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NASA: Evidence Favors Infinitely Expanding Universe

Chris Gondek writes "The Sydney Morning Herald has a story here about how NASA is expected to announce this week that it has proved the existence of "dark energy," a cosmic force that counteracts gravity and will keep the universe expanding forever. The announcement will effectively demolish the theory that life will be wiped out in a "big crunch" when the universe collapses, and should end decades of academic dispute. Scientists ranging from Stephen Hawking, the Cambridge University physicist, to Albert Einstein, have argued that the universe eventually will stop expanding and then implode under the force of gravity, destroying all life. The Chicago Sun Times has also got some info."

576 comments

  1. I don't know about you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    but my money is on Hawking and Einstein, and not only because they had a handle on the metric system.

    1. Re:I don't know about you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't know much about the subject, but couldn't this dark energy that is proven exists one day stop, for any reason? I always thought the expanding was due to the big bang, however if our accelleration is not decreasing, then this would be interesting. If the energy stops pulling us outwards, then it seems like we would be sucked back in for the big bang to start over.

    2. Re:I don't know about you... by The_K4 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Think of it this way, the thing that is slowing down the expansion of the universe is the gravity within the universe pulling inwards. If there's enough gravity to overcome the energy of the big-bang....the big crunch happens. However since gravity decreases as the universe expande (because of the inverse square stuff) if the univers gets too large there's a point where it's graivty is no longer sufficient to turn expansion around. (And yes there's this the theory of the "sweet spot" where the energy and the mass are perectly ballanced and the universe stops expanding but fails to colapse. The rate of expansion IS decreasing, the question is will that be enough to cause the crunsh or not because the rate of decrease (second derivitie of velocity) is decreasing as well.

    3. Re:I don't know about you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought that everything had a gravitational effect on everything else, no matter how small or far away the objects were?

    4. Re:I don't know about you... by bleckywelcky · · Score: 2, Interesting


      Yeh, but that is only how we look at things here on Earth, within enough of a margin of error, things at infinity, etc, do not matter to us for our purposes and applications. However, if you are looking at this in a purely classical physics matter and on the universal scale, then the momentum caused by the big bang, that is the movement of the universe now, can only continually be proppelled by further explosions. But the explosions have reactants and products, and pretty soon the reactants will run out (I would guess that the source of reactants is not infinite, just as any fuel that we know of is not infinite - whether it be for the Sun or for our cars). This means that further impulses will not occur to continually increase the momentum over infinite time. And, since gravity acts an infinitesmal force at even infinite distances, then in the end, gravity will always overcome the momentum, and the universe will have to crunch back in on itself.

      And actually, if you look at it in this way, it sort of makes sense. The universe is just one big oscillating process, the origins of which we have no grasp of yet (through the sciences, the religions have explained this for a while now). But, we can imagine that if we just begin to look at the universe at some random point in time, it is either expanding or contracting. If expanding, a big bang has just occured, and the universe will continue to expand until the energies of expansion run out and the energies of contraction take over (ie Earth analogy: kinetic vs potential energies when throwing an object upwards). Then, when contraction energies take over, the universe will contract and collapse on itself, increasing temperatures, pressures, etc, and the result is another big bang that resets the universe to the original state that we observed it in: expansion. Lather. Rinse. Repeat.

      This would lead us onto another big question though: where the heck did all this start from? Has the universe just always existed and the absence of a surrounding (in thermo terms) resulted in a process/cycle that has thermo properties that are entirely conservered (constant on the whole). But then, why would the universe exist in the first place? Perhaps our universe is just the surrounding for thermo processes in other dimensions? Who knows. It would be fun to get in a time machine and travel 100, 1000, 10000, 100000, then 1000000 years into the future and see what we have come up with and if we can explain anything any better (although I'm sure we'll have come up with many more details in the mean time, but will we really understand the origins of time and the universe then?).

    5. Re:I don't know about you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may be betting on the wrong horse here. This theory has been around a long time, and dark matter seemed to be the only redeeming thing for "big crunch".

      Perhaps the _only_ thing that would make your horse come in first, would be if gravity displayed some type of characteristic that hasn't be seen yet. For instance, at certain distances, gravity happens to INCREASE dramatically. However odd this may be, it is still a possibility.

    6. Re:I don't know about you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      right... and what exactly is going to cause bodies to lose momentum in perfect vacumm? gravity? its too small to do this at such distances.

      I think you need to learn some more physics.. good try though.

    7. Re:I don't know about you... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Its true that every 'body' has its own gravity, but the effects of it are lessened over distance, over an inverse square rule or something. Just like the amplitude of sound halves as you double distance.

    8. Re:I don't know about you... by PenguiN42 · · Score: 1

      Gravity will *not* always overcome the momentum. Ever heard of escape velocity? Gravitational binding energy? There is a point where you have enough initial kenetic energy such that gravity loses, and "further explosions" are unnecessary.

      --
      The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
    9. Re:I don't know about you... by PenguiN42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      actually a body can lose momentum in a perfect vacuum due to gravity... it just has to transfer that momentum somewhere else.

      --
      The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
    10. Re:I don't know about you... by spiro_killglance · · Score: 1

      Yes indeed it could, since no one has any idea
      what dark energy is, no one knows weather it may
      run out in the future.

      The standard, and simplest model of dark energy, is just a cosmological constant, which says that
      every empty piece of vacuum exerts a default repulsive force (creates negative space-time curvature), that idea of actually first inverted
      by Einstein, with the constant appearing as an
      arbitary constant of integration in his derivation
      of the equations of general relavity. In this simplest model obviously dark energy obviously can't change (they'd have to rename to the cosmological variable otherwise:-).

      A models where it might run out, is called quintessance, a nice name they made
      up for a simple scalar field (i.e. a field that
      has magnitude only, no direction), which has
      a repulsive effect, models where quintessance
      decays are very possible.

    11. Re:I don't know about you... by The_K4 · · Score: 1

      That exact point is the heart of this debate. Does the universe have enough velocity to "escape"? If it does, it goes on forever, if not in crashes back in on itself. it also might have the exact right amount to enter a stable orbit and remain at the same size.

    12. Re:I don't know about you... by bleckywelcky · · Score: 1


      Actually, yes, I'm an aerospace engineer, I know all about escape velocities and gravitational binding energy. If you truly understand the math and analysis involved you will realize that again, as I said before, that these are merely approximations in limiting conditions. If the universe exists alone then approximating effects in limiting conditions is not entirely valid (as we {humans} have applied them for the most part thus far). Simply check out the basic aerospace analysis of a parabolic orbit and the approximations should stick out like sore thumbs. If they don't, then you need to take (or take again) several basic calculus classes.

  2. Perception is reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Dammit. Now I'm going to be able to feel my atoms growing farther apart all week.

    1. Re:Perception is reality by KDan · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Expansion of the universe doesn't actually mean the space between the atoms in your body increases. The atoms in your body are tightly coupled by strong electromagnetic forces, which are stronger than the expansion of the universe. Imagine a cardboard disc on the elastic surface that usually represents spacetime - several cardboard discs will grow apart as you stretch the surface, but the discs themselves will not grow, they are rigid because of the internal forces.

      Those discs are actually of sizes somewhere around clusters of (billions of) galaxies, so the atoms in your body are fairly safe.

      Daniel

      --
      Carpe Diem
    2. Re:Perception is reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was joking. You know, "haha. funny. joke."

    3. Re:Perception is reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The best jokes can also provoke serious discussion. Since it was my joke, I'm quite happy with the response thread.

    4. Re:Perception is reality by SparafucileMan · · Score: 0

      Actually this analogy is biased because it is based on the human cognitive structures, which can't picture things moving around in the absence of space (as in things are either P or not P). The inability of the human brain to think outside of these limitations is whats screwing us over with people looking for the Theory of Everything. The spoon after all, isn't even there.

  3. The Complete Military History of France by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Gallic Wars - Lost. In a war whose ending foreshadows the next 2000 years of French history, France is conquered by of all things, an Italian.

    Hundred Years War - Mostly lost, saved at last by female schizophrenic who inadvertently creates The First Rule of French Warfare: "France's armies are victorious only when not led by a Frenchman."

    Italian Wars - Lost. France becomes the first and only country to ever lose two wars when fighting Italians.

    Wars of Religion - France goes 0-5-4 against the Huguenots

    Thirty Years War - France is technically not a participant, but manages to get invaded anyway. Claims a tie on the basis that eventually the other participants started ignoring her.

    War of Devolution - Tied. Frenchmen take to wearing red flowerpots as chapeaux.

    The Dutch War - Tied

    War of the Augsburg League/King William's War/French and Indian War -Lost, but claimed as a tie. Three ties in a row induces deluded Frogophiles the world over to label the period as the height of French military power.

    War of the Spanish Succession - Lost. The War also gave the French their first taste of a Marlborough, which they have loved every since.

    American Revolution - In a move that will become quite familiar to future Americans, France claims a win even though the English colonists saw far more action. This is later known as "de Gaulle Syndrome", and leads to the Second Rule of French Warfare: "France only wins when America does most of the fighting."

    French Revolution - Won, primarily due the fact that the opponent was also French.

    The Napoleonic Wars - Lost. Temporary victories (remember the First Rule!) due to leadership of a Corsican, who ended up being no match for a British footwear designer.

    The Franco-Prussian War - Lost. Germany first plays the role of drunk Frat boy to France's ugly girl home alone on a Saturday night.

    World War I - Tied and on the way to losing, France is saved by the United States. Thousands of French women find out what it's like to not only sleep with a winner, but one who doesn't call her "Fraulein." Sadly,widespread use of condoms by American forces forestalls any improvement in the French bloodline.

    World War II - Lost. Conquered French liberated by the United States and Britain just as they finish learning the Horst Wessel Song.

    War in Indochina - Lost. French forces plead sickness, take to bed with the Dien Bien Flu.

    Algerian Rebellion - Lost. Loss marks the first defeat of a western army by a Non-Turkic Muslim force since the Crusades, and produces the First Rule of Muslim Warfare: "We can always beat the French." This rule is identical to the First Rules of the Italians, Russians, Germans, English, Dutch, Spanish, Vietnamese and Esquimaux.

    War on Terrorism - France, keeping in mind its recent history, surrenders to Germans and Muslims just to be safe. Attempts to surrender to Vietnamese ambassador, fails after he takes refuge in a McDonald's.

    The question for any country silly enough to count on the French should not be "Can we count on the French?", but rather "How long until France collapses?"

    Observations: 1.)Going to war without the French by your side is like going deer hunting without your accordian.. You are leaving a lot of noisy useless baggage behind. 2.)Europe caused WWII by trying to appease Hitler during the 30's and refusing to enforce the Treaty of Versailles 3.)With "friends" like this...Who needs enemies.

    1. Re:The Complete Military History of France by rv23 · · Score: 0

      I dont accept the appeasement argument. WWII developed out the mistake the Western democracies made in using a madman build an overwhelming army and provide a bulwark against what was considered a greater threat: in this case Communist Russia and a greater madman, Stalin. You know, like using a certain fascist in the Middle East to keep at bay a nation ruled by mullahs.

    2. Re:The Complete Military History of France by Lt+Razak · · Score: 0

      I thought the CIA funded Hitler?

    3. Re:The Complete Military History of France by JimFromJersey · · Score: 0

      Don't accept it all you want, the fact is that Chamberlin (sp?) claimed that he had secured "peace in our time" while Hitler said "I have seen our enemies at Munich and they are worms"

      appeasement kills, apparently you haven't learned your lesson.

      The era of "real-politic" is over. We no longer have to sit on our hands while "allies" like Saddam gas their own people and threaten the physical and economic well being of both neighbors and the world at large, because of larger geo-political concerns. The UN and NATO are becoming more and more irrelevent to American foreign policy, not because they are trying to prvent an American hemogeny, but because they are willing to trade the freedom of the Iraqi people for their own security. Oh, I know what your going to say, "it's only oil", "the Iraqi people will only trade one dictator for another", "just exercise containment". First, Iraqi oil will be the property of the Iraqi people and extracted for their benefit. Yes, Shell, BP-Amaco, Haliburton, ect will manage the extraction process, but the fields will belong to the Iraqis. Second, yeah just like in Afganistan, tell that to the girls who are going to school and the women who can now work to support their families. Three, every day we exercise containment is another day that the Iraqi people suffer.

      Oh I know, "The Iraqi people are only suffering because of the big, bad, bully, Americans and their economic sanctions". The sanctions are the UN's sanctions, voted and approved by the Security Council. We get to enforce them (with the help of the Brits - thanks, mates) because no one else can. The only person to blame for the condition of the Iraqi people is Saddam.

      We don't want this war, but once again the world has failed to act and we are given no choice. No one is asking you to contribute, to sacrifice, to take moral responsibility, to pull the trigger. Your objections are duly noted, now please stand aside and let us do what we have to.

      Why is Russia and Frace so dead set against this? They aren't, they are just trying to pressure the US into giving them oil field concessions for their state owned oil firms. Well, we can't. We cannot make that promise, that will be up to the liberated people of Iraq.

      --
      between the greater and lesser infinities sleep the dreams undreamt
  4. Good Sigmonster! by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1, Funny

    The universe is like a safe to which there is a combination -- but the combination is locked up in the safe. -- Peter DeVries

    Now all I have to do is find out how to emit this energy and I can build starships!

    --
    "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    1. Re:Good Sigmonster! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Peter Devries? As in the twisted mentat and Harkonen servant? I dont think I'd trust him now if it was Thufir Hawat Id trust him.

    2. Re:Good Sigmonster! by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Peter Devries? As in the twisted mentat and Harkonen servant?

      Funny, I thought he was a sysadmin. Oh well, same difference.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  5. Hollow Universe by CommieLib · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is the way the world ends
    This is the way the world ends
    This is the way the world ends
    Not with a bang but a whimper.

    --
    If your bitterest enemies are people who hack the heads off civilians, then I would say you're doing something right.
    1. Re:Hollow Universe by Mr.+Mai · · Score: 1

      Why worrying, if we continue with this rythm of decadence, there will be no human race by then =)

    2. Re:Hollow Universe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    3. Re:Hollow Universe by kzinti · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is the way the world ends
      This is the way the world ends
      This is the way the world ends
      Not with a bang but a whimper.


      from "The Hollow Men", TS Eliot.

      Attribute your sources!

      --Jim

    4. Re:Hollow Universe by CommieLib · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I overestimated Slashdot; I just assumed that it would be recgonized. You're probably right, though. I certainly wasn't trying to pass it off as my own.

      --
      If your bitterest enemies are people who hack the heads off civilians, then I would say you're doing something right.
  6. "end decades of academic dispute" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    doubt it. we still have ppl disputing that the earth is round.

    1. Re:"end decades of academic dispute" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the earth is both round and flat...

      round, like a pizza...

      flat, like a pizza...

    2. Re:"end decades of academic dispute" by gewalker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I dispute that the earth is round. It is a lumpy oblate ellipsoid (slightly pear shaped). It is also flat (as measured near the surface, on a small scale, within reasonable definitions of flat).

      Much of science (and other realms of study) is similar in that we often discuss rules that are no more than useful generalizations that are true within limits (for the often unstated conditions to which they apply), but do not cover the special cases or represent highest accuracy. It would be accurate to note that not everybody believes that the earth is round, that man has walked on the moon, or that the universe is expanding.

      Certainly, this is an interesting adjustment to the standard model, but Nasa is not the first to line up behind the dark energy interpretation. Nor is the the first Slashdot article to refer to it either.

    3. Re:"end decades of academic dispute" by gmack · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ends one debate and begins another.

      Note that this will make the creation debate more intense since now it could be argued that if it expands forver there had to be a fixed point in time when it began and therefore something had to cause such a beginning.

