Posted on 09/18/2006 9:44:07 PM PDT by snarks_when_bored
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A striking consequence of the new picture of the world is that there should be an infinity of regions with histories absolutely identical to ours. That's right, scores of your duplicates are now reading copies of this article. They live on planets exactly like Earth, with all its mountains, cities, trees, and butterflies. There should also be regions where histories are somewhat different from ours, with all possible variations. For example, some readers will be pleased to know that there are infinitely many O-regions where Al Gore is the President of the United States. In this astonishing world view, our Earth and our civilization are anything but unique. Instead, countless identical civilizations are scattered across the infinite expanse of the cosmos. With humankind reduced to absolute cosmic insignificance, our descent from the center of the world, a process begun by Copernicus, is now complete. THE PRINCIPLE OF MEDIOCRITY [9.15.06] INTRODUCTION In 1981, Alan Guth made what some considered at the time to be the most important contribution to cosmology in a generation: the theory of inflation. In Guth's model, the very early universe underwent a period of rapid expansion; this accounts for, among other puzzles in big-bang theory, the present-day universe's puzzling homogeneity. Today, more than 25 years later, Guth's inflationary model still holds sway, as other cosmologists have moved the theory in new directions, i.e. chaotic inflation, eternal inflation, brane inflation, among others. The implications of inflation are particularly important in the context of the landscape of string theory. One of the leading researchers studying how inflationary cosmology evolves through the landscape is Alex Vilenkin, a theoretical physicist at Tufts who has been working in the field of cosmology for 25 years and is a pioneer in introducing the ideas of eternal inflation and quantum creation of the universe from nothing. Here he sets forth his ideas of how the set of theories which began with Guth's inflationary scenario are playing out. —JB ALEXANDER VILENKIN is Professor of Physics and Director of the Institute of Cosmology at Tufts University. He is the author of the Many Worlds in One: The Search for Other Universes. |
Some recent articles by Alexander Vilenkin and various co-authors (#23 is written for philosophers of science rather than cosmologists):
The URL for this search is http://xxx.lanl.gov/find/grp_physics/1/au:+Vilenkin_Alexander/0/1/0/all/0/1
Showing results 1 through 25 (of 79 total) for au:vilenkin_alexander
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- 1. astro-ph/0605465 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Reionization from cosmic string loops
Authors: Ken D. Olum, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 7 pp., RevTeX, no figures
- 2. astro-ph/0605242 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: The vacuum energy crisis
Authors: Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 4 pages, no figures; invited "perspective" article in "Science" (4 May 2006)
Journal-ref: Science 312 (2006) 1148-1149
- 3. hep-th/0605015 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Eternal observers and bubble abundances in the landscape
Authors: Vitaly Vanchurin, Alexander Vilenkin
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D74 (2006) 043520
- 4. hep-th/0602264 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Probabilities in the landscape
Authors: Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: Discussion in Sec. IV.A corrected and clarified
- 5. hep-th/0601162 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Probabilities in the Bousso-Polchinski multiverse
Authors: Delia Schwartz-Perlov, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 21 pages, 7 figures Minor changes made
Journal-ref: JCAP 0606 (2006) 010
- 6. gr-qc/0511159 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Scaling of cosmic string loops
Authors: Vitaly Vanchurin, Ken D. Olum, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: Added discussion of gravitational wave bounds; other minor changes
- 7. hep-th/0509184 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Probabilities in the inflationary multiverse
Authors: Jaume Garriga, Delia Schwartz-Perlov, Alexander Vilenkin, Sergei Winitzki
Comments: 18 pages, RevTeX 4, 2 figures. Discussion of the full probability in Sec.VI is sharpened; the conclusions are strengthened. Note added explaining the relation to recent work by Easther, Lim and Martin. Some references added
Journal-ref: JCAP 0601 (2006) 017
- 8. hep-th/0508135 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Cosmic strings: progress and problems
Authors: Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: minor changes; added references
- 9. hep-th/0508005 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Anthropic prediction for Lambda and the Q catastrophe
Authors: Jaume Garriga, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 20 pages, 1 figure
- 10. gr-qc/0501040 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Cosmic string scaling in flat space
