Dear Friends,
http://www.livescience.com/25335-multiple-universes-5-theories.html
Be Well.
David
5 Reasons We May Live in a Multiverse
by Clara Moskowitz, SPACE.com Assistant Managing Editor
Date: 07 December 2012 Time: 12:25 PM ET
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Our universe may be one of many, physicists say. In fact, that's the most likely scenario. CREDIT: Shutterstock/Victor Habbick |
The universe we live in may not be the only one out there. In fact, our
universe could be just one of an infinite number of universes making up
a "multiverse."
Though the concept may stretch credulity, there's good physics behind it. And there's not just one way to get to a multiverse — numerous physics theories independently point to such a conclusion. In fact, some experts think the existence of hidden universes is more likely than not.
Here are the five most plausible scientific theories suggesting we live in a multiverse:
1. Infinite Universes
Scientists can't be sure what the shape of space-time is, but most
likely, it's flat (as opposed to spherical or even donut-shape) and
stretches out infinitely.
But if space-time goes on forever, then it must start repeating at some
point, because there are a finite number of ways particles can be
arranged in space and time.
So if you look far enough, you would encounter another version of you —
in fact, infinite versions of you. Some of these twins will be doing
exactly what you're doing right now, while others will have worn a
different sweater this morning, and still others will have made vastly
different career and life choices.
Because the observable universe extends only as far as light has had a
chance to get in the 13.7 billion years since the Big Bang (that would
be 13.7 billion light-years), the space-time beyond that distance can be
considered to be its own separate universe. In this way, a multitude of universes exists next to each other in a giant patchwork quilt of universes. [Visualizations of Infinity: A Gallery]
Space-time
may stretch out to infinity. If so, then everything in our universe is
bound to repeat at some point, creating a patchwork quilt of infinite
universes.
CREDIT: Shutterstock/R.T.Wohlstadter
2. Bubble Universes
In addition to the multiple universes created by infinitely extending
space-time, other universes could arise from a theory called "eternal
inflation." Inflation is the notion that the universe expanded rapidly
after the Big Bang, in effect inflating like a balloon. Eternal
inflation, first proposed by Tufts University cosmologist Alexander
Vilenkin, suggests that some pockets of space stop inflating, while
other regions continue to inflate, thus giving rise to many isolated
"bubble universes."
Thus, our own universe, where inflation has ended, allowing stars and
galaxies to form, is but a small bubble in a vast sea of space, some of
which is still inflating, that contains many other bubbles like ours.
And in some of these bubble universes, the laws of physics and
fundamental constants might be different than in ours, making some
universes strange places indeed.
3. Parallel Universes
Another idea that arises from string theory is the notion of "braneworlds"
— parallel universes that hover just out of reach of our own, proposed
by Princeton University's Paul Steinhardt and Neil Turok of the
Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Ontario, Canada. The idea
comes from the possibility of many more dimensions to our world than
the three of space and one of time that we know. In addition to our own
three-dimensional "brane" of space, other three-dimensional branes may
float in a higher-dimensional space.
Out
universe may live on one membrane, or "brane" that is parallel to many
others containing their own universes, all floating in a
higher-dimensional space.
CREDIT: Shutterstock/Sandy MacKenzie
Columbia University physicist Brian Greene describes the idea as the
notion that "our universe is one of potentially numerous 'slabs'
floating in a higher-dimensional space, much like a slice of bread
within a grander cosmic loaf," in his book "The Hidden Reality" (Vintage
Books, 2011).
A further wrinkle on this theory suggests these brane universes aren't
always parallel and out of reach. Sometimes, they might slam into each
other, causing repeated Big Bangs that reset the universes over and over
again. [The Universe: Big Bang to Now in 10 Easy Steps ]
4. Daughter Universes
The theory of quantum mechanics, which reigns over the tiny world of
subatomic particles, suggests another way multiple universes might
arise. Quantum mechanics describes the world in terms of probabilities,
rather than definite outcomes. And the mathematics of this theory might
suggest that all possible outcomes of a situation do occur — in their
own separate universes. For example, if you reach a crossroads where you
can go right or left, the present universe gives rise to two daughter universes: one in which you go right, and one in which you go left.
"And in each universe, there's a copy of you witnessing one or the
other outcome, thinking — incorrectly — that your reality is the only
reality," Greene wrote in "The Hidden Reality."
5. Mathematical Universes
Scientists have debated whether mathematics is simply a useful tool for
describing the universe, or whether math itself is the fundamental
reality, and our observations of the universe are just imperfect
perceptions of its true mathematical nature. If the latter is the case,
then perhaps the particular mathematical structure that makes up our
universe isn't the only option, and in fact all possible mathematical
structures exist as their own separate universes.
"A mathematical structure is something that you can describe in a way
that's completely independent of human baggage," said Max Tegmark of
MIT, who proposed this brain-twistin gidea. "I really believe that there
is this universe out there that can exist independently of me that
would continue to exist even if there were no humans."
This story was provided by SPACE.com, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz or SPACE.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook & Google+.






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