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In search of extra dimensions: Hang on -- a new reality may be around the corner
spaceref.com ^ | 19 Feb 02 | Press Release

Posted on 02/19/2002 9:19:22 AM PST by RightWhale

http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=7456

PRESS RELEASE

Date Released: Monday, February 18, 2002

American Association for the Advancement of Science

In search of extra dimensions: Hang on -- a new reality may be around the corner

BOSTON, MASS. -- "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a persistent one," according to the late Albert Einstein. But, "if everything is an illusion and nothing exists," humorist Woody Allen has observed, "I definitely overpaid for my carpet."

Hang onto your carpet receipts:

Our understanding of reality -- that is, a world where events happen over time within a three-dimensional space -- may be turned on its head by the year 2005, scientist Maria Spiropulu said today during the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Annual Meeting.

"The way we think about things is about to change completely," said Spiropulu. "This is truly a revolution in the way we understand our world."

Spiropulu, a 32-year-old scientist with the Enrico Fermi Institute at the University of Chicago, is hot on the trail of extra dimensions. She's using new methods to prove, experimentally, whether our reality is more complicated than we previously assumed.

"We are very close" to a new reality, she said. "Right now, we imagine space and time as a static question, and we solve equations as a function of space and time. But, what we're learning is that, at the very large scale or the very small scale, space and time are dynamic. What is happening at those scales, we cannot explain. So we have to wonder, do these scales hold some extra dimensions?"

Traditionally, physicists have mathematically explained all that happens in the world by using a "standard model." In this system, all matter is made of lightweight "leptons" (such as electrons and neutrinos) and quarks. Three forces manipulate these particles: electromagnetism, and strong and weak nuclear reactions.

But, this traditional approach doesn't explain gravity, the fourth force. The conventional rules of quantum mechanics have been successfully married with Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity, which explains the behavior of very fast objects -- but not with his Theory of General Relativity, the guidebook to gravitational force. Mathematical gobbledygook usually results from trying to combine quantum mechanics and general relativity. Consequently, we still don't know, for example, what happens to particles sucked into a black hole.

In an effort to uniformly explain all events, physicist Gunnar Nordstrom (1881-1923) first introduced the notion of an extra dimension at the beginning of the 20th century. Perhaps, he thought, gravity happens in a realm we don't understand and can't mathematically define. Some 10 years later, Theodor Kaluza (1885-1954) and Oskar Klein (1894-1977) took Nordstrom's ideas another step forward: An extra dimension may be curled up like an unimaginably small ball, they said, on the order of the Planck scale -- the smallest unit of length in the universe (10 to the minus 33 centimeters).

The idea of an extra dimension was resurrected yet again in the late 1990s, as scientists began to ask whether Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation reliably predicts gravity's behavior below the centimeter scale, Spiropulu explained. Physicists were energized in 1997 by the discovery of possible links between the standard model and "superstring theory" -- the notion that a series of extremely tiny, vibrating strings may lurk beneath the level of quarks and leptons.

Researchers Nima Arkani-Hamed, Savas Dimopoulos, and Gia Dvali then caused further excitement, by suggesting that at least one of these tiny dimensions might, in fact, be large enough to measure. Still, no one has produced undeniable proof of superstrings, and many questions persist.

Since then, Spiropulu reported to AAAS attendees, experiments have shown that Newton's Law is valid down to the 200-micron level. That is, gravity "follows the rules" at that scale. But, the physical reality below this level remains a mystery. Somewhere within the Planck scale, or at extreme energy levels, an incredibly small extra dimension may finally combine gravity and electromagnetism, Spiropulu suggested.

"We're very close into the energies where we can see effects of a very low-energy Planck scale," she said. "If an extra dimension is mirroring the Planck Scale, that means that gravity and the electromagnetic theory is going to be unified tomorrow."

Gravity, Spiropulu said, may soon be unified in an "unexplainable hierarchy of scale."

Various scenarios or "frameworks" are emerging to describe a mysterious sister world where, as Alice in Wonderland once remarked, "nothing would be what rings, because everything would be what it isn't."

Our three-dimensional world includes the coordinates X, Y, and Z, extending infinitely throughout the universe. But, some researchers have proposed that extra dimensions may be finite, and compacted around a sphere, pole, or other geometrical shape. Others have said that quarks, the standard-model particles, may have "technicolor" cousins in another realm. Or, quarks and neutrinos may exist in a mirror-world, as "squarks" and "sneutrinos."

To learn more about what's happening at the very small scale, Spiropulu and her colleagues are staging high-energy particle collisions. Extra dimensions, she explained, would leave behind a "signature," and she hopes to detect it. The classic signature might be a graviton -- the carrier of gravity -- capable, perhaps, of trickling to another dimension. In her experiments, protons (the hydrogen nucleus is a proton) going at almost the speed of light smash head-on into anti-protons. "What comes out," she said, "is a graviton, escaping into an extra dimension, and leaving a viable signature in your detector."