      The debates over what caused the beginning are about to get a lot more interesting.

    4. Re:"end decades of academic dispute" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, he said "round", not spherical. You are not disputing roundness, you're disputing sphericalness. Apparently in an attempt to make a point you wanted to make but couldn't find a more appropriate message to respond to. Good point, too, but way off-topic.

    5. Re:"end decades of academic dispute" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure what the Flat Earth Society thinks, but most arguments (I think Columbus is the most noted), is NOT whether it is flat or round. The earth was proven round a LONG time ago:

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/scienceshack/backca t/ adamexp/wlflatearth.shtml

      It isn't like they "forgot" either. It was a matter of the earth's SIZE!

      http://www-istp.gsfc.nasa.gov/stargaze/Scolumb.h tm

      There are many links out there to read on this subject... matter of fact, the test on how they PROVED the earth is round is pretty clever (and I don't mean shadows on the moon... search for a well).

    6. Re:"end decades of academic dispute" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Columbus: "The world, she's-a round, like-a an apple."
      King: "She's-a flat, like-a the pancake"
      Columbus: (raising his voice) "She's a round, like-a my head!"
      King: (flattens Columbus's head with a mallet) "She's-a flat, like-a your head."
      Hare We Go, 1951
    7. Re:"end decades of academic dispute" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you are going to niggle with details then I don't know how you can say that it is flat, as measured on a small scale. Certainly the roundness shows up if you have to set up things like sundials or satellite dishes because you have to know your latitude to fairly accurately. And I don't know how you can claim it is flat on smaller scales; my neighborhood has hills and valleys. Walk out onto a football/soccer/baseball field and the field has curvature for drainage. Go to smaller scales and you now have things like rocks and boulders ruining your flatness.

      I think one could make a much better argument that to a decent approximation that the Earth is spherical and that the differences is small when considering the length scales you are talking about (when discussing the whole Earth, the effect of mountain heights and cavern depths are quite insignificant. When talking about the flatness of the Earth on small scales, the effects of the things I mentioned (hill/valley sizes on neighborhood length scales, or even rock and pebble size on length scales of a square foot or so) are much more significant).

      From a different vantage point the topologist would view a spherical Earth and a flat Earth much differently, and would thus find the rules and generalizations quite significant (assuming the Flat Earth is supposed to be functionally a 2-D surface as opposed to an isomorphic transformation of a sphere to a squashed sphere (and thus a disk with thickness)).

      I also wouldn't waive away general rules and generalizations so carelessly. While it is true that a lot of useful physics and engineering can be done using Newton's Laws, one's whole fundamental view is changed when you consider relativity in much the same way as one's whole fundamental view of the world and universe is changed when one sees the world as a sphere rather than a disk.

    8. Re:"end decades of academic dispute" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You ain't kiddin' - we still have folks that think the world is around 10,000 years old and that the Ark had dino-eggs in it, etc.

      Hell, the president believes in phrophets!

      America deserves to become a therocracy, so we can implode under our own dillusions, while the new powers like India and China make rotating space stations and send missions to the nearest star...

    9. Re:"end decades of academic dispute" by Wolfrider · · Score: 1

      --Ah, good old Bugs Bunny... A true classic. :)

      --
      .
      == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
    10. Re:"end decades of academic dispute" by Fembot · · Score: 1

      My Dad actualy seriously belives the world is just 10,000 years old, and I have atteneded lectures which claim to prove this (basicaly they say carbon dating is wrong). Ammusingly they assume that because many cultures have a story of a great flood then that proves the Christian flood story is correct... Doesnt it make you nuts

  7. Whew! That's a relief! by Anonym0us+Cow+Herd · · Score: 5, Funny

    So the universe won't be wiped out by a big crunch.

    What a relief. I was worried.

    The universe will be wiped out by the heat death of the universe instead.

    (Or am I incorrect in my understanding?)

    --
    The price of freedom is eternal litigation.
  8. Ah crap by Valiss · · Score: 4, Funny

    So all that money that I spent on "Big Crunch" insurance is going to waste?

    --

    -Valiss
    1. Re:Ah crap by c_jonescc · · Score: 1

      I'm screwed too.

      I've been getting 'Heat Death' insurance on the cheap for years, and now my premiums are expanding!

      --
      Getting diabetes AND salmonella would be a bad weekend.
    2. Re:Ah crap by mentalist23 · · Score: 1

      Well, maybe you can prove it's a Act of God.

      --
      Unix does not prevent you from doing stupid things; that would also prevent you from doing clever things.
  9. Sun Times? by joshamania · · Score: 2, Funny

    Whoa....if it's in the Chicago Sun Times then it must be true!

    1. Re:Sun Times? by PD · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'm watching for coverage of the actual event in the Chicago White Dwarf Times.

    2. Re:Sun Times? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's NOT The Sun, genius. It's the Chicago Sun Times, one of the larger and more respected papers in America.

    3. Re:Sun Times? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoa....if it's in the Chicago Sun Times then it must be true!

      Uncle Cecil excepted, of course.

    4. Re:Sun Times? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I always thought that the Chicago Tribune was the more respected of the two major Chicago dailies.

      The Sun Times is owned by Rupert Murdoch and more like one of his other papers, the New York Post in tone and scope and is somewhat comparable to The Sun, which Murdoch also owns.

      Also, the link refers to a wire article from the Sunday Telegraph, FWIW.

    5. Re:Sun Times? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except that Cecil writes for the Chicago Reader - a free alternative news weekly ...

    6. Re:Sun Times? by Captain+Nitpick · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Whoa....if it's in the Chicago Sun Times then it must be true!

      But only if it's tomorrow's edition.

      (I'm finding it hard to believe that I just made that reference.)

      --
      But then again, I could be wrong.
  10. Heat Death instead by crow · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So instead of the Big Crunch, we get Heat Death. The universe is slowly cooling, and will eventually cool to absolute zero (killing all life), or so the theory goes.

    I don't think that there is any reputable theory that doesn't have a "killing all life" at some point in the very distant future.

    1. Re:Heat Death instead by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Opposing that is the theory that any sufficiently large empty space starts spouting matter (sounds like spontaneous creation, doesn't it?). This is apparently an attempt to explain the 'foamy' shape of the observable universe.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    2. Re:Heat Death instead by Simon+Field · · Score: 1
      I don't think that there is any reputable theory that doesn't have a "killing all life" at some point in the very distant future.

      Perhaps there are reputable theories that have "killing all life" in the not-so-distant future?
      ;-)

    3. Re:Heat Death instead by KDan · · Score: 1

      The operative word being very.

      Mind you, on that scale of things you could say physics is still in its infancy... who knows, maybe we'll find ways to break the axioms of physics in the future... stay hopeful :-)

      Daniel

      --
      Carpe Diem
    4. Re:Heat Death instead by lacheur · · Score: 1

      Not absolute zero, just the total heat of the universe spread perfectly evenly. Which will kill us anyway, so kinda a nitpick.

    5. Re:Heat Death instead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      The universe is slowly cooling, and will eventually cool to absolute zero (killing all life), or so the theory goes.



      Thus finally allowing Mickey Mouse to pass into the public domain.

    6. Re:Heat Death instead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "killing all life"

      Well, that's the upshot of the second law of thermodynamics. The bright side is that that's why life is interesting in the first place - because it actively spends free energy until it's gone. Death is kind of the point of life, in the same sense that the journey is more rewarding than the destination.

    7. Re:Heat Death instead by giminy · · Score: 2, Interesting


      So instead of the Big Crunch, we get Heat Death. The universe is slowly cooling, and will eventually cool to absolute zero (killing all life), or so the theory goes.

      Dyson said, more or less, that life can store up some energy and wait for the universe to cool. Then it can use that difference in energies to do some useful work, and wait for the universe to cool again to the point where the difference is sufficient to do an equal amount of work. He proposes that life can do this indefinitely (I guess because energy difference is a continuous curve function against time? But IANAP.)

      --
      The Right Reverend K. Reid Wightman,
    8. Re:Heat Death instead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The average temperature will be bounded by absolute zero as the universe expands.

    9. Re:Heat Death instead by TrevorB · · Score: 1

      The universe is slowly cooling, and will eventually cool to absolute zero (killing all life), or so the theory goes. ...

      Thus finally allowing Mickey Mouse to pass into the public domain.

      I didn't think Hell was supposed to be part of this universe....

      Comic Book Guy voice: But in Bizzaro World, that would mean that Mickey Mouse would rule forever!

    10. Re:Heat Death instead by WatertonMan · · Score: 1

      Or if you like some of the other Inflationary theories, you could have a sufficiently flat spacetime and simple create a new universe. Of course that assumes that "movement" between universes is possible. I don't think there is anything that indicates it is. (Although the old joke in physics about "that which is not forbidden is compulsory" may apply)

    11. Re:Heat Death instead by camusflage · · Score: 1
      Thus finally allowing Mickey Mouse to pass into the public domain.
      Sorry. Hell has to hit absolute zero for THAT to happen.
      --
      The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
    12. Re:Heat Death instead by SB5 · · Score: 1
      The universe is slowly cooling, and will eventually cool to absolute zero (killing all life), or so the theory goes.

      Thus finally allowing Mickey Mouse to pass into the public domain.


      This only works if you actually believe lawyers, lobbyists, and Disney CEOs actually have pulses and are alive. I have an inkling that they may be highly advanced animatronics..
      --
      If what you are reading sounds funny, or sarcastic, lame, or stupid
      it is because it is supposed to be. just laugh
    13. Re:Heat Death instead by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Yeah, its the theory that we need to go into Iraq with all guns blazing :)

    14. Re:Heat Death instead by caveat · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but eventually, since the cooling asymptotically approaches absolute zero, you'll only be able to get a delta-T of a few tenths of a Kelvin, which isn't enough to do any meaningful work. (IANAP either, but IAAChemist, and I'm only two semesters out of PhysChemI/Thermodynamics, so I like to think I have a faint idea of what's going on)

      --

      Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
    15. Re:Heat Death instead by Bastian · · Score: 1

      Since the universe will homogenize asymptotically, you'd have to come up with some sort of life that can do the same work on an infinitely decreasing energy gradient.

      Nope, not even life can escape the laws of thermodynamics.

    16. Re:Heat Death instead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the copyright lasts *after* the death of the author & we all know the (myth of) how Walt was frozen (and hence, not *quite* dead... :)

      I guess you have to be certified as dead to be frozen, but what if someone got around that... would they be able to claim that they were "still alive" and keep their copyright the whole time? :) There's a good question for sci-fi writers... :)

  11. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by TimeTrip · · Score: 2, Informative

    Pretty much what I was going to say. There's only x amount of energy, and if the universe is constanly expanding... OOPS! From one of the articles:

    "Although NASA's discovery means the universe will go on forever, the same is not true for human life. As the universe expands, all of its energy will be used up."

    --

    You crazy man? You piss off supahfly!
  12. It's the midichlorian's fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You just know George Lucas is going to find a way to work this into his next lameass movie script.

    1. Re:It's the midichlorian's fault by bpfinn · · Score: 2, Funny

      "A long time ago, in a galaxy that is much farther away now..."?

  13. Woohoo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now I have no fear of dying in 10 billion years when the universe collapses! *eats some greasy cheeseburgers*

  14. The reason? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An infinitely expanding universe favors an infinitely expanding budget for NASA. They'll never run out of things to explore.

  15. um by theblacksun · · Score: 1

    "expected to announce? wouldn't it be better to wait and see if they actually do announce it before using slashdot bandwidth/processor ticks?

    --
    Ignorance kills, complacency kills, hatred kills, but usually not the ones guilty of them.
  16. Love the last paragraph by jdgreen7 · · Score: 2, Funny
    I swear, optimism must be a lost cause in the field of science. :)

    Although NASA's discovery means the universe will go on forever, the same is not true for human life. As the universe expands, all the energy needed to keep the stars and galaxies alight will be used up. What will remain is a universe full of black holes, which after trillions of years will explode to leave nothing but dark energy

  17. Grain of salt post. by zaqattack911 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As always take this with a grain of salt.
    This is the typical "blackbox" approach in science:

    You have a blackbox with inputs and outputs, and you theorize what is in the blackbox based on your inputs, and what the outputs are. Sure you can come up with math/thoery that works everytime when trying to predict what the blackbox DOES. But this doesn't mean you really know what the blackbox IS (or whats inside rather).

    Losely throwing out a word such as "dark energy", pretty much spells "we really have no fucking clue why to me".

    sure there is something forcing our universe to expand againts the will of gravity. But it's OK to admit we don't know what it is.

    Heh.. I might as well call that sludge in my sink "dark matter", and the unpleasant odour a result of "dark energy".

    --noodle

    1. Re:Grain of salt post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "we really have no fucking clue why to me"

      This quote doesn't make any sense to me...

    2. Re:Grain of salt post. by RatBastard · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Losely throwing out a word such as "dark energy", pretty much spells "we really have no fucking clue why to me".
      Why? It's just as good a term as Einstein's cosmological constant. It's just a label.

      And the "blackbox" approach is part of figuring out what is going on. We don't know how gravity works. Does that stop us from knowing that it does work, or what effects it has on the universe? This is no different.

      If we had to wait until we had a nuts-and-bolts answer for every question we'd never get anywhere.

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    3. Re:Grain of salt post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it should read

      '... spells "we really have no <omitted> clue why" to me.'

    4. Re:Grain of salt post. by KDan · · Score: 2

      That's a pretty unfair perspective on physics. It's rather more than just 'black box testing'. Or if you want to take it as 'black box testing', then you'd have to consider a black box with an infinite number of continuous inputs, and an infinite number of continuous outputs, each of which can produce an infinite, continuous number of values. And "valid" physics theories are those which consistently predict the right outputs given an infinite number of infinite, continuous sets of inputs.

      A bit more than a black box in my opinion.

      Sure, electron or energy or dark energy are labels for bits and pieces in theories, but that doesn't mean that the concepts which they label are not valid and observed. A good example of this is quarks - you could ask "how do they know the stuff inside hadrons is quarks?" They don't, per se. What they know is that the stuff inside hadrons has a certain number of characteristics, and that's the characteristics that describe what we call "quarks". All of physics is like that, but that doesn't make it any less useful or insightful.

      Daniel

      --
      Carpe Diem
    5. Re:Grain of salt post. by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Also remember that no one has been looking to see if energy is added or removed from the universe. All of these theories are based on the notion of a closed system. What if that assumption was not true?

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    6. Re:Grain of salt post. by MrDog · · Score: 2, Funny

      You're an engineer, aren't you?

    7. Re:Grain of salt post. by 2short · · Score: 1

      If there is something ouside a system that affects that system, that system is not the "universe".

    8. Re:Grain of salt post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Loosely throwing out a word such as "dark energy", pretty much spells "we really have no fucking clue why to me".

      Boy, spelling rules really ARE getting flexible on slashdot.

    9. Re:Grain of salt post. by schmink182 · · Score: 1
      Why? It's just as good a term as Einstein's cosmological constant. It's just a label.

      Exactly. It is just a label. What the original poster was trying to get across is that there's a problem with calling this force "dark energy" and moving on. I think that we should wait until we know *anything* about dark energy before we give it a holding name.

      Currently, dark energy can be defined as "whatever force causes the universe to expand." This is significantly less specific than definitions of any other forces, so I've got a problem with it. AFAIK, forces we already know of could possibly be used to describe universal expansion instead of something radical like dark energy.

    10. Re: Grain of salt post. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > This is the typical "blackbox" approach in science

      That's what science is all about: figuring out how the universe works by observing it.

      If the universe came with documentation, we'd just look the answers up.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    11. Re:Grain of salt post. by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1

      Says who.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    12. Re:Grain of salt post. by Rakarra · · Score: 1
      That is pretty much the definition of "the universe." Whatever adds energy to the universe is part of the universe. Unless you want to get all theological...