Authors: Vitaly Vanchurin, Ken Olum, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 13 pages,7 figures
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D72 (2005) 063514
- 11. hep-th/0410222 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Gravitational radiation from cosmic (super)strings: bursts, stochastic background, and observational windows
Authors: Thibault Damour, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 16 pages, 6 figures
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D71 (2005) 063510
- 12. gr-qc/0409055 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Eternal inflation and chaotic terminology
Authors: Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 5 pages, no figures
- 13. astro-ph/0407586 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Anthropic predictions: the case of the cosmological constant
Authors: Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 14 pages, 1 fugure. Contribution to "Universe or Multiverse", ed. by B.J. Carr, to be published by Cambridge University Press
- 14. astro-ph/0405606 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Early reionization by cosmic strings revisited
Authors: Levon Pogosian, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 5 pages, a new paragraph added, matches the version accepted to PRD
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D70 (2004) 063523
- 15. astro-ph/0404497 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Anthropic predictions for vacuum energy and neutrino masses
Authors: Levon Pogosian, Alexander Vilenkin, Max Tegmark
Comments: 9 pages, 4 figures
Journal-ref: JCAP 0407 (2004) 005
- 16. hep-th/0312007 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Formation and evolution of cosmic D-strings
Authors: Gia Dvali, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: Added discussion and references
Journal-ref: JCAP 0403 (2004) 010
- 17. hep-th/0310034 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Dark energy equation of state and anthropic selection
Authors: Jaume Garriga, Andrei Linde, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 22 pages, 8 figs
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D69 (2004) 063521
- 18. hep-th/0309236 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Inflating magnetically charged braneworlds
Authors: Inyong Cho (LPT, Orsay), Alexander Vilenkin (Tufts University)
Comments: 35 pages, revtex, 18 eps figures
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D69 (2004) 045005
- 19. gr-qc/0305025 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Creation of massive particles in a tunneling universe
Authors: Jooyoo Hong, Alexander Vilenkin, Serge Winitzki
Comments: 32 pages, 1 figure
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D68 (2003) 023521
- 20. astro-ph/0304536 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Anthropic predictions for neutrino masses
Authors: Max Tegmark (MIT), Alexander Vilenkin (Tufts), Levon Pogosian (Tufts)
Comments: Revised to match accepted PRD version. Added references, discussion of very heavy neutrinos, analytic growth factor fit. 9 pages, 4 figs. Color figs and links at this http URL
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D71 (2005) 103523
- 21. hep-th/0304219 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Gravity of superheavy higher-dimensional global defects
Authors: Inyong Cho (LPT, Orsay), Alexander Vilenkin (Tufts University)
Comments: 19 pages, revtex, 6 eps figures
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D68 (2003) 025013
- 22. hep-th/0304043 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Cosmic Attractors and Gauge Hierarchy
Authors: Gia Dvali, Alexander Vilenkin
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D70 (2004) 063501
- 23. physics/0302071 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Philosophical Implications of Inflationary Cosmology
Authors: Joshua Knobe, Ken D. Olum, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: 25 pages; v2: revised version to appear in British Journal for the Philosophy of Science
Subj-class: Physics and Society; History of Physics
- 24. hep-th/0209217 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Solitonic D-branes and brane annihilation
Authors: Gia Dvali, Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: a typo corrected
Journal-ref: Phys.Rev. D67 (2003) 046002
- 25. gr-qc/0204061 [abs, ps, pdf, other] :
- Title: Quantum cosmology and eternal inflation
Author: Alexander Vilenkin
Comments: To appear in "The Future of Theoretical Physics and Cosmology", proceedings of the conference in honor of Stephen Hawking's 60'th birthday
Plop plop fizz fizz...
An estimate of the number of distinct histories that can unfold in an O-region between the big bang and the present gives 10 to the power 10150 . This number is fantastically huge, but the important point is that the number is finite.
should instead read
An estimate of the number of distinct histories that can unfold in an O-region between the big bang and the present gives 10 to the power 10150. This number is fantastically huge, but the important point is that the number is finite.
