Yes, The Multiverse Is Real, But It Won't Fix Physics
Ethan Siegel , Contributor
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The multiverse idea
states that there are an arbitrarily large number of Universes like our
own, but whether there are any with differences in the laws of physics
remains an open question.
"We are all agreed that your theory is
crazy. The question that divides us is whether it is crazy enough to
have a chance of being correct." Niels Bohr spoke these words to
Wolfgang Pauli about the latter's theory of elementary particles, but it
could just as easily apply to many of today's most controversial modern
physics ideas. One that's gotten a lot of attention recently is that of a Multiverse.
In short, it's the idea that our Universe, and all that's contained
within it, is just one small region of a larger existence that includes
many similar, and possibly many different, Universes like our own. On
the one hand, if our current theories of physics are true, the
Multiverse absolutely must exist. But on the other hand, as Sabine Hossenfelder rightly points out, it's unlikely to teach us anything useful.
The observable
Universe might be 46 billion light years in all directions from our
point of view, but there's certainly more, unobservable Universe,
perhaps even an infinite amount, just like ours beyond that.
Inflation causes
space to expand exponentially, which can very quickly result in any
pre-existing curved space appearing flat. If the Universe is curved, it
has a radius of curvature hundreds of times larger than what we can
observe.
Bock et al. (2006, astro-ph/0604101); modifications by E. Siegel
Inflation set up
the hot Big Bang and gave rise to the observable Universe we have access
to, but we can only measure the last tiny fraction of a second of
inflation's impact on our Universe.
- The lack of spatial curvature,
- The adiabatic nature and spectrum of fluctuations imprinted on the cosmic microwave background,
- The magnitude of imperfections that gave rise to the large-scale structure we see,
- The constraints on the gravitational waves inflation could have created,
- And the superhorizon fluctuations that we observe (on scales larger than the visible Universe),
The fluctuations in
the CMB are based on primordial fluctuations produced by inflation. In
particular, the 'flat part' on large scales (at left) have no
explanation without inflation, and yet the magnitude of the fluctuations
constrains the maximum energy scales the Universe reached at the end of
inflation. It's far lower than the Planck scale.
Artist’s
logarithmic scale conception of the observable universe. Note that we're
limited in how far we can see back by the amount of time that's
occurred since the hot Big Bang: 13.8 billion years, or (including the
expansion of the Universe) 46 billion light years. Anyone living in our
Universe, at any location, would see almost exactly the same thing from
their vantage point.
If inflation is a
quantum field, then the field value spreads out over time, with
different regions of space taking different realizations of the field
value. In many regions, the field value will wind up in the bottom of
the valley, ending inflation, but in many more, inflation will continue,
arbitrarily far into the future.
Wherever inflation
occurs (blue cubes), it gives rise to exponentially more regions of
space with each step forward in time. Even if there are many cubes where
inflation ends (red Xs), there are far more regions where inflation
will continue on into the future. The fact that this never comes to an
end is what makes inflation 'eternal' once it begins.
- That different regions where inflation ends should never collide or interact.
- That the fundamental constants and laws in different regions should be the same as they are here.
- And that unless inflation was truly eternal to the past, there isn't enough "space" to contain all the parallel Universes that the many-worlds interpretation of quantum physics would require.
The idea of
parallel Universes, as applied to Schrödinger's cat. As fun and
compelling as this idea is, without an infinitely large region of space
to hold these possibilities in, even inflation won't create enough
Universes to contain all the possibilities that 13.8 billion years of
cosmic evolution have brought us.
An illustration of
multiple, independent Universes, causally disconnected from one another
in an ever-expanding cosmic ocean, is one depiction of the Multiverse
idea.
Astrophysicist and author Ethan Siegel is the founder and primary writer of Starts With A Bang! His books, Treknology and Beyond The Galaxy, are available wherever books are sold.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/startswithabang/2018/01/25/yes-the-multiverse-is-real-but-it-wont-fix-physics/#2d31e6a433a6
https://www.forbes.com/sites/startswithabang/2018/01/25/yes-the-multiverse-is-real-but-it-wont-fix-physics/#2d31e6a433a6
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