In particle collisions, the conservation of energy and momentum can be measured, so that what goes into the initial experiment must jive with what's left over, post crash-test. "If it doesn't add up and you have significant imbalance," she explained, "that is a viable signal that there is an extra dimension where, if these theories are valid, gravity may become very strong, and other weird properties might kick in. The idea is that there may be a form of super-gravity in the extra dimension."

Spiropulu shared the latest experimental findings at the AAAS meeting, including a completely new -- and what she described as "totally innovative strategy" -- worked out by Harvard's Nima Arkani-Hamed and others for "dynamically generating an extra dimension and then testing it," rather than the opposite, more conventional strategy: Searching for proof of an assumed extra dimension.

"We're looking at some really neat, new ideas," she concluded. "We hope by 2005 to have great results on this topic."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events
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To: xcon
Nima Arkani-Hamed has a new mental picture of dimensions and a new way of talking about it. New lingo. Check out one of his papers, then check back here and explain it to us. :)
41 posted on 02/19/2002 11:13:53 AM PST by RightWhale
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To: RightWhale
Another Hindu/Buddahist teaching: “When the student is ready, the teacher appears.”

Another way of looking at it is that everything-that-exists is God's creation and is His holy scripture, available for everyone to read.

42 posted on 02/19/2002 11:22:05 AM PST by Savage Beast
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Comment #43 Removed by Moderator

To: RightWhale
...to read and to interpret for himself--and to use as a basis for his moral, and other, decisions.
44 posted on 02/19/2002 11:28:41 AM PST by Savage Beast
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To: Aurelius
I really love these threads. I just wish I had the math background to understand a tenth of it.

My understanding was, there were eleven dimensions...is an infinite number a possibility? How can a finite number be assigned to an expanding universe...wouldn't dimensional space expand also?

45 posted on 02/19/2002 11:31:00 AM PST by Focault's Pendulum
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To: RightWhale
The Laws of Physics
46 posted on 02/19/2002 11:42:26 AM PST by Consort
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To: Physicist
LOL. "No matter where you go, there you are." :)
47 posted on 02/19/2002 11:43:11 AM PST by anymouse
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To: Physicist
Gravity, you see, is many orders of magnitude weaker than the other forces, which is one of the reasons why it's so hard to unify with the others.

Are there any guesses as to why gravity is monopolar?

48 posted on 02/19/2002 11:46:34 AM PST by Moonman62
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To: Physicist
But you forget in post-Clintonian physics, "'is' is not 'is'." :)

Therefore the liberal mind is cabably of altering the physical universe at will. :)

49 posted on 02/19/2002 11:47:26 AM PST by anymouse
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To: RightWhale
Bump for later reading.
50 posted on 02/19/2002 11:51:58 AM PST by Brett66
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To: xcon
Would furnaces be in your baliwick? Just thinking about that furnace problem at the undertaker's business down in Georgia. Maybe the proprieter was looking for an extra dimension where he could stash the backlog.
51 posted on 02/19/2002 11:53:00 AM PST by RightWhale
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Comment #52 Removed by Moderator

To: Focault's Pendulum
there were eleven dimensions

For a while there were 12. That was really interesting, but what happened to the young man who was working on that? Time was actually not just one dimensional, but 2 dimensional, not a line, but a surface. That freed us from causality, a fine idea, but opposed by both the church and the legal system. So we are back to 11 dimensions.

53 posted on 02/19/2002 11:56:48 AM PST by RightWhale
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To: palo verde
ping...dimensional doors again ;-)
54 posted on 02/19/2002 12:02:35 PM PST by habs4ever
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To: Savage Beast
Everything else is illusion.

But still very real.

55 posted on 02/19/2002 12:04:33 PM PST by keri
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To: xcon
I work on HVAC/R stuff for a living. All I need to know about physics is that water flows downhill, heat goes from hot areas to cold areas and that electrcity shocks the crap out of you if you ain't careful.

You forgot that the wrench always falls in the deeper duct, or at least the one that goes into the crawlspace.

OK OK maybe that's probability, not physics.

56 posted on 02/19/2002 12:04:41 PM PST by freedomlover
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Comment #57 Removed by Moderator

To: Moonman62
Are there any guesses as to why gravity is monopolar?

That follows from its being a spin-2 interaction. By symmetry, the dipole term vanishes in the multipole expansion. Gravitational waves propagate as a quadrupole undulation.

58 posted on 02/19/2002 12:30:12 PM PST by Physicist
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To: xcon
That's when you get into the economics. Hmmmm $12 tool, two hours of your life lost trying to find it, and then the ducts never quite go back together just the right way.

Yeah, I know, you've never left a tool in a duct.;) Jeez those things are like time capsules.

59 posted on 02/19/2002 12:39:06 PM PST by freedomlover
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To: keri
Everything else is illusion but still very real. Exactly. Another paradox. As we move closer and closer to untimate truth, we reach a point at which everything is paradoxical. Beyond that, everything is chaotic. Beyond that... And all of this is happening at the same time, a spectrum of illusion--or reality.
60 posted on 02/19/2002 12:41:59 PM PST by Savage Beast
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