That is, Vilenkin is speaking of the gargantuan number
1010150
Late at night and I am busy on a political piece, but I will divert a few neurons to this.
I am reminded of the passage in one of Feynman's books about psychology being "cargo-cult science".
At first blush some of this talk seems to be reducing physics to mush--playing with assumed bell-curve distributions of constants which cannot by definition be checked.
What was that about "not falsifiable"?? 95% confidence level is still (technically) not falsified...
The other odd thought popping into my head (ok, alright, one of *many* -- as other Freepers know only too well by now) is this: "God does not play dice with the Universe" by a strange paradox, is true--by this presentation, the Universe itself is itself merely the result of ONE throw of the dice.
And so within any O-region, it appears "God does not play dice" because all we see is one throw.
What happens when two inflationary regions "just happen" to be close enough to encounter or interact with each other?
What are the odds of such a thing happening?
And why didn't *I* get to live in the Universe where Reagan beat Ford for the GOP nomination in 1976 and Carter never happened?
Thanks, Snarks, for the article. Good to the last drop as usual.
Cheers!
Bumpity Bump
What happens when two inflationary regions "just happen" to be close enough to encounter or interact with each other?What are the odds of such a thing happening?
I've not seen a calculation of those odds, but they're probably quite small. This passage appears relevant:
With inflation, the two competing processes are the decay of the false vacuum and its “reproduction” by rapid expansion of the inflating regions. My calculations, and those of Andrei Linde, show that false-vacuum regions multiply much faster than they decay, and thus their volume grows without bound. At this very moment, some distant parts of the universe are undergoing exponential inflationary expansion. Other regions like ours, where inflation has ended, are also constantly being produced. They form “island universes” in the inflating sea of false vacuum. Because of inflation, the space between the islands rapidly expands, making room for more island universes to form.
Inflation is thus a runaway process that has stopped in our neighborhood, but still continues in other parts of the universe, causing them to expand at a furious rate and constantly spawning new island universes like our own.
However, let me also quote a passage from a different article (I quoted this passage in a post on another thread):
The following paragraph from page 3 of Anthony Aguirre & Steve Gratton, "Inflation Without a Beginning: a null boundary proposal" (2003, PDF format) is somewhat relevant, I think (my red fonting):
"An observer within a bubble can never leave, but will eventually be encountered by an encroaching bubble wall after a typical time τcoll, where τcoll-1 is related to the r-integral of Eq. (5) by some transformation between the bubble observer's proper time τ and cosmic time t. Since this rate depends on t−t0, a patient and very sturdy observer could in principle discover the global time at which it formed by counting the frequency of incoming bubbles."
From this point of view, islands colliding appears possible...
Okay, listen up everybody, important safety tip: Don't cross the beams!
Bump for further reading.
Did you find that out by Googling it?
< }B^)
Did you find that out by Googling it?
Nope. I relied on
But having just checked the article, the number appears near the bottom of page 3...
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So that's why some things have been so repulsive lately. LOL /s
Not sure if it's junk science, but an intriguing article. Worth a reread.
But "95%" is an arbitrary number used because an early statistics book had a table of 5% confindence widths. (Things were done by hand then.) The "correct" confidence level is not a mathematical concept but is set by the practical consequences of making one decision or another.
But in QM, even when we see over 10**23 throws, things still behave as if at random. There would be experimental consequences were such not the case.
Cheers!
As a practical ansatz, yes. But if something still has a 5% chance of being true, you haven't falsified it.
Secondly, if we can never tell that any other O-regions exist, then the entire concept of O-regions is "non-falsifiable" empirically.
And that gives me paws pause it what purports to be *science* which is based on systematic observation, experiment, yada yada. You know the drill.
Cheers!
My personal favorite view of such a Mediocracy perspective is quantum mechanical. I really like the idea that all quantum outcomes occur, but we are perceiving the path of one particular series oif outcomes.
Plus, when throwing dice or tossing a coin, there is the memoryless property.
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