    13. Re: Grain of salt post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody worth their grain of salt reads the documentation...

    14. Re:Grain of salt post. by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      I strongly feel our definition of universe will look horribly primitive in a few million years if intelligence is still developing technological explinations of the world around them.

      I also feel the word universe is often overused and misunderstood, in fact I think it would be better to come up with a word describing the tangeable "universe" that most people mean, and the mathematical "universe" that you are refering to in your post.

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    15. Re:Grain of salt post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If we had to wait until we had a nuts-and-bolts answer for every question we'd never get anywhere.


      I agree we should just listen to all the nut's answers....

    16. Re:Grain of salt post. by error0x100 · · Score: 1

      Just to throw a little more fuel into this semantic fire, even Stephen Hawking, who it is probably safe to assume knows what he is talking about, talks about "multiple universes" in "The Universe in a Nutshell". If there are multiple Universes, then under the "Universe is everything" definition, those universes are not really universes, since all of them form "The Universe". It does seem like we really need two terms.

    17. Re:Grain of salt post. by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      And that still doesn't take into account the fact the we would never really be able to measure if some force outside this whole system isn't tweaking it as he/she/it goes.

      Face it, we can't answer a simple question like "Is it going to rain 7 days from now." Why? Chaos. Now you are going to tell me that somehow these physicists can model the universe to any kind of precision, over billions of years. I think not.

      All things being equal, I like the simple answers. Namely: there is a whole lot more than you will ever understand, and that something more powerful than you is keeping it all running.

      I call it the SimUniverse. Now if the Player is reading this, the code for unlimited energy is --M-O-M-O-N-E-Y in all caps. And if the game crashes giving you the option to Abort, Retry, or Ignore NEVER CHOOSE ABORT.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    18. Re:Grain of salt post. by 2short · · Score: 1

      There can be multiple universes under my definition (which I suspect is also Hawkings). To try to put it simply: Anything that can even possibly affect me in any way is in the same universe as I am. When Hawking talks of multiple universes, he is talking of multiple, entirely seperate systems that do not interact.

  18. No Omega Point? by DdJ · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well, there goes the whole Omega Point thing. I guess there'll be no subjective eternity of omniciense and omnipotence for the likes of us. Oh, well.

    1. Re:No Omega Point? by PD · · Score: 1

      Dyson came up with his own ideas long before Tippler, and his are based on an ever-expanding universe.

      Essentially, the state machine that simulates all of us will run on temperature differences. As the universe expands, it cools. When the difference becomes large enough, the machine that we all live in can run a few cycles.

      Over time, the length between cycles will increase, but we won't notice because the simulation, and therefore us, will be in the HLT state.

      Since the universe will never reach absolute zero, that means that if the universe expands, there are an infinite number of cycles available to such a machine, and therefore, our simulations can live infinitely.

    2. Re:No Omega Point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Omega Point is possible. If you were well read in the Forward theories, you would know that the Omega Point could be formed by the macroscopic engineering of the universe to generate a collapse in one dimension and complete expansion in the other two. The results in a constant supply of energy due to the different temperatures in the collapsing/expanding directions. The configuration of the universe will last indefinitely and will always have sufficient energy to sustain the Omega Point intelligence.

      Man, that guy is a quack.

  19. Joy in Redmond by ColonelPanic · · Score: 1

    Damn. The big crunch was the only remaining obstacle to M$FT's eternal universal domination.

    --
    "Skill shows through where genius wears thin." -Wittgenstein || Religion: uniting aviation and architecture.
  20. not so new... by QEDog · · Score: 2, Informative

    This announcement has been informally known for a few weeks in the physics community. A famous cosmologist (Edward "Rocky" Kolb, FNAL) told us that it was delayed the official announcement after the Columbia tragedy.

    --
    "There is no teacher but the enemy."-Mazer Rackham
  21. Grammar check? by kaptin · · Score: 1

    The Chicago Sun Times has also got some info

    Slashdot posters has also got a need for some grammar checking.

    --
    If water were beans, I'd be 70% beans.
    1. Re:Grammar check? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Slashdot posters has also got a need for some grammar checking.

      Well, you do. "The Chicago Sun Times" is a singular proper noun. The sentence was grammatically correct.

      If water were beans, I'd be 70% beans.

      Well beans are mostly water, so let's see - A is mostly B, C is mostly B, therefore A is mostly C. Who says propositional logic can't be creative.

    2. Re:Grammar check? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Grammatically correct? No way. The problem with the original sentence was not subject-verb agreement -- that was ok. The problem was atrocious verb conjugation. Try this instead:

      "The Chicago-Sun Times also has some information."

      "Has got" is incorrect usage.

    3. Re:Grammar check? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't agree that it's incorrect or ungrammatical. I do agree that it's atrocious. ;) But note that this doesn't appear to be what the OP was criticising, given the parody example provided ("slashdot posters has").

      Put it this way: You've got a point, but I've also got a point. ;)

    4. Re:Grammar check? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are confusing "The Chicago Sun Times" which is not plural,
      with "Slashdot Posters" which is plural. If "The Chicago Sun Times"
      were plural, you would be correct, but since it is not (it is a singular;
      proper name) you are wrong.

  22. All life will die because.... by 1000101 · · Score: 0

    Someone set us up the bomb! aaayyyyeeeee!!!!

    1. Re:All life will die because.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...all your base...

    2. Re:All life will die because.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -1 INCORRECT

      I see this mistake over and over again, here. Nobody has 'set us up the bomb'! They have 'SET UP US THE BOMB!!'

  23. Unfortunate by khaladan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If there was a big crunch, then another expansion, maybe there would be the possibility for life again. Instead, there will be a cold death... and, it seems, eventually it will be a lot like nothing at all.

    1. Re:Unfortunate by KDan · · Score: 1

      Don't wet your panties yet, we still have billions of years to go to figure out some way out of this mess (assuming we don't wipe ourselves out in a "nucular" war first...)

      Daniel

      --
      Carpe Diem
    2. Re:Unfortunate by n__0 · · Score: 1

      It's still possible seeing as the centre of the universe could be constantly spewing out matter. I might be wrong but I dont tihnk anyones seen so far as the centre of the universe yet. The other alternative maybe that due to some unforeseen symmetry or reversal of time the universe ends up colliding with itself but then you get into the whole real unreal numbers thing.

    3. Re:Unfortunate by LMCBoy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Even if we don't live in a closed, oscillating Universe, it's still possible that the Universe could "reboot" itself after the heat death. [Disclaimer: complete speculation follows. I am an astronomer, but by no means am I a cosmologist]

      If we live in a non-oscillatory universe, then the Big Bang was not a "bounce" due to a preceeding Big Crunch. Rather, the Big Bang arose from a quantum fluctuation in the vast nothingness that was (or was not?) before. So, if the Universe of the very distant future has expanded to ~zero density and ~zero temperature, then it looks basically just like the pre-Big Bang vacuum. In that case, another Universe might very well pop up from another quantum fluctuation in the vacuum.

      Hell, who knows? Maybe a sufficiently empty vacuum is extremely unstable to such Universe-spawning fluctuations, so they are pretty much certain to occur once the density and temperature get low enough. If so, there you go: we can have our heat death and still have Universal rebirth.

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    4. Re:Unfortunate by John+Meacham · · Score: 1

      unfortunatly, there is no center of the universe. the universe is expanding everywhere at once. there is not a spot that is any more special than any other which could be considered the center.

      --
      http://notanumber.net/
    5. Re:Unfortunate by addaon · · Score: 1

      The Big Bang was the source of the vacuum, not a product of it. There was no space before the Big Bang, it's not just that the space was empty. Hence, expansion now.

      --

      I've had this sig for three days.
    6. Re:Unfortunate by shadowbearer · · Score: 1


      "Rather, the Big Bang arose from a quantum fluctuation in the vast nothingness that was (or was not?) before."

      Actually it was probably some geeky teenager with thick glasses doing vacuum energy experiments in his parents' basement.

      Watch THIS Mom, I'm going to save the Universe! *insane grin*

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    7. Re:Unfortunate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which makes every point in the universe the center. Thus, *I* am the center of the universe. So are you for that matter. But I make a better center of the universe than you.

    8. Re:Unfortunate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, please learn field theory... A "quantum fluctuation" in the vacuum, regardless of how low the energy density in the neighborhood, still must obey Noether's theorem: there is simply not enough time asymmetry to "hide under the rug" (speaking very roughly), the fluctuations you would need to start a new universe (which would be exponentially damped in energy anyway).

    9. Re:Unfortunate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My mortal mind is inconsolable. I will never know the answers to these questions that I have come to pose. When Life finds the meaning for it's existence, resurrect me from a slashdot post.

      Anonymous Coward is so wrong for this post.

    10. Re:Unfortunate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A "quantum fluctuation" in the vacuum, regardless of how low the energy density in the neighborhood, still must obey Noether's theorem: there is simply not enough time asymmetry to "hide under the rug" (speaking very roughly), the fluctuations you would need to start a new universe (which would be exponentially damped in energy anyway).


      In a certain sense, Vilenkin's tunneling proposal can be viewed as "the creation of a universe from a vacuum fluctuation".
  24. McDonalds: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evidence favors infinetly expanding wastelines...

    1. Re:McDonalds: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WASTE lines?!?! Like LINES of POOP?!?!
      POOPING WASTE !!!

      YES!!! YES!!! YOU ARE eating AT THE McDONALDS, YOU WILL be TO POOPING !!!

      or maybe you meant 'waistlines'.

  25. Heat Death... unless by meckardt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What will remain is a universe full of black holes, which after trillions of years will explode to leave nothing but dark energy.

    This is true... unless there is another mechanism that transforms some of the dark energy back to normal matter. This could result in a classic steady state model.

    1. Re:Heat Death... unless by Tenebrious1 · · Score: 3, Funny

      This is true... unless there is another mechanism that transforms some of the dark energy back to normal matter. This could result in a classic steady state model.

      "Let there be light"

      --
      -- If god wanted me to have a sig, he'd have given me a sense of humor.
    2. Re:Heat Death... unless by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 1


      I couldn't agree more. So far in human learning we have found that for every action there is a reaction, for every particle an anti-particle, every good an evil, every yin a yang.

      Everything in the universe from stars to atoms, amoebas to anteaters goes through some cycle of death and rebirth. Why wouldn't there be a counteractive mechanism to the expansion of the universe? I for one trust the amazing design of the universe to have already accounted for this problem. We just have to figure it out.

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
    3. Re:Heat Death... unless by 2short · · Score: 1

      "So far in human learning we have found that for every action there is a reaction, for every particle an anti-particle, every good an evil, every yin a yang."

      With one notable exception: gravity. Which is what we're talking about here.

    4. Re:Heat Death... unless by Hadean · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that we're just a big room with God flicking the light switch on and off? (albeit with big pauses in between each switch)

    5. Re:Heat Death... unless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The force that causes the universe to expand goes against gravity.

    6. Re:Heat Death... unless by error0x100 · · Score: 1

      Just out of interest, are you making a reference to the winning entry of one of those recent, pompous so-called "art" competitions in the UK, where the winning entry was a room with nothing in it but a light bulb that just switched on and off repeatedly?

    7. Re:Heat Death... unless by Hadean · · Score: 1

      Not really, but it doesn't surprise me that such an art piece would exist...

  26. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by The+Only+Druid · · Score: 1

    Quick note: heat death would be if the universe was becoming hotter and hotter. This is more of a cold-death, AFAIK.

    --
    "Stumble before you crawl"
  27. Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by akiaki007 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, I'm no astophysicist, but won't this new theory disprove all previous theories about the Bing Bang as well, and everything we thing of the Universe thus far. If this susbstance will keep the Universe expanding forever, how was it ever possible to have a Big Bang in the first place? It would be inconcievable to think anything created the Universe in the Big Bang theory, because it could never happen, thus our Universe does not go in cycles (expand then contract - repeat).

    So, How did the universe get created. Does this mean that there was actually a "beginning of time" as far as we can tell? What was that point? What existed before then? Since matter can't be created nor destroyed, where did it come from? (though that is a question beyond most planes of though, IMO)

    I don't believe this story, and I think more research is needed here.

    --
    "Time is long and life is short, so begin to live while you still can." -EV
    1. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Kaz+Riprock · · Score: 4, Funny

      You have to understand the era he grew up in to adequately answer this question. Mr. Crosby was a free-loving man and often bedded many of his attractive female co-stars.

      He was a very good crooner.

      This is how, not "The", but many, Bing Bangs happened.

      --
      Mordor...a magical, mythical land where women are more rare than dragons--but where every man would rather find a dragon
    2. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by brer_rabbit · · Score: 1

      Presumably Bing Crosby's parents had too much to drink one night, and bang, there was Bing.

    3. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      Using words like "created" in reference to subject matter which involves time is self-defeating.

      The "point" and "what" existed "before then" is all really just asking for the answer to the life the universe and everything.

      Religion and science are orthogonal. Science can answer how the universe formed and how mathematical models can define time and space, but it can't answer "why."

    4. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by SashaM · · Score: 1

      how was it ever possible to have a Big Bang in the first place?
      So, How did the universe get created.
      What existed before then?

      You're thinking about it in wrong terms - it was never created and there was no "before then". You can't even say "there was nothing before then" because "before then" did not exist. Time started existing along with the Big Bang, thus the Universe existed since always (since the beginning of time).

      I don't believe this story, and I think more research is needed here.

      As many others are saying here, it's pretty obvious that our best guess about the fate of the Universe has a very low chance of being actually true, because we don't understand the Universe well enough yet. But it is our best guess nonetheless, and we will keep guessing until we get it right. This is how science works - someone brings up a theory and until it is disproved, it's assumed to be correct.

    5. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      It's quite easy: The universe (or at least as much as we humans can fathonm it) has always existed! There is no such thing as "the beginning of time or space" The human brain does not have the capability to understand this concept, but we do have the primal need to understand things around us so we endeavor to put things into an understandable perspective, even if, unfortunately, this makes us succumb to the ludicrous.
      I have always hated with passion the "Big Bang" theory, mostly because it takes something so (pardon my pun) infinitely wonderful and exciting as infinite space and turns it into just another notch on the timeline of mortal existence.

      jwf

    6. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does this mean that there was actually a "beginning of time" as far as we can tell?
      Why not.

      What was that point?
      Around 12,000,000,000 B.C.

      What existed before then?
      Nothing, not even time.

      Since matter can't be created nor destroyed, where did it come from?
      Maybe conservation of mass/energy doesn't apply in this special case.

    7. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the funniest thing I've seen all day, and I've taken a leak.

    8. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by martyros · · Score: 1
      Well, there's a lot of potential answers to this... I think Stephen Hawking conjectured "baby universes" dropping like bubbles from some "other" universe (someone who's read the book follow up here.)

      Of course, there is that whole God thing too. Maybe God just made the big bang. It's a theory with at least as much scientific support as "baby universes". What kind of cosmic evidence would it take for "science" to conclude that the universe was created?

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    9. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by RatBastard · · Score: 1

      Sure it can!
      Q: Why did the universe come into being?
      A: Because it did.

      There you go. But that's not the answer people want, is it?

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    10. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by popu · · Score: 1

      42.

    11. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by SectoidRandom · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This 'evidence' does not disprove the Big Band, in fact it just attempts to answer what is going to eventually finnish off this universe, there by completing the theory. It doesnt attempt to answer anything more about the Big Bang itself, but just proposes a solution to a question that is usually asked when talking about the Big Band, that is; "If the universe started in a Bang where will it end?"

