sight. When I experience something directly, and someone calls it an illusion, I conclude that they are rejecting valid data. That can’t be science.

Perhaps some insights are to be found in the “void” of space.


26 posted on 08/16/2018 10:38:31 AM PDT by ChessExpert (NAFTA - Not A Free Trade Agreement)
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To: rightwingcrazy

How long could you live without space?

Wow, that’s a horrible thought! I’ve never considered it before. But I think I’ve just developed a new phobia. Thanks.

If you were out of food, water or air, you’d die. So it seems the least physically substantial the necessity, the more agonizing the death, judging from a fish’s reaction to being taken out of water, all that flopping around and all.

The problem being with space is there’d be no room to flop around in, no matter how much pain you were in.

So if you were taken out of space, would that be the same as being spaced out to death? No, that’s just silly and doesn’t sound as painful as we already know it should be.

Maybe it’d be somewhat like being instantly thrown into the center of a black hole, since we supposedly know space and time are both destroyed there, because one cannot exist without the other.

So there’s a clue: being yanked out of space would mean you would also be yanked out of time, and you would die instantly. You couldn’t survive two minutes without space because time doesn’t exist without space and there’d be no two minutes happening for you after you were removed from space.

I don’t know, but I do know it’s all just too horrible to contemplate!


27 posted on 08/16/2018 10:52:35 AM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: SunkenCiv

*ping of interest*


28 posted on 08/16/2018 11:18:06 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj ("It's Slappin' Time !")
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To: fieldmarshaldj; 6SJ7; AdmSmith; AFPhys; Arkinsaw; allmost; aristotleman; autumnraine; bajabaja; ...
Thanks fieldmarshaldj.

· String Theory Ping List ·
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29 posted on 08/16/2018 11:43:30 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (www.tapatalk.com/groups/godsgravesglyphs/, forum.darwincentral.org, www.gopbriefingroom.com)
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To: cuban leaf

¡Qué Bueno!


30 posted on 08/16/2018 12:05:26 PM PDT by onedoug
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To: cuban leaf

The Big Bang was God speaking the Universe into existence. The Moment of Creation.


31 posted on 08/16/2018 12:51:54 PM PDT by Fred Hayek (The Democratic Party is now the operational arm of the CPUSA)
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To: LibWhacker
We know that our universe has three dimensions in space: you can go left and right, backwards and forwards, up and down. Time is like a fourth dimension.

If you think of X, Y, Z as colors instead of lengths then the appearance of what we sense as 3D space could emerge from no space. If we can figure out how to re-tune these colors we can jump to different locations in time and space without having to travel. That might hint at how particles separated by time and space can have an instant spooky connection.

32 posted on 08/16/2018 1:10:56 PM PDT by Reeses (A journey of a thousand miles begins with a government pat down.)
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To: ChessExpert

The Bible has much to consider on this topic. Comes down to God is stretching out spacetime in which we have our existence. Now consider the ‘latent’ energy of that expansion ... Like stretching a rubber band.


33 posted on 08/16/2018 2:42:56 PM PDT by MHGinTN (A dispensational perspective is a powerful tool for discernment)
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To: rightwingcrazy

“Is empty space really the same as nothing?”

What a vacuous question.

Might as well ask a democrat why Hillary should be President.
Any answer you get will mean absolutely nothing.


34 posted on 08/16/2018 2:48:15 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: Candor7

Behold the void!
Consider it not the void of nothingness
but thine own intellect, blissful and shining.


35 posted on 08/16/2018 2:51:27 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: tet68

but thine own intellect, blissful and shining.>>>>>>>>>>>>

Thine own intellect is merely a construct which must be maintained continually. At death it ceases to exist. It is called the ego, which is non existant. As such we work to continually maintain who we are, a continually evolving self image.

So thine own intellect shines only for ones self.make it transparent through Shamatha meditation, so one can not be tricked into thinking it is “Thine own intellect shining.”It has no independent existence except what we give it moment to moment.

What shines is not intellect, but ones own basic human nature, unconditional basic goodness or bodhicitta.To touch that one must rest ones mind in peace, slow the incessant discursiveness of thought and then see what lies underneath.The way is to practice Shamatha meditation .

https://www.shambhala.com/how-to-practice-shamatha-meditation-2253.html


36 posted on 08/18/2018 3:54:44 AM PDT by Candor7 ((Obama Fascism)http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2009/05/barack_obama_the_quintessentia_1.html)
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