      Much of your question is not relevant in this discussion, as the Big Bang theory attempts to explain what happens in our universe, not before it! :) If you want to read about theories explaing what happened before the beginning of time (as we know it) a nice place to start is reading about M-Theory and the Multiverse (As opposed to universe).

    12. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by etymxris · · Score: 3, Insightful

      First of all, do not extrapolate beyond what you could possibly know. We live today, and we have evidence that there were things before us for a very long time. But we have no guide as to what exists "before the universe". Had you seen X number of universes, and knew the nature of their origin, you might be able to guess the nature of the origin of our universe. But no one knows about other universes, let alone what happened "before the beginning" of our own universe.

      Secondly, from my understanding, the Big Bang complements the Inflationary Model. Everything started accelorating from a giant explosion. But as the galaxies got further apart, the void between them tended to increase it's size. This is the mysterious "inflation" force that keeps galaxies accelorating away from each other.

      There must be such a force if everything keeps expanding forever. Imagine that Earth is the only object in the universe, and someone throws an apple straight up so that it does not fall into orbit. Eventually, no matter how far away that apple gets, it will come back to Earth. That's because there is nothing accelorating it away from Earth, and gravity pulls it towards Earth. In order for the apple to keep increasing it's distance from Earth, something must keep pushing on it.

      The thing that keeps pushing it is the inflationary force, or, alternatively, the cosmological constant. It does not explain the origins of the universe, but rather it's fate. So it is irrelevant to a question of "the beginning of time."

    13. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by iabervon · · Score: 1

      The universe doesn't have to collapse in order for there to be multiple Big Bang events. It's possible that there is some substrate outside of the visible universe which is expanding so rapidly that Big Bang-like events occuring in it are dragged away from each other faster than they grow, such that having each visible universe expand forever will not lead to them colliding. So even if there is never another Big Bang where we are, such events could be common over an area we can't sense.

      The Big Bang in this case is just the beginning of locally-visible information, which is the beginning of time for us, but not for the energy of which we are formed.

    14. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by MrDog · · Score: 1

      Aha! Step aside! I AM an astrophysicist, I can help. Big Bang theory makes no statements about where the Big Bang came from, only the physics describing the behavior of the Universe an instant after "creation". An accelerating, expanding universe has always been one possible future, and this seems to be what the evidence supports.

    15. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by kisrael · · Score: 1

      Of course, there is that whole God thing too. Maybe God just made the big bang. It's a theory with at least as much scientific support as "baby universes". What kind of cosmic evidence would it take for "science" to conclude that the universe was created?

      I dunno, what kind of cosmic evidence would it take for "faith" to conclude that the universe just happened? (Certainly non-lunatic believers have had to expand their view of how god works from a straightforward reading of holy scriptures to "god just set it up to unfold the way science is demonstrating that it did")

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    16. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by vorpal22 · · Score: 1

      This concept of multiple universes makes absolutely no sense to me; doesn't, by definition, the universe mean "everything"? Hence, if multiple time/space continuums existed, they would just constitute different parts of the same universe? If the universe truly means everything, then concepts like "before" the universe and "outside" the universe have no meaning, because the nature of statements like that would imply that they are a part of the universe.

      The only model that possibly makes sense to me yet, of course, due to my limited brain as a human, is that the universe is infinite in every possible way. It has existed infinitely far back in time, and it will exist infinitely far forward in time, in an infinite number of dimensions, etc... At least when I start thinking this way, I get into paradoxes about the nature of the universe and I find that deducible logical arguments lead to dualities and contradictions, but in the context of infinity (true infinity, beyond what we can conceive in a mathematical sense), I would imagine that given a statement, there exists a finite framework (indeed, an infinite number of finite frameworks) in which the statement is provably true, and likewise, a finite framework in which the statement is provably false. We can only think in finite frameworks (even our concepts of countably infinite and uncountably infinite aren't *truly* infinite), and when you really think about it, it only makes sense to think in finite frameworks, so unfortunately, it is my belief that the universe will never truly be within our realm of understanding.

    17. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by supabeast! · · Score: 1

      "Since matter can't be created nor destroyed, where did it come from? (though that is a question beyond most planes of though, IMO)"

      Matter and energy exist because they have to. Otherwise, there would be nothing to compare the void to, and all existance would be nullified.

    18. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by sisukapalli1 · · Score: 1
      So, How did the universe get created. Does this mean that there was actually a "beginning of time" as far as we can tell? What was that point? What existed before then? Since matter can't be created nor destroyed, where did it come from? (though that is a question beyond most planes of though, IMO)

      Slightly offtopic but I thought I'd bring up something that is very similar to this line of questioning.

      The Rig Veda, the most ancient text of Hinduism contains these questions in its first verse.

      It seems those guys didn't know the answers and neither do I

      S

    19. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by KDan · · Score: 1

      I still think it's better than:

      Q: Why did the universe come into being?
      A: Because God willed it to be.
      Q: Why did God come into being?
      A: Because He did.

      The former actually passes Occam's razor, at least :-)

      Daniel

      --
      Carpe Diem
    20. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by vorpal22 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. The simplest, and most logical notion to me is that the universe is infinite in every way and has always existed. Thus, it has always been infinitely large and infinitely expanding in an infinite number of dimensions. The only caveat to this fact is that we can't possibly truly wrap our minds around it, and IME, I've found that attempts to do so boggle the mind and freak me out.

    21. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by vorpal22 · · Score: 1

      Orthogonal? In what sense?
      I've believed that ultimately, science and religion, which were highly divergent at times in the past, will ultimately converge to the same thing. I enjoy studying eastern religions in particular, and I find it fascinating to notice parallels between, say, Taoism and quantum / relativity theory.

    22. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Turning a switch on in systems equations requires an infinite amount of energy. Think about that the next time someone tells you to switch the lights off if you aren't in the room for 5 minutes.

      Seriously though, I think every cosmologist should be required to be an Electrical Engineer first. I should write a book, All the I needed to know in life I learned in Systems

      • All of the mathmatical rules we have to describe the universe are approximations.
      • There is more than one model to describe most phenominon.
      • Any time you convert data, you alter it. Quantifying data is a conversion process.
      • Quick, Cheap, Right. Pick any two.
      • If the problem can't be solved, transform it into another domain or eliminate variables through constraints.
      • And by the way, just because someone says it's a constraint doesn't make it so.
      • Engineers are the center of the Universe. They get to pick the coordinate system.
      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    23. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      I dunno, what kind of cosmic evidence would it take for "faith" to conclude that the universe just happened?

      Science is the search for knowledge about the observable universe.

      Faith is a belief in an entity that is beyond the knowable universe.

      While Science can prove faith, it cannot disprove faith, because the boundary of the unknown keeps moving--and any one of the faith structures I have ever encountered easily can move as the boundary of the unknown moves.

      Certainly non-lunatic believers have had to expand their view of how god works from a straightforward reading of holy scriptures to "god just set it up to unfold the way science is demonstrating that it did"

      Only a few fanatics really cared how God worked. It has always been enough for the bulk of us to say "God works", and not to worry about how.

      If the only way that God influences reality is thorough adjustments of random chance, he could still accomplish nearly every miracle attributed to Him.

    24. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by woodsma · · Score: 1

      And how, exactly, does having nothing to compare a void to necessitate the existance of matter and energy? Just because there's a void (a contradiction if I ever saw one), it doesn't mean that there must be non-void.

      Why would anything have to exist? Indeed, if something had to exist, that would only be because something did exist and necessitated the existance of the other thing. And, of course, if there's something now, there's always been something (though not necessarily material, I think), because pure logic dictates that out of nothing nothing can possibly come.

    25. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Jester99 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This concept of multiple universes makes absolutely no sense to me; doesn't, by definition, the universe mean "everything"? Hence, if multiple time/space continuums existed, they would just constitute different parts of the same universe?

      The best way to think about it is to imagine a balloon. Blow the balloon up. See the inner walls of it? That's the universe. You can place a pebble anywhere on those walls and roll it around, and it's pretty much trapped there.

      Our universe (theoretically, anyway) is a special, 3-d balloon wall. Supposing the inner walls of the balloon were 3d, you could travel around in there, but never escape.

      Now take hold of some of the balloon in one hand, so you've pinched off a sub-balloon. Give the pinch-point a small twist so it stays that way. A pebble rolling around on the inner surface of that pinched off bubble will never make it into the original balloon inner-space. They're connected, but it is impossible to get from one "universe" to the other. This is what is meant by the multiple universes sprouting off from each other theory. Singularities in space, etc, cause baby universes to "pinch off" from the one we know and love.

      Disclaimer: IANAPP (I am not a particle physicist), but I've read a few books / magazines on the subject :)

      That's how I think about it, anyway.

    26. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Scarblac · · Score: 1

      So, How did the universe get created. Does this mean that there was actually a "beginning of time" as far as we can tell? What was that point? What existed before then? Since matter can't be created nor destroyed, where did it come from? (though that is a question beyond most planes of though, IMO)

      The Big Bang was the beginning of time. Therefore, there is no "before then".

      --
      I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
    27. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by saddino · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Uh, no.

      Let's say I, as a supreme being, throw a rock, connected to my hand by a piece of magic string into the void. And lets say life evolves on this rock to the point where it is has figured out that it came from "the big throw." The big question for everyone on the rock is: Is the magic string

      a) taut? (static Universe)
      b) forever stretchy? (infinite Universe)
      c) rubberbandy? (big crunch Universe)

      You seem to like c) which I agree sounds very nice, because then life can be seen as an infinite bounce of "big throw, expand, crunch, repeat."

      But just because someone comes up with a good theory for b) doesn't mean I didn't throw the rock in the first place!

      Maybe this is the first rock I've ever thrown? I guess I'll never throw another one. I hope nobody has a problem with that.

      Or, maybe I'll just throw another rock with one of my infinite hands (ah, the multiverse concept)?

      Point is: yes, there can be a big bang AND a forever expanding universe.

      P.S. What you want to believe about "before" the big bang is a metaphysicial question, because time and space began at the big bang. You might as well be asking "what is north of the north pole?"

    28. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by op51n · · Score: 1

      Well, there's nothing to say that if the expanding universe theory is proven that the big bang didn't happen. Just like if the universe would crunch, then re-bang, well it would have to have exploded a first time wouldn't it?
      One of the theories of the big bang, based on work at CERN, reckons that particles pop out of other dimensions when you collide particles on this one (as i heard it put, "you bang together an apple and an apple, and you don't get lots of little bits of apples, you get a whole fruit salad appear for a fraction of a milisecond").
      I've never quite made up my mind what my opinion on the big bang or expanding universe theories and whatnot. I guess it comes down toit being such a vast thing, spread over such a vast amount of time that it's kind of hard to get a fully subjective view. Plus I'm of the opinion that what we think of as the universe isn't all there is, be it multiple universes through dimensions or whatever. I tried to say that without it sounding like a Sci-Fi outline but it just didn't work!

    29. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by doktr+thunder · · Score: 1
      how are "universe is expanding" and "big bang couldn't have happened" mutually exclusive. There is a large body of evidence supporting the big bang theory, i thought it was disputed by a select few.



      I was also under the impression that the big bang theory sort of spawned the expanding universe theory.ie</p>
      Big bang sets everything expanding about that initial center point. So there are 2 options, everything can keep expanding forever, or gravity brings everything to a stop and then implosion. I guess there is more evidence for the former now...</p>

      and you kind of answer your own question</p>
      the reason why we can't answer "how did the universe get created" or "what existed before then" is because, for all intensive purposes, it is the Beginning of Time, all our powers of observation and experimentation fall apart at the big bang.</p>

      I also thought since e=mc^2 that matter didnt have to come from anything. The Law of the Conservation of energy says that for the whole system it is constant at 0, so nothing was magically created or destroyed.</p>

      nothing had to "create" the universe, or at least that is not a prerequistite for a theory's viability....

    30. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Best.......... Post...... Ever! You've just made a friend. (Posting as AC to avoid vindictive offtopic mods)

    31. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by chriso11 · · Score: 1

      Well, I think you are right. Christian religions no longer believe that lightning comes from god, and that disease is not caused by witches' curses. Well, at least most of them... Who knows - maybe they'll catch onto evolution someday...

      --
      No, I don't trust in god. He'll have to pay up front, like everybody else.
    32. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by vorpal22 · · Score: 1

      Very interesting, and just wanted to say thanks for the explanation!

    33. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Goalie_Ca · · Score: 1

      Engineers are the center of the Universe.

      Ahmen to that!

      --

      ----
      Go canucks, habs, and sens!
    34. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There must be such a force if everything keeps expanding forever. Imagine that Earth is the only object in the universe, and someone throws an apple straight up so that it does not fall into orbit. Eventually, no matter how far away that apple gets, it will come back to Earth. That's because there is nothing accelorating it away from Earth, and gravity pulls it towards Earth. In order for the apple to keep increasing it's distance from Earth, something must keep pushing on it.
      This is not true at all. If the apple is thrown hard enough (approx. 11 km/s) it will never fall down to Earth, because the gravitational interaction between the Earth and the apple weakens as the distance between them increases (inversly proportional to the square of the distance), and at a certain speed (known as Escape Velocity), the gravitational pull will never be enough to stop the apple, no matter how much time you give it, and it will never fall to Earth even without an external force acting upon it (unless the universeis a hypersphere, in which case the apple will eventually hit the other side).
    35. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by etymxris · · Score: 1

      When the apple is thrown away from Earth, there are two vectors: the velocity vector pointing away from Earth, and the acceleration vector pointing towards Earth. Assuming that the acceleration vector never decreases to zero, the velocity vector will continue to decrease in magnitude and, eventually, point the other way--towards Earth.

      Of course, many things complicate this picture, such as other bodies in the universe, the theory of relativity, the possibility of orbit, and so on. There is one complicating factor that does concern us particularly--the cosmological constant. This allows there to be a speed S such that if you throw the ball faster than S, it never comes back. Without the inflationary model, and without the other complicating factors, there would be no such speed S.

    36. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by kisrael · · Score: 1

      Science is the search for knowledge about the observable universe.
      Faith is a belief in an entity that is beyond the knowable universe.
      While Science can prove faith, it cannot disprove faith, because the boundary of the unknown keeps moving--and any one of the faith structures I have ever encountered easily can move as the boundary of the unknown moves.


      By "faith structures", we can say "religions" for the most part, right?

      I think many faith structures are much more rigid than you suppose. There's a strong unwillingness to change in fundamentalist Christianity, which is why, amazingly, there are attempts to make the fundamentals of Evolution look like a matter of continuing dispute.

      And if it keeps moving, what's the point?

      Yeah, I've come to the conclusion that science hasn't done a terrific job at explaining the why of the big bang. I think the question then becomes, whatever that cause is...is it likely to look as proscribed by one of hundreds of religions? To get into that question, you have to dive pretty deeply into the apologetics of one particular belief system.

      Only a few fanatics really cared how God worked. It has always been enough for the bulk of us to say "God works", and not to worry about how.

      Are you KIDDING? The canonical kid question about religion is "ok, everything came from god...but where did god come from?" That is a natural question, and is a huge part of "how does God work".

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    37. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by martyros · · Score: 1
      I realized that "cosmic evidence" could be misunderstood... what I meant was, "scientific evidence from the cosmos." There are, of course, many different kinds of evidence that affect our beliefs (more on this later); if the only thing I were to judge on were scientific evidence about the cosmos, though, I think here's my main one: If the universe were in a steady state or in a cycle. This doesn't prove there's no God, of course, but it takes away the whole "How did we get here" problem: the universe has always existed, and always will.

      I'm not sure if the following really come under "cosmic" or not, but here's a couple:

      • If there were found to be life on many planets, in many very diverse conditions, and in many different stages of evolution. If we observed bacteria in our laboratories evolve into multi-cellular organisms and thence to sexual beings; if we could breed a dog into a cat; if we observed life come from nothing on a regular basis.
      • If animals developed religion and art, at appropraite degrees of development.
      • If scientists had never come up with the "Anthropic principle". If there were relatively few physical constants, or if there were a wide range of values for which the universe as we know it, or a universe of similar complexity, could exist.
      None of these would prove conclusively that there is no God; but it would probably make an unbiased observer, looking only at this evidence, more prone to naturalism than deism.

      As for evidence, there are many different kinds of evidence. What kind of scientific evidence is there that the person I call my mom is actually my biological mother? Well, there's DNA evidence, blood types, and so on. What kind of scientific evidence is there that my mother loves me? Or what would it take to convince me that that she never loved me? It's of a different type.

      If all I had was a dusy book and a bunch of arguments about science and all that, I don't think my faith would be very lasting.

      So, OK -- now it's your turn. What kind of cosmic evidence would make you prone to believe in a creator?

      P.S. I read your "Skeptics Guide to Mortality". Pretty good; all the same, I like mine a lot better. =)

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    38. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By that logic, the sum 1 + 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 + ... diverges to infinity rather than converging to 2. Adding an infinite number of positive quantities can actually give you a finite number, one of the more interesting results of basic integral calculus.

    39. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by martyros · · Score: 1
      Only a few fanatics really cared how God worked. It has always been enough for the bulk of us to say "God works", and not to worry about how.

      Are you KIDDING? The canonical kid question about religion is "ok, everything came from god...but where did god come from?" That is a natural question, and is a huge part of "how does God work".

      Well, no... you're still thinking of philosophy. The questions most people really have are the ones that matter on a day-to-day basis: How am I to live? What does God want me to do?

      In the old days, most people who baked bread did't really care about how the heat catalyzes the chemical reaction and so on... they wanted to eat, and they wanted to know what they can do to bring that about. Knowing the chemical reactions going on and why they happen is nice, but it's not necessary for eating; you just need the recipe.

      Plus, being a chemist doesn't necessarily make you a good cook, although it can help; neither does being a philosopher or a theologian necessarily make you good, or closer to God; although it can certainly help. =)

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    40. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by supabeast! · · Score: 1

      Because without SOMETHING, nothing isn't anything! If there was no energy or matter, what would the universe be? Nothing, because without stuff within the space as a contrast, the emptiness is no longer space, it is just nothing.

      Even nothing is something, but to exist, there has to be something in the nothing to make the nothing something. I think.

      Now that my brain hurts again, I'll go read a book...

    41. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Catholic Church has.

      Next?

    42. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      By "faith structures", we can say "religions" for the most part, right?

      Well, yeah. I tend to think of a Religion as a body meant to bring people to a better faith / spread the good word et al, but for this discussion they're interchangeable.

      I think many faith structures are much more rigid than you suppose. There's a strong unwillingness to change in fundamentalist Christianity, which is why, amazingly, there are attempts to make the fundamentals of Evolution look like a matter of continuing dispute.

      The "fundamentals of evolution" are either the observable fact that creatures evolve, or the unprovable thought that _everything_ evolved.

      If I proposed a scientific theory that stated, essentially, that you were born from the family dog and not your mother, you'd be pretty upset too. Especially if my standard of evidence was "look at these scratch marks from the time of your birth" and not "look, you're a dog!"

      Yeah, I've come to the conclusion that science hasn't done a terrific job at explaining the why of the big bang.

      Science isn't supposed to tell us WHY. It's just supposed to tells us WHAT or HOW. Religion tells us WHY.

      I think the question then becomes, whatever that cause is...is it likely to look as proscribed by one of hundreds of religions? To get into that question, you have to dive pretty deeply into the apologetics of one particular belief system.

      Aside from a few control-freaks that only show up in times of general turmoil--like the European Renaissance or the modern-day middle east--most religions don't say one way or the other how the world looks, what mechanism God uses to influence the World, or specifically how God created the world.

      Are you KIDDING? The canonical kid question about religion is "ok, everything came from god...but where did god come from?" That is a natural question, and is a huge part of "how does God work".

      "Where did God come from" and "How did God create the world" are two entirely different questions.

      I don't need to know where The Great Cosmic Force That Sits Outside Of Creation came from to know that He is there, wonder about what He is like, or conjecture about how He influences creation.

      Just like learning where Linux came from, and what the philoiphsy of the GPL are, won't help you figure out how the command line works beyond "its UNIXy."

    43. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by woodsma · · Score: 1

      Because without SOMETHING, nothing isn't anything! If there was no energy or matter, what would the universe be? Nothing, because without stuff within the space as a contrast, the emptiness is no longer space, it is just nothing.


      Sorry, nothing isn't anything anyway!

      Now if you're sayting that matter must exist because the universe is, then I'm in complete agreement. However, what I took your comment to mean (perhaps incorrectly?) was that the universe had to exist in order to contrast non-existance, but that presupposes an existance of something then again, but on a less physical level. I'm speaking of a rule or law that creates this "must", but then, where would that rule have come from? Any way you slice it, if we have actual existance, or something that necessitates existance, then we have something that exists and it's not a true void. But then, I recognize that I'm bringing an element of a non-physical into what started as a statement of the physical.

      Even nothing is something...

      Again, nothing isn't something. You're making a contradictory statement. If you're speaking of something, even something unseen, you cannot be speaking of nothing! Interestingly, we cannot conceive of nothing...every time we do, we actually end up thinking about something...

      Now that my brain hurts again, I'll go read a book...

      Not that I can appreciate! :)

    44. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by woodsma · · Score: 1

      Now that my brain hurts again, I'll go read a book...

      Not that I can appreciate! :)

      er, what I meant to say was "NOW, that I can appreciate! :)". Obviously, my typing leaves something to be desired!

    45. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by PenguiN42 · · Score: 1

      Anyone familiar with basic calculus would realise that it's entirely possible that an acceleration decaying to infinity but always existing might *not* overcome some velocities. Think of the acceleration as a curve, and the change in velocity is the area under that curve.

      Not all curves integrated to infinity equal infinity... in fact, the area under the curve of acceleration as the apple is traveling away from the earth would be finite: this is exactly what Escape Velocity is.

      --
      The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
    46. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by togofspookware · · Score: 1

      Well, maybe it's just impossible for nothing to exist :-)

      Seriously. Try to imagine nothing existing. No other universes, no physics, no mathematics. No such thing as 1 + 1 = 2. Nothing to even concieve of the concept. No such thing as existence. It's impossible to stretch your mind around the concept.

      I guess I can't really back this up with anything, but intuitively, to me, it just seems impossible for the universe to not be infinite. Because then what would be outside the universe? I mean before/after/all around it? I mean, what is the universe 'embedded' in?

      Maybe it's only beause of the way our brains are constructed that we can't hold in our heads the idea that the universe is embedded in 'nothing'. But if you try to think about it, it's just counter-intuitive that 'nothing' could exist at all, seeing as how something other than nothing exists.

      Either there's nothing, or there's everything, and there's not nothing.

      Blah.

      *brain implodes*

      --
      Duct tape, XML, democracy: Not doing the job? Use more.
    47. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Occam's razor has been used a few too many times - I can see stubble.

    48. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there was no energy or matter, what would the universe be? Nothing, because without stuff within the space as a contrast, the emptiness is no longer space, it is just nothing.


      That's your opinion. In general relativity, space is imbued with physical properties, such as geometry, regardless of whether there is any matter or energy in it.
    49. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by fudgefactor7 · · Score: 1

      The Big Bang (if you ask me, and since you did, I'm going to answer) is the result of a "pinhole" in our previously empty Universe. This pinhole is a 3D hole. It lead to another Universe (which is the same size as ours) that is composed of no matter but pure energy. Some of the energy leaked into our Universe, instantaneously converting into Matter and Energy (that whole Einstein thing); and some of the energy reflected back and closed the hole. The result is an expanding matter-Universe which expands in all directions at the speed of light. (Making the Universe a sphere.)

      So there you go. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.

    50. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Clith · · Score: 1
      [..] won't this new theory disprove all previous theories about the Bing Bang as well [? ..] If this substance will keep the Universe expanding forever, how was it ever possible to have a Big Bang in the first place? It would be inconcievable to think anything created the Universe in the Big Bang theory, because it could never happen, thus our Universe does not go in cycles (expand then contract - repeat).
      You are confusing the Big Bang theory with the Cyclic Universe (Bang->Crunch->Bang->Crunch-> .. repeat) theories. The Big Bang only postulates that there was.. well, a Big Bang several billion years ago. That's it, no cycle or anything. That's when time began, and space too. Yes, it's hard to wrap your head around it, but that's all it is.

      I think that the bang-crunch-bang-crunch thing made people more comfortable.

      --
      [ReidNews]
    51. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Turning a switch on in systems equations requires an infinite amount of energy.
      Apparently your systems course was taught by someone who flunked the course, then! What a load of bunk. You show me a model of a switch that requires an infinite amount of energy to turn on, and I'll show you a faulty model.

    52. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by jonhuang · · Score: 1

      I don't know.. there are quite a few things I can't understand. Such as the number 137--I mean, I can put a label on it (i.e. "absolute nothingness") and perform functions based on its symbols and recorded properties, but I've nevr been able to imagine 137 seperate obejects at once. In the same way I can imagine a fewer number of things, say 3. I just cant wrap my mind around it.

    53. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by jonhuang · · Score: 1

      I believe this too, though in further reflection, it means nothing to me.

    54. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by jonhuang · · Score: 1

      Q: Why did the universe come into being?
      A: Because God willed it to be.
      Q: Why did God come into being?
      A: Because He is.

      (a quick revision in regards to neccesary beings, i.e. entities that are requisite and eternal if they exist at all; e.g. the number 2, which many people believe exists even if there's nothing to count.)

    55. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by kisrael · · Score: 1

      Well, no... you're still thinking of philosophy. The questions most people really have are the ones that matter on a day-to-day basis: How am I to live? What does God want me to do?

      If you're going to be that cynical about how people limit their speculation, than why not go the full monty: How do I avoid burning in hell? How can I get God to use some divine power to help me out right here and now?

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    56. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Q+Who · · Score: 1

      P.S. What you want to believe about "before" the big bang is a metaphysicial question, because time and space began at the big bang. You might as well be asking "what is north of the north pole?"

      That's bullshit. Notion of time is not necessary for causality.

    57. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by kisrael · · Score: 1

      If I proposed a scientific theory that stated, essentially, that you were born from the family dog and not your mother, you'd be pretty upset too. Especially if my standard of evidence was "look at these scratch marks from the time of your birth" and not "look, you're a dog!"

      (Two can play at this game.) No, clearly you're made of special god goo. I mean heck, that god goo must be the crucial difference between you and the chimp that looks a lot like you and shares a lot of your DNA.

      Science isn't supposed to tell us WHY. It's just supposed to tells us WHAT or HOW. Religion tells us WHY.

      Semantics....the WHY of the big bang is just another form of WHAT was there "before" the big bang and HOW did the big bang "happen".

      Religion just says "here's the border of what you can hope to understand, don't even bother thinking you're way around it, that's God's turf". Hence the "Great Cosmic Force That Sits Outside Of Creation". Admittedly testing theories at these levels is difficult, but I don't think it's sporting to just give up because "God says pay no attention to the man behind the curtain".

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    58. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Effexor · · Score: 1

      I think the point he was trying to make is that you suggest that science is foolish in attempting to explain the origins of everything when you have the answer. "God did it." But this merely puts the question back a generation. It's like if I ask where do chickens come from and you said eggs. The suggestion that God is The Great Cosmic etc. that Sits Outside is a bit of a cop out.

      If there is a God then where did he come from? What was there before him? If the answer is nowhere and nothing then its not really any more ridiculous than extracting him from the equation and saying the same for the universe.

      Oh, and at its heart isn't religion entirely about saying how the world is, why it is that way and where it came from? Only after you have answered those questions with "god(s)" can you start asking "What does God want from me?"

      --

      As the air to a bird or the sea to a fish, so is contempt to the contemptible -W.B.

    59. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by kisrael · · Score: 1

      I think here's my main one: If the universe were in a steady state or in a cycle. This doesn't prove there's no God, of course, but it takes away the whole "How did we get here" problem: the universe has always existed, and always will.

      Eh, I don't see the steady state vs. big bang theory changing the basic question: "why is there something rather than nothing".

      If there were found to be life on many planets, in many very diverse conditions,

      Haven't we found microbes that seem to hitch ride on commets? Hanging out around undersea vents that we thought could never support life?

      and in many different stages of evolution. If we observed bacteria in our laboratories evolve into multi-cellular organisms and thence to sexual beings; if we could breed a dog into a cat; if we observed life come from nothing on a regular basis.

      All these things take TIME and the equivalent of Massively Parralel Processing on a scale we just don't have.

      If animals developed religion and art, at appropraite degrees of development.

      And who's to say tht the dog doesn't sense a bit of the divine in our ability to secure food? Or that the whistles and clicks of Dolphins playing have at least one level of meaning we can't fathom?

      If scientists had never come up with the "Anthropic principle". If there were relatively few physical constants, or if there were a wide range of values for which the universe as we know it, or a universe of similar complexity, could exist.

      Like I've admitted, I don't think Science has done a brilliant job in this area because it's very difficult work, but I tend to have the most hope for the multiple universes kind of thinking, we're something outside our system and frame of reference is somehow generating universes, and every once in a great great while one emerges that isn't an undifferentiated puddle of plasma, and once in an even greater while things work out and life emerges (and life can be pretty damn tenacious) and even less frequent than that, the life evolves to the point of intelligence.

      If all I had was a dusy book and a bunch of arguments about science and all that, I don't think my faith would be very lasting.

      I'm still convinced that a LOT of faith springs from a sense of "wow, the world is unfair, that doesn't seem right to me" and "I don't want to die".

      So, OK -- now it's your turn. What kind of cosmic evidence would make you prone to believe in a creator?

      "If only god would give me a sign... like making a large deposit in my name to a swiss bank account." ... or maybe someone who could regularly perform what would commonly be held to be miracles through prayer that could withstand a few months of investigations by the Amazing Randi and/or Penn & Teller and maybe some others. At least then I'd be interested in what he or she had to say about the issue.

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    60. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by naasking · · Score: 1

      Time did not exist before the Big Bang. It is non-sensical to ponder what happened "before" it or to say that the Big Bang was dependent on something "before" (in your case, a infinite chain of Big Crunches).

    61. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      This 'evidence' does not disprove the Big Band, in fact it just attempts to answer what is going to eventually finnish off this universe


      Well, finns haven't dealed with Earth either, so it will take some time before finns can finnish off the universe. But we are working on it.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    62. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      * Engineers are the center of the Universe. They get to pick the coordinate system.


      Well, you could say that I'm in the center of the Universe. Since Universe doesn't really have limits as such, the point in space I'm at has equal distance to the borders of the Universe in all directions. Therefore I'm in the cetner of the Universe. But then again, that means that everyone is at the center of the Universe in the same time.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    63. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by ThePyro · · Score: 1
      There must be such a force if everything keeps expanding forever. Imagine that Earth is the only object in the universe, and someone throws an apple straight up so that it does not fall into orbit. Eventually, no matter how far away that apple gets, it will come back to Earth. That's because there is nothing accelorating it away from Earth, and gravity pulls it towards Earth. In order for the apple to keep increasing it's distance from Earth, something must keep pushing on it.

      That is not quite correct. If you throw the apple fast enough (faster than escape velocity) then it will never fall back to Earth, although it will always be slowing down.

      The potential energy of an object in a gravitational field is traditionally represented as a finite, negative number (at infinite distance the potential energy is greatest - zero). The "escape velocity" is defined as having just enough kinetic energy to counter that negative potential energy.

      On Earth's surface, escape velocity is about 25000 MPH.

    64. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by saddino · · Score: 1

      That's a priceless comment. Do tell how one can have cause and effect without the notion of time.

    65. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Q+Who · · Score: 1

      That's a priceless comment. Do tell how one can have cause and effect without the notion of time.

      Time is a property of space-time geometry. Causality is not. Go get some clue.

    66. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by saddino · · Score: 1

      Why, you're right! That link perfectly explains why you think something did happen "before" the big bang! Thanks!

    67. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Q+Who · · Score: 1

      Why, you're right! That link perfectly explains why you think something did happen "before" the big bang! Thanks!

      Okay, you seem so sure that causality is only possible within a single time frame, so I will give you a counter-example.

      In the inflationary universe theory, already considered classic, it is possible to create black holes, which under some conditions will expand into their own universes, which will then have spacetime completely separated from ours.

      The second universe creation was then caused from this universe, although nothing prevents any smartass in that universe to claim that it is impossible for anything to cause creation of it, since the time began when the universe was created.

    68. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by fudgefactor7 · · Score: 1

      I disagree. Time did exist before the Big Bang, there just wasn't a reference point from which to measure events. There could have been an "infinite time" of nothing happening before the Big Bang, but since we have no way of knowing we're kind of stuck with the idea that Time as a construct began with the Big Bang. Time exists only to prevent all events from happening simultaneously, since the Universe didn't come into existance and die out at the same instant, we can conjecture that Time pre-existed the Big Bang.

    69. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by saddino · · Score: 1
      nothing prevents any smartass in that universe to claim that it is impossible for anything to cause creation of it, since the time began when the universe was created.

      Exactly. And that is why the argument is metaphysical.

      In your example, for those inside that universe, it is impossible to prove causation. For all intents and purposes, in that universe, the question of its cause is one for the philosophers of that universe to argue.

    70. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      I think the point he was trying to make is that you suggest that science is foolish in attempting to explain the origins of everything when you have the answer. "God did it."

      I certainly didn't say that.

      Science can explain and conjecture all that it wants, about any real thing that we can see and observe. But as far as propertly agnostic science is concerned, God is as irrelevant as fiction.

      Oh, and at its heart isn't religion entirely about saying how the world is, why it is that way and where it came from? Only after you have answered those questions with "god(s)" can you start asking "What does God want from me

      Yes, religion asks and answers "why." Not how, not what, just "why."

    71. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      No, clearly you're made of special god goo. I mean heck, that god goo must be the crucial difference between you and the chimp that looks a lot like you and shares a lot of your DNA.

      That's not a scientific argument. You can make all of the rhetorical, philisophical, or religious arugments you want, and say any darn thing you want in those arguments. But the moment that you call it "science", you had better hold yourself to the same standard of evidence that everyone else (and every other branch of science) is held to.

      Semantics....the WHY of the big bang is just another form of WHAT was there "before" the big bang and HOW did the big bang "happen".

      No, it isn't.

      Let's settle the semantics issue right here.

      Science can tell us that Hiroshima was destroyed--this is the WHAT.

      Science can tell us that an atomic bomb destroyed Hiroshima--the HOW.

      But "science" cannot tell us why the US bombed Hiroshima--the WHY. We have to take the word of those who were there if we want to answer WHY.

      Religion just says "here's the border of what you can hope to understand, don't even bother thinking you're way around it, that's God's turf".

      Mine doesn't. My religion says "God is out there, and he made all of this, and he loves you." It doesn't so much as mention "don't even try to understand how I made this" or "don't even try and learn how it's all put together." Heck, God never said "don't try and understand me." He may have said "don't waste your time--you won't figure it out"--but that's something else, and He's been wrong before.

      Admittedly testing theories at these levels is difficult, but I don't think it's sporting to just give up because "God says pay no attention to the man behind the curtain".

      OK. Figure out a way to disprove the existance of a being who is not bound by time and has no physical form, who set up the natural order and likes it this way, who wants humanity to become better than we are--and who has admited to us that he wants to stay hidden.

      Testing the existance of God isn't just difficult--it's out and out impossible.

    72. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by naasking · · Score: 1

      I disagree. [...] Time exists only to prevent all events from happening simultaneously, since the Universe didn't come into existance and die out at the same instant, we can conjecture that Time pre-existed the Big Bang.

      You can disagree and conjecture all you like, but that doesn't make it so; reality need not conform to your perceptions or aesthetic tastes. Until you can provide some coherent theory which is testable against reality, this is merely hand waving.

      But since hand waving can sometimes be fun:

      Time did exist before the Big Bang, there just wasn't a reference point from which to measure events.

      There were no events before the Big Bang (since the it is the beginning of our universe), hence we can conclude that time essentially began there. If nothing existed before the Big Bang (ie. no space-time events), then can time really be said to have existed? In other words, if nothing happened until the Big Bang, can anything really be said to have existed "beforehand"?

    73. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by kisrael · · Score: 1

      But the moment that you call it "science", you had better hold yourself to the same standard of evidence that everyone else (and every other branch of science) is held to.

      Of course it's not a scientific argument. And you gave me the exact reasons why I tend to trust science over faith...standards of evidence.

      But "science" cannot tell us why the US bombed Hiroshima--the WHY. We have to take the word of those who were there if we want to answer WHY.

      Of course science could take a stab at the why. It's not going to be very good at it, since it'll be devilishly hard to setup controlled repeatable experiments, but at least in principle you could set up a hypothesis, test it, and fish around for some peer review.

      Heck, God never said "don't try and understand me." He may have said "don't waste your time--you won't figure it out"--but that's something else, and He's been wrong before.

      God has been wrong before? Hrrm, you might have a more reasonable view of religion than most.

      Since neither side is going to make a truly convincing case...as far as I can tell, the issue is did something intelligent but outside the system create the system on purpose. And is one of the religions more or less right. And why are the other ones so wrong, or even around at all. And how can we tell. And, in that 'right' religion, is an honest accounting, or are we just seeing the propaganda for one superpowered being. And is that diving being, in turn, part of an even larger system that we stand even less of a chance of explaining the existence of.

      Testing the existance of God isn't just difficult--it's out and out impossible.

      Heck, if you adopt the solistic stance, proving the existence of anything outside your own consciousness is out and out impossible. It becomes a matter of figuring what seems most likely, and convincing other people, preferably through repeatable and testable experiment.

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    74. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by naasking · · Score: 1

      Just an added note since we're discussing outlandish theories:

      since the Universe didn't come into existance and die out at the same instant, we can conjecture that Time pre-existed the Big Bang.

      Keep in mind that all of reality is merely a product of our perceptions. This raises the possibility that all events have happened simultaneously and the linear progression of events is imposed by our minds.

    75. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      And you gave me the exact reasons why I tend to trust science over faith...standards of evidence.

      Ok. Then maybe you can tell the historical evolutionists that they should really be held to the same standards of evidence as every other branch of science--and if that puts them out of a job, well, tough.

      (The rest of your post is spot-on, btw. And thanks for the compliment.)

    76. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by dohcvtec · · Score: 1

      It has existed infinitely far back in time, and it will exist infinitely far forward in time, in an infinite number of dimensions, etc...
      We are of like minds. I, too, imagine the universe as being infinite in every possible dimension, but I realize it's a paradox: the concept of infinity doesn't really make sense from the human perspective, either.

      This is why I have a really hard time listening to astronomers and physicists when they refer to "the moment of the beginning of the universe." Beginning? WTF? The law of conservation of mass says that matter is neither created nor destroyed, so "before" the universe was created, there had to be mass already there. More paradoxes... And how about when they talk about "the edges of the universe?" Well, if there are edges, is there anything beyond those edges?

      Yes, these may seem like basic, maybe naive questions, but I'm looking at the big picture, and we may never understand these questions.

      --
      -- Never hit a man with glasses. Hit him with a baseball bat.
    77. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by dohcvtec · · Score: 1

      The best way to think about it is to imagine a balloon. Blow the balloon up. See the inner walls of it? That's the universe. You can place a pebble anywhere on those walls and roll it around, and it's pretty much trapped there.

      Sure, this makes sense; it's valid. But what lies outside the balloon? A vacuum? Nothingness? What is nothingness? Is nothingness == vaccum?

      --
      -- Never hit a man with glasses. Hit him with a baseball bat.
    78. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Q+Who · · Score: 1

      In your example, for those inside that universe, it is impossible to prove causation. For all intents and purposes, in that universe, the question of its cause is one for the philosophers of that universe to argue.

      Completely wrong, since it might be possible to prove that the only way their universe was created is via external cause.

    79. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by fudgefactor7 · · Score: 1

      "There were no events before the Big Bang (since the it is the beginning of our universe)..."

      Actually this is not correct. The truth is that there was no matter in our Universe prior to the Big Bang, before that event it was just an empty plain of nothingness (a void--neither with matter or energy. It just was.) But if one accepts the traditional belief that all the matter existant was compressed into a singularity and then exploded outward, then there must have been existance (and Time) prior to the event referred to as The Big Bang. Either theory still allows for Time to predate the Big Bang, because Time exists as a construct only to prevent all events from happening simultaneously and you can't compress all the matter that there is in the current Universe into a singularity instantaneously (from a external, reference/relative, point of view).

    80. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by fudgefactor7 · · Score: 1

      "Keep in mind that all of reality is merely a product of our perceptions."

      If this were indeed the case it would be our minds that would define and sculpt the Universe. As a result of that, we could think our way to Mars (for instance) and *poof* we'd arrive on top of Olympus Mons. Since it doesn't work, or at least I haven't the power (and I dobut anyone does), I'd have to say that it's untrue.

      "This raises the possibility that all events have happened simultaneously and the linear progression of events is imposed by our minds."

      Intersting as well, and brings up cool concepts all it's own. Perhaps it's not our mind that is imposing reality upon us, but some other external being. Or perhaps we're just a reflection or echo of events long past and we acutally had this discussion eons ago...this would then bring about the idea that free-will is artificial and we're all plotting along following the paths predetermined by our ancient actions and we cannot alter the ends.

    81. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why I have a really hard time listening to astronomers and physicists when they refer to "the moment of the beginning of the universe." Beginning? WTF?


      Beginning: an event which was not preceded by another event.


      The law of conservation of mass says that matter is neither created nor destroyed, so "before" the universe was created, there had to be mass already there.


      There was no "before the universe was created" in the models you're talking about: the Big Bang was the first instant of time. There was no earlier time to speak of whether there was any matter or not at that time.


      More paradoxes... And how about when they talk about "the edges of the universe?" Well, if there are edges, is there anything beyond those edges?


      The universe is not believed to have an edge. However, the observable universe has one. Beyond it are the parts of the universe we can't see because light from them hasn't reached us.
    82. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Jester99 · · Score: 1

      I think (not that I'm really qualified to do so on this topic, but anywho) that there's a sort of paradox involved...

      Because it's impossible to get "out there", there is no "out there" to consider, just like there's no concept of time "before time started at the big bang."

    83. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what lies outside the balloon? A vacuum? Nothingness? What is nothingness? Is nothingness == vaccum?


      This is where the analogy breaks down. We talk of a balloon expanding inside some larger space because this is how we can mentally visualize a curved space. But in the theory, there is no larger space inside which space exists; no "outside the balloon". That doesn't mean that there is space outside the balloon but it is vacuum; it means that the concept "space outside space" doesn't make sense and is not defined.
    84. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The truth is that there was no matter in our Universe prior to the Big Bang, before that event it was just an empty plain of nothingness (a void--neither with matter or energy. It just was


      No, in standard Big Bang cosmology, there is no such thing as "prior to the Big Bang". The Big Bang was the first instant of time, and it is impossible to speak of times prior to it. The original poster was correct.


      But if one accepts the traditional belief that all the matter existant was compressed into a singularity and then exploded outward, then there must have been existance (and Time) prior to the event referred to as The Big Bang.


      No, that does not follow. Just because there was matter at one time does not mean that there was a prior time, let alone the existence of anything at a prior time.
    85. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by fudgefactor7 · · Score: 1

      I'll be a bit brief on this: Standard Big Bang Cosmology is not entirely correct.

      What you're saying is that the matter that comprised the singularity from which the Big Bang originated simply "existed" and didn't come from someplace. That's wacky. All things have an origin. If it came from someplace, then it must not have transported itself instantaeously from its origin to the location of the signularity. Unless the point of origin and the location of the singularity are one and the same. Either way, this still indicates existance of Time prior to the formation of the singularity and it indicates equally the existance of matter prior to the Big Bang. Matter does not come into existance on its own, and Matter cannot exist without the weaving framework of Time entering into the mix; however, Time can exist on it's own accord but there will simply be no relative reference point from which to guage events. The first measurable event was the Big Bang. It is from this event we measure time, but just because we can't measure something doesn't mean it wasn't existing or relevent.

    86. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by naasking · · Score: 1

      Since it doesn't work, or at least I haven't the power (and I dobut anyone does), I'd have to say that it's untrue.

      Merely because you do not know how, does not mean you cannot. Your brain is mostly autonomous and little reaches your consciousness; people have trained themselsves to consciously control certain functions, so whos to say what else can be retrained?

    87. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by naasking · · Score: 1

      Actually this is not correct. The truth is that there was no matter in our Universe prior to the Big Bang, before that event it was just an empty plain of nothingness (a void--neither with matter or energy. It just was.)

      An event, by definition, is an occurrence in space-time. If no matter or energy existed prior to the Big Bang, then no space-time events could have taken place (since what else causes events but the interactions of matter and energy?). Since no events occurred prior to the Big Bang, it makes no sense to speak of time prior to the BB.

      because Time exists as a construct only to prevent all events from happening simultaneously

      Let me try approaching this from another angle: you are speaking of time as if it were an absolute, but it is not. Time is extremely malleable and completely relative to the observers' frame of reference (as explained in the theories of relativity). This is observed fact. The deeper the gravity well, the slower the progression of time.

      Since at the beginning of the universe, everything was compressed into a singularity and infinitely (or near) dense, time would actually stop. No time... at all. Once the singularity exploded and began expanding, the gravity well began to smooth out and time started running.

      So you see, the Big Bang and infinite time are mutually exclusive beliefs. Big Bang, infinite time; pick one. There exist physics theories which postulate infinite time (or something similar), but the Big Bang will not allow it.

    88. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by naasking · · Score: 1

      Your mistake is that you are applying the bias of your observations of our universe to the conditions of creation and pre-creation where it makes no sense to do so. Theoretically, there can exist universes where causality does not exist or it is even reversed! The logic of our existence makes sense only within the bounds of our universe. Outside these boundaries (ie. another universe, or before our universe was created), all bets are off. Who knows what happened? Even the belief that "something happened" is a bias we impose.

    89. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by fudgefactor7 · · Score: 1

      Just as the belief that "nothing happened" is imposition of bias...

    90. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by kisrael · · Score: 1

      Yeesh, where did our potential little flamefest go?

      The God Makes Mistakes opinion is intriguing. I suppose it's pretty astounding how much of mainstream Christian belief is extra-biblical. I mean, it happens to most all religions to various degree, but for a post-reformation, back to the scriptures church, there's a lot of deeply ingrained belief (from what the devil is to visions of heaven and what not) that just comes outta nowhere. And on top of it all, is the vision of Omnipotent, Omniscient, and all loving God. Getting away from that view leads to some amazing speculation (heh, see "Dogma" that basically turns Catholic Cosmological history into a giant Marvel comics backstory...) and some of it will be harder to refute than the typical fundamentalist position, but that doesn't mean it's all that close to the truth...

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    91. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by naasking · · Score: 1

      I don't deny that something could have happened. But your imposition of our concepts to a situation outside of our boundaries was clearly wrong; that's all I was establishing.

      Besides, burden of proof is on "something happened" as evidence and theories clearly imply "nothing" so far.

    92. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1

      Okay, Integrate a step function. What do you get at the point when the the system goes instantly from zero to one. Hmmm. Looks like a spike that shoots straight up to infinity, doesn't it?

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    93. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Standard Big Bang Cosmology is not entirely correct.


      I agree, but not for the reasons you state.


      What you're saying is that the matter that comprised the singularity from which the Big Bang originated simply "existed" and didn't come from someplace.


      I'm saying that could be true, not that it is true.


      That's wacky. All things have an origin.


      If by "an origin" you mean "all things that exist were caused by even earlier things", then that is an opinion of yours, not a logical requirement or experimental fact. As is the rest of your post, so I don't see much point in trying to address it.

    94. Re:Then how did the Bing Bang happen? by acarey · · Score: 1

      "Solipsism" (sp?) is the word you are looking for...

      --
      -- "I believe the human being and the fish can coexist peacefully." - George W. Bush, 29 September 2000
  28. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Forgotten · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You got it, though "wiped out" isn't really the term I'd use (more like "stretched out"). It lowers the heat death temperature so that it approaches absolute zero, since the space occupied would constantly expand. Also, it's a rather lonely future even before then, as galaxies grow so far apart that you eventually can't see anything but your own big front yard.

    I wouldn't get too excited, though. There are virtually no "facts" in cosmology that haven't been overthrown multiple times. This one will be no different.

  29. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by kccricket · · Score: 1

    I'd say 'heat death == the death of heat'

    --
    * chirp * chirp *
  30. Re:Then how did the "Big" Bang happen? by akiaki007 · · Score: 0

    Yikes...spelling error galore. I wish I could edit my own post....I of course meant "Big" Bang, not "Bing" Bang (as in Friends)...

    Original Post:
    Well, I'm no astophysicist, but won't this new theory disprove all previous theories about the Bing Bang as well, and everything we thing of the Universe thus far. If this susbstance will keep the Universe expanding forever, how was it ever possible to have a Big Bang in the first place? It would be inconcievable to think anything created the Universe in the Big Bang theory, because it could never happen, thus our Universe does not go in cycles (expand then contract - repeat).

    So, How did the universe get created. Does this mean that there was actually a "beginning of time" as far as we can tell? What was that point? What existed before then? Since matter can't be created nor destroyed, where did it come from? (though that is a question beyond most planes of though, IMO)

    I don't believe this story, and I think more research is needed here.

    --
    "Time is long and life is short, so begin to live while you still can." -EV
  31. You forgot the punchline by BlackTriangle · · Score: 0, Funny

    French Pussy : Priceless

  32. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by KDan · · Score: 1

    That's true... Cosmology is one big fun exercise in making up the most outrageous bullshit and supporting it with wild theories :-) Quite a lot of fun, too. What really got me was when I studied up on the Inflation theory... I mean, most of it before was already far out, but that... I had great trouble explaining to non-physicists that it's not actually meant to have been pulled out of thin air...

    Daniel

    --
    Carpe Diem
  33. Omega Point by QEDog · · Score: 2, Informative

    Check out the Omega Point Theory... in this book. It suggests a way to use the expansion of space to generate energy to run a computer that would contain everyone's' information. Seems plausible, until he mixes its up with religion and it turns metaphysical. This theory has been promoted by Tipler, the same guy who has written many physics text books. I don't but the theory, but it answers your question about an alternate theory...

    --
    "There is no teacher but the enemy."-Mazer Rackham
  34. Eternal life is an Infinite Good by cryofan2 · · Score: 1

    Nothing could possibly approach the Goodness of an Infinite Life. By definition, it is Infinitely Better than All Other Goods.

    I want to live forever; that is why I am signed up to be cryopreserved. See http://www.alcor.org

    1. Re:Eternal life is an Infinite Good by vorpal22 · · Score: 1

      Nothing could possibly approach the Goodness of an Infinite Life. By definition, it is Infinitely Better than All Other Goods.

      I would entirely disagree with this, thus relegating it to a matter of perspective. While I'm enjoying being alive now, I'm not frightfully attached to it either, and when my time comes to die, I'll exeunt gracefully and be more than happy to let go so that others may live.

  35. Maybe a little Robert Frost too... by Pyrosophy · · Score: 4, Funny

    Some say the world will end in fire,
    Some say in ice.
    From what I've tasted of desire
    I hold with those who favor fire.
    But if it had to perish twice,
    I think I know enough of hate
    To say that for destruction ice
    Is also great
    And would suffice.

    1. Re: Maybe a little Robert Frost too... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Funny


      > To say that for destruction ice
      > Is also great
      > And would suffice.

      Did you really expect an unbiased opinion from someone named "Frost"?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  36. Still doesn't save us by targo · · Score: 1

    Even if we don't get crunched, there are still too many inevitable things that current physics is predicting. Even if we somehow evade the heat death and all the other "short-term" worries, the matter itself as we know it will ultimately cease to exist because even the "stable" elemetary particles will ultimately decay (proton's halflife is about 1e31 years) and everything will turn into a soup of photons.

    1. Re:Still doesn't save us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      now im probably wrong...but i remember my eighth grade science teacher speeking of the beginning and ending of the unvierse and such.

      Now for everything to start at a single point it all had to be compressed to just energy...so eventually that energy slowed down enough and turned into matter. So if everything decays back into photons its energy again. So wouldn't that eventuall fall back into matter.

      Even saying it i can see problems, but im instersted in hearing answers

    2. Re:Still doesn't save us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in 1E31 years, I really don't think I'll be all that worried about it.

      Whether we crunch or expand, the real question is:

      what is "space", and what was here *before* the big bang, and what will be there after the big crunch, or how far does space extend??? and if space *is* infinite, have there been other "big bangs" so far away from us (in the infinity of space) that we can't see them because the light hasn't reached us? and.. well, the questions could go on *forever*! (or at least for 1E31 years).

  37. Rotational Inertia. by anubi · · Score: 2, Interesting
    One thing I have yet to see is anybody explain to me where the apparent rotational inertia of the universe as I see it. Everything seems to be spinning around something else.

    They try to get me to accept the big bang.. but the problem I see is if everything emanated from a point source, it should not have any rotational inertia, which will be required for the spin I observe.

    Maybe our observable universe is the result of the explosive contraction of a black hole? Let me elaborate: A black hole forms, and begins to accrete matter. But the matter is not falling *directly* into the hole, no, it goes round and round on its way in, going ever faster as it falls inward, spinning the hole up. Consider under the rotational centrifugal forces, the singularity forms a ring. Eventually, this ring meets the event horizon. Now, as long as the ring is not spinning fast enough to meet the event horizon, the hole is stable, but once the centrifugal force of the singularity exceeds in the tiniest amount the gravitational force holding it together, it looks like it may detonate, much like a wheel would detonate if you spun it faster than the tensile strength of the steel it is made of exceeded.

    This would form the local areas we see in the universe as galaxies and galaxy clusters... and as a result of the rotational inertia of the detonating black hole which formed them, they would rotate likewise, and eventually the cycle would repeat. Endlessly. Much like a pendulum - free of friction, constantly exchanges kinetic energy for potential energy.

    I'll toss this idea up the pole... comments invited.

    --
    "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

    1. Re:Rotational Inertia. by anubi · · Score: 1
      Oh yes, I forgot to add something...

      When the matter goes into the hole, it goes in as the complex arrangements we know as the elements, as well as any condensed matter (neutronium?). But when the hole detonates, there would really be nothing there but subatomic particles, which would rapidly coalesce to what we know as hydrogen.. firing off a whole new round of mass accretion by gravity, which would eventually end up in enough hydrogen gathering together to ignite the nuclear fusion process which powers stars.

      I think the whole system is closed.. the amount of energy:mass never changes, although one can be exchanged for the other - just two faces of the same coin.

      I think this thing goes into perpetuity, never running down - constantly renewing in this manner.. moving constantly much like brownian motion observed in a Petri dish. Although I may be able to fix dates where I speculate my own galaxy or observable universe subset may have been formed, I do not think I will ever see where the universe in its entirety can ever be dated. I get the strong idea it always has been and always will be. But local stuff comes and goes through these never-ending oscillations between mass and energy.

      --
      "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

    2. Re:Rotational Inertia. by spike+hay · · Score: 1

      But when the hole detonates, there would really be nothing there but subatomic particles, which would rapidly coalesce to what we know as hydrogen..

      Sorry, TANSTAAFL. When a black hole explodes, it emits only energy, no subatomic particles or anything.. Granted, it's a fucking huge amount of energy, but it still won't make much of a difference a trillion years down the road. It won't start fusion off again.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    3. Re:Rotational Inertia. by anubi · · Score: 1
      Yes.. but energy *is* mass.. just another form of it. What I am speculating on is that the energy *forms* mass during the decompositon, somewhat the counterpart of what happens during a nuclear detonation when mass disappears to form energy.

      --
      "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

    4. Re:Rotational Inertia. by anubi · · Score: 1
      When a black hole explodes, it emits only energy, no subatomic particles or anything.. Granted, it's a fucking huge amount of energy,

      Yes... I think this was the "big bang" that started our area of the observable universe.

      --
      "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

    5. Re:Rotational Inertia. by spike+hay · · Score: 1

      Yes.. but energy *is* mass.. just another form of it. What I am speculating on is that the energy *forms* mass during the decompositon, somewhat the counterpart of what happens during a nuclear detonation when mass disappears to form energy.

      The energy is just photons. The matter that was sucked into the black hole is being outputted as energy. No mass.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    6. Re:Rotational Inertia. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One thing I have yet to see is anybody explain to me where the apparent rotational inertia of the universe as I see it. Everything seems to be spinning around something else.


      They try to get me to accept the big bang.. but the problem I see is if everything emanated from a point source, it should not have any rotational inertia, which will be required for the spin I observe.



      We don't observe the universe spinning about an axis. There are theoretical models that allow for global rotation --- including Big Bang models, contradicting your claim --- but our observations indicate that the universe is not rotating.


      Consider under the rotational centrifugal forces, the singularity forms a ring. Eventually, this ring meets the event horizon. Now, as long as the ring is not spinning fast enough to meet the event horizon, the hole is stable, but once the centrifugal force of the singularity exceeds in the tiniest amount the gravitational force holding it together, it looks like it may detonate, much like a wheel would detonate if you spun it faster than the tensile strength of the steel it is made of exceeded.


      Ring singularities don't meet the horizon unless you make the hole extremal, but it can never truly become extremal, only approach it. Nor can a black hole or its singularity "detonate" --- that's a mathematical theorem. (On the other hand, a black hole can evaporate due to quantum radiation --- but not due to rotating too fast.)
  38. Hooray by Bendebecker · · Score: 2, Funny

    We eventually get ripped apart(by enthropy) rather than being crushed by gravity!

    --
    There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
    most of us won't be able to afford it.
    -- Lemmy
  39. Infinitely expanding is necessarily non-cyclical? by httpamphibio.us · · Score: 1

    The idea of a cyclical universe made things so much neater, the fact that there wasn't a definitive beginning or end, that it existed, had always existed, and will always exist. I'm not sure if an infinitely expanding universe necessarily means some sort of weirdness can't happen to bring it all back together, or that another dimension splitting thing can't happen (the basis of string theory), but nonetheless, the idea is daunting. The truely unfortunate part of this is that all the religionists are going to flip and say it's more proof that god exists... bleh.

    Oh... and you can't prove anything in science... so they aren't going to release a paper proving dark matter.

    --
    sig.
  40. Dear Multivac^WSlashdot by IvyMike · · Score: 1

    How can the net amount of entropy of the universe be massively decreased?

    (With apologies to Asimov.)

    1. Re:Dear Multivac^WSlashdot by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > [Dear Multivac] How can the net amount of entropy of the universe be massively decreased?

      The freaky part is that the answer "just wait long enough for one highly-improbable quantum fluctuation to do it for you" (Stephen Hawking's hypothesis that our universe is the result of a quantum fluctuation), and the notion that a universe-sized Multivac would "think" in timeless instants (progressively slower as the heat death / entropy increase resulted in ever-smaller heat differentials, and thus ever-slower clock cycles), really dovetail nicely with the ending of the Asimov story you reference.

      The truly cool part is that Asimov, at the time of writing, had no way of knowing how close he might have actually been. Asimov went from the "thermodynamics/entropy requires that Multivac will have to run extremely slowly towards the end stages", Hawking picked up on the possibility that a universe-sized quantum fluctuation is inevitable given an infinite amount of time to wait, and both arrived at pretty much the same net result; a Big Bang.

    2. Re:Dear Multivac^WSlashdot by MagPulse · · Score: 1

      This is exactly the story that popped to mind when I saw the headline. I've read some Asimov but not that much.. I wonder if Asimov believed the universe would expand forever too or he just assumed it for this story.

  41. I think the math works better this way by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
    I think that this makes sense using some kind of bogo-calculus. It's like a huge differential equation with boundary conditions = zero at one end and infinity at the other: nothing and everything. Something has to fill the space between, it might as well be the universe as we know it.

    If you have a big crunch, the boundary conditions at both ends are zero, and it's harder to imagine why anything would happen in the first place.

    Mabye the big bang wasn't driven internally so much as it was (is?) sucked out of nothingness by the infinity at the other end of time.

    1. Re:I think the math works better this way by forkboy · · Score: 1

      If you have a big crunch, the boundary conditions at both ends are zero, and it's harder to imagine why anything would happen in the first place.

      Why? Who says it's not just a harmonic cycle? A cosine wave from origin to the end of one cycle both starts and ends at zero, yet there is most certainly "something happening" between those boundries.

      Or you could think of it as infinitely small instead of zero...imaging an asymptote approaching the X-axis. I certainly wouldn't call it zero at any point but it's sure awful close after a while. Graph 1/X and you'll see how something can go from infintessimal to infinite and back to infintessimal as it crosses a time threshhold.

      That said, this is the kind of shit that I think about when I'm all stoned and trying to disprove to myself the existance of a creating force in the multiverse. Ah, the torment of agnosticism.

      --
      This message brought to you by the Council of People Who Are Sick of Seeing More People.
  42. Re:Then how did the "Big" Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anything that happened before the Big Bang is outside the purview of science. Ask the same question to your local philosopher or clergyman.

  43. Dark Energy doesn't mean Heat Death by dfn5 · · Score: 1

    We will eventually find a way to tap into Dark Energy, just as we have with every other energy source. We will then build big honkin' SUVs that convert Dark Energy into smog. We will then use up all of the Dark Energy until it no longer has an influence on the expansion of the Universe. The Universe then dies with a big crunch (not unlike a tasty Dorito)

    --
    -- Thou hast strayed far from the path of the Avatar.
    1. Re:Dark Energy doesn't mean Heat Death by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We will eventually find a way to tap into Dark Energy, just as we have with every other energy source. We will then build big honkin' SUVs that convert Dark Energy into smog. We will then use up all of the Dark Energy until it no longer has an influence on the expansion of the Universe. The Universe then dies with a big crunch (not unlike a tasty Dorito)

      No we won't. It's not really energy. Just some sort of antigravity force.

  44. This is the way the world ends ... by gcondon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Not with a bang but a whimper

    That said, an infinitely expanding (or "open") universe is just as likely to destroy all life as the "big crunch" at the end of a collapsing (or "closed") universe. The open universe eventually winds down as all the energy in the universe become homogenized by the 2nd law of thermodynamics in a fate that is often referred to as "heat death".

    If anything, the symmetric fate of a closed universe is usually considered the more hopeful fate of the universe mirroring the more traditional cyclic cosmologies of many cultures. Not only does it allow for a sort of cosmic reincarnation but also provides insight into the origin of our own universe (plus some really interesting theories as to the nature of time).

    As I see it, an open universe is going to fuel some interesting debates among proponents of the strong anthropic principle (unless they are also advocates of a mischevious "trickster" creator). At least we can take solace in the possibility that matter-energy lost from our universe is "reborn" through inflation events on the far side of black holes. Otherwise, its all seems to me to be an awfully big waste of space-time ;)

    1. Re:This is the way the world ends ... by UrGeek · · Score: 1

      Okay, yeah, black holes will suck everything up and then after a few googleplex years they will all evaporate and decay into cold virtual particles.

      BUT we do have this big anti-chaotic force called life. With all of that time, someone, somewhere will perhaps find a way to say, "Let there be MORE light!" al la, Asmiov's wonderful story, "The Last Question".

      So, an open or flat universe ain't so bad. The problem I had is with all of the possiblities, how can it be FLAT? I would buy open OR closed before flat. How much precision is need to be flat, anyway.

      Maybe there IS a creator...

  45. Badda Bing by QEDog · · Score: 2, Informative

    The current Big Bang theory doesn't depend on any oscillatory process in the universe. It explains the universe since 10^-43s after the Bang. before that the String Theorists specullate about the universe, and that is it.

    --
    "There is no teacher but the enemy."-Mazer Rackham
  46. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Animus+Howard · · Score: 5, Funny

    > Whew! That's a relief!

    Reminds me of the story of the student of cosmology who frantically waved his hand until the annoyed professor finally called on him.

    "Professor, would you mind repeating what you just said about the end of the universe?"

    "I said that according to recent estimates it would take place in about 200 billion years."

    "Oh, thank God, you really had me worried there for a minute! I though you said million!

  47. Looking back, looking forward. by wowbagger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    According to the best cosmological theory we have now:

    The universe came into being. At first, there was but one force. As the universe grew larger and colder, aspects of that one force that were hidden became apparent - these are the forces we know of now: gravity, electroweak, strong nuclear.

    Consider:

    Trillions of years from now, the universe is much larger and colder. Aspects of the four forces we know of now become apparent, creating new forces.

    Who is to say that in a google of years, there won't be some lifeform that will look back and say (translating to English) "We aren't sure what happened in the first trillion years, but after that, the 27 forces of nature we know of began to manefest themselves..."

    Who is to say that there was not some lifeform living at the first 10e-32 second that was looking forward and saying (translating into English) "One day, seconds from now, all life as we know it will cease, and the universe will be far too cold to support life."

    1. Re:Looking back, looking forward. by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1
      Who is to say that in a google of years, there won't be some lifeform that will look back and say (translating to English) "We aren't sure what happened in the first trillion years, but after that, the 27 forces of nature we know of began to manefest themselves..."

      Who's to say that this organism defines the universe in the same way that we do? Our science is Earth- and human-centric.
    2. Re:Looking back, looking forward. by dameron · · Score: 1

      The universe came into being. At first, there was but one force.

      Ah, so that's where science and religion meet.

      -dameron

    3. Re:Looking back, looking forward. by majcher · · Score: 3, Informative

      Just picking a nit, but I think you mean "googol", not "google". One is a number, the other is a search engine.

    4. Re:Looking back, looking forward. by meringuoid · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Trillions of years from now, the universe is much larger and colder. Aspects of the four forces we know of now become apparent, creating new forces.

      Interesting... we do actually discover new physics in the domain of the supercool. Perhaps new life might evolve in the form of superconducting structures in the iron corpses of burned-out black dwarfs in the unspeakably distant future, and wonder about the time in the afterglow of the Big Bang in which a mysterious quantity called 'electrical resistance' dominated physics...

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    5. Re:Looking back, looking forward. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      One day, seconds from now, ...

      I know it's just an idiom, but as a non-native speaker of English, I find this phrase very funny.

    6. Re:Looking back, looking forward. by deblau · · Score: 1
      Who is to say that there was not some lifeform living at the first 10e-32 second that was looking forward and saying (translating into English) "One day, seconds from now, all life as we know it will cease, and the universe will be far too cold to support life."

      Um, I'll say it.

      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    7. Re:Looking back, looking forward. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who is to say that in a google of years, there won't be some lifeform that will look back and say (translating to English)...

      I performed a Google of "years", but I think you meant AltaVista, because Google doesn't have Babelfish.

  48. Everybody knows... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "We have been watching over Earth since the day it was created, 5000 years ago, by god "

  49. Bad Joke But by cranos · · Score: 1

    See what happens when you "Embrace and Extend"?

  50. Obligatory Asimov quote... by gmuslera · · Score: 1

    by the time the universe is dying of cold, something called AC could say

    "Let there be light!"

    And there will be light

    1. Re:Obligatory Asimov quote... by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > by the time the universe is dying of cold, something called AC could say
      > "Let there be light!"
      >And there will be light

      ...and the moderators will see the light, and mod it (+1, Universal).

      (Oh dear. Multivac evolved out of Slashdot. Does that make CowboyNeal a God? *shudder*)

  51. Universe is Infinite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Universe is Infinite
    Universe is infinite but matter exists only in finite dimensions (finite, but billions of cubic light years if we just consider 3 dimensions and ignore other dimensions like time). I am not making it up. This was known in Asian(Indian) philosophy/religion about 500-600 hundred years before Christ! Most of this knowledge was lost over 2 millenia but a little bit of that knowledge is still alive. Science is just discovering some of it...

    I can't wait till they install the next version of Hubble Telescope in year 2009 which is about 10 times powerful than the current one...

    Also, if you need extra money, try this:
    Rent your forehead out for advertisements

  52. What I want to know is... by Mephie · · Score: 5, Funny
    What will remain is a universe full of black holes, which after trillions of years will explode to leave nothing but dark energy.

    How the hell can they predict what the universe is going to do in trillions of years, but I can't get an accurate weather forcast for the next 24 hours??

    1. Re:What I want to know is... by Forgotten · · Score: 1

      (grin) You know, this is actually a good point (as well as funny, since my favourite science to make fun of is weather prediction ;). The reason cosmologists feel justified is that their predictions are on such a ridiculously grand scale. It's like a weather prediction of "tomorrow, there will be weather".

    2. Re:What I want to know is... by g00set · · Score: 1
      How the hell can they predict what the universe is going to do in trillions of years, but I can't get an accurate weather forcast for the next 24 hours??

      They also can predict you will die on average at age 76.9 years if born in 2000. (American born in 2000) but are not able to tell you within 10 seconds.

      --
      ... and furthermore ... I don't like your trousers.
    3. Re:What I want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Project Manager". nuff said.

    4. Re:What I want to know is... by Kashif+Shaikh · · Score: 1

      How the hell can they predict what the universe is going to do in trillions of years, but I can't get an accurate weather forcast for the next 24 hours??

      I know you're trying to be funny, but what you say is the truth. We can't predict earthquakes(i.e. happened in Japan, India, and Turkey) nor can we predict if this Winter it's going to snow a lot or instead will be very cold(i.e. here in Toronto, Canada we are facing the coldest winter in 9 years).

      Point is, we didn't create such systems and therefore can't control such systems. In this point, lies great wisdom that the athiests won't even understand.

      Besides, while the 'earth & solar infrastructure'(woooo sounds so hitech) will remain intact for who knows how long, I believe if we are let to continue in our state, we would kill our ownselves. War, environmental destruction(i.e. pollution), increasing seperation of rich/poor, etc. will lead to the downfall of humankind unless they have the willingness to change and cause betterment of society.

      As a Muslim, we firmly believe and atest to the fact that God alone knows when this world/universe will perish. "GOD is the One who created the night, the day, the sun, and the moon. Each one is travelling in an orbit with its own motion" (Qur'an 21:33).

    5. Re:What I want to know is... by pcb · · Score: 1

      I got news for you. Just because we can't predict the future does't mean your not living in a dream world.

      -PCB

      --
      'Men never commit evil so fully and joyfully as when they do it for religious convictions.' B. Pascal
    6. Re:What I want to know is... by Schroedinger · · Score: 1

      Just because something is beyond our current level of comprehension does not necessitate that something more intelligent and powerful than us had to have created it. In fact, it's rather easy to create enormously complex systems from a set of simple rules applied iteratively. Complexity is cheap. Check out Stephen Wolfram's new book if you're interested. You also might check out books on chaos theory or self-organizing criticality.

      Oh and incidentally, having a willingness to change and having absolute faith in something are to a large extent mutually exclusive.

    7. Re:What I want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >As a Muslim, we firmly

      yada yada yada whatever. Don't you have women to throw rocks at or something.

      Oh, it appears its women next week; this week its:
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/27480 43.stm

    8. Re:What I want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't create my video recorder, but I can control it. Besides, who said anything about control, anyway? The issue was whether we can understand it sufficiently to predict what it's likely to do.

      Currently, you're probably right that God is the only one who knows when the universe will end - assuming anyone does. We can, however, make educated guesses about it, and suggesting that we can never improve our understanding is clearly wrong (see the whole of human history for examples). Whether we should is, as always, up for debate, but I can't see us stopping now...

      Why is it that any debate involving cosmology always degenerates into a religious flaming match, anyway?

    9. Re:What I want to know is... by Kashif+Shaikh · · Score: 1

      Who's flaming? I was just stating my opinion...

    10. Re:What I want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oops!

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/2749231.s tm

      "There's a women in there? Where? Kill her! KILL HER!!"

      *giggle*

    11. Re:What I want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a christian.

      Good for you to stand up for your religion. However, I feel that Muslim religion is and will continue to be the primary factor in the world destruction as it now stands (terrorism, supporting 'martir' suicides, bashing women, and many other idiocies). Your Qur'an clearly encourages global and all out "holy" war on anyone who doesn't seem to share similar lunatic believes as YOU do.

      I've had a few Muslim friends, but since the recent events (that of September 11th) I've tried hard to distance myself from any association with any muslim representative. Recently, also, a few Muslim accupants in same apartment complex where I live have been jailed for transporting explosives across Canadian/USA border. How's that for a 'peaceful' religion and co-existance?

  53. The Big Crunch AKA... by Animus+Howard · · Score: 1

    Many cosmologists call the Big Crunch the Gnab Gib.

  54. we may be jealous of possible future immortals by cryofan2 · · Score: 1

    You wrote:
    >>
    I don't think that there is any reputable theory that doesn't have a "killing all life" at some point in the very distant future.
    >>

    Exactly what I have been saying. Actually there ARE theories (see the next post below) that DO include the possibility that life may go on forever in the universe, but for some reason, they never get promoted by the media. Why not? It is obvious to me that we do not know what the hell is going on with the universe. So, therefore I say why not just assume that the possibility DOES exist for infinite life?

    It sometimes seems as if currently living humans, having already internalized the inevitability of their own individual death, create their cosmological theories so as to make sure that there will never be any immortals. Our popular cosmology, at least the "mainstream" theories promoted by the mainstream media, seem akin to *theology*.

    1. Re:we may be jealous of possible future immortals by KDan · · Score: 1

      You could actually technically live forever by moving your mind into some huge and subtle machine that slows down your thoughts (and thus the expenditure of energy) progressively as time passes (obviously no need to do that for the first few billions of years). By the end, you might have one atomic thought per X years, where X is an insanely huge number (and growing all the time) but technically you'd still be alive, and unless some bad shit happened (which, I'll admit, is fairly likely in an infinite lifespan), you could go on living like that for a very long time indeed, approaching infinity.

      Daniel

      --
      Carpe Diem
  55. Well, Until the Next "Discovery" by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
    If I had a nickel for one of these crack pot stories...

    I have heard so many versions of different cosmological outcomes for the universe, that the signal to noise ratio is approaching zero. The press doesn't help, covering every crackpot with a soapbox.

    I am not discrediting the research. I am just so skeptical about scientific news stories that the Meaning of Life could be posted online and I wouldn't believe it.

    --
    "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
    --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    1. Re:Well, Until the Next "Discovery" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have heard so many versions of different cosmological outcomes for the universe, that the signal to noise ratio is approaching zero.

      So you're saying that cosmology is entering heat death? ;)

  56. We knew this already by Superfreaker · · Score: 1

    While this may be further proof, this has been widely accepted for several years now. Even Hawking reversed his opinion of the matter some time ago.

    (I think this may even be the bet he had for a subscription to playboy- I can't remember...)

  57. The Standard View of Gravity by ka9dgx · · Score: 3, Interesting
    When you get down to it, the problem that people have is that observations of large systems don't seem to experience gravity the same way we see it locally here on earth.

    The assumption is that the laws of physics are uniform throughout the universe, which I also assume to be true. However, I don't assume that gravity is an attractive force, but rather one that obeys common sense, and is repulsive in nature at the quantum level.

    I believe that when a graviton interacts with a particle, it pushes it along... just like any other particle interaction... but I believe that the source of the gravitons is external... and that each interaction creates a shadow... thus there would be slightly more gravitons coming at be from above, than have managed to pass through the earth to hit me from below... thus creating an apparent (and real) local gravity field, with the deficit in the downward direction.

    The experiments to prove this are going to be very sneaky... but one sure proof would be that a material that stops gravitons would be very heavy, instead of having a negative weight. Even if you managed to stop some of the gravitons... then effects would be on the opposite side of the device than expected. Thus if your anti-gravity plate is put underneath a weight, it would actually get heavier... and if you put it above the plate, then it would get lighter.

    The truely interesting effects occur when you get black-hole level matter density. If I'm right... then they should probably "boil off" slowly as some of the matter gets pushed out of the hole over time.

    --Mike--

    1. Re:The Standard View of Gravity by ka9dgx · · Score: 1
      Why pass the bong?

      I'm theorizing that things work in a more common-sense approach, rather than the bizarre one offered up in traditional quantum-level gravitation.

      According to that model, a watermellon sized graviton pulse hitting you in the chest would knock you forward, instead of onto your keister.

      --Mike--

    2. Re:The Standard View of Gravity by Maigus · · Score: 1

      Black holes already boil off. Hawking postulated and it was later proven that particle / anti-particle pairs are created at the peripherary of the event horizon and that *some* of these pairs paths escape anhialation because one is trapped by the black hole while the other spins off into the universe.

      This matter creation increases in speed, or temperature if you will, as the black hole gets *smaller*.

      As for the rest of your comment, a graviton particle / wave does not have to push something via it's interraction. We're not talking about real matter here, we're talking about virtual matter. It does not have to obey your concept of a push / pull force. It doesn't have to be anything we have an analogy for here in the non-quantum world, we still need to verify how these things work.

    3. Re:The Standard View of Gravity by Wraithlyn · · Score: 1

      I've thought about it from this exact angle too.. maybe gravity pushes, and mass actually BLOCKS it.

      It doesn't work though... Here's the problem: The Earth spins, but gravity remains constant. If gravity is actually pressure from ABOVE, it would vary depending on the Earth's orientation to the rest of the cosmos, unless you make the claim that we are bombarded with an equal amount of gravitons uniformly from every direction of space, which seems ridiculously improbable.

      --
      "Mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices, is to some extent present in every electron." -Freeman Dyson
    4. Re:The Standard View of Gravity by kubalaa · · Score: 1

      So I guess in your theory a sheet of paper is heavier than a needle -- after all, it has more surface area to "deflect" the "gravitons."

      Actually I'm being over-harsh, but this was old hash thousands of years ago. Check out this thread: http://www.besslerwheel.com/wwwboard/messages/106. html

      --

      "If you look 'round the table and can't tell who the sucker is, it's you." -- Quiz Show

    5. Re:The Standard View of Gravity by ka9dgx · · Score: 1
      My theory is that matter stops some of the gravitons, but the size of things makes this fairly rare (though not as rare as neutrinos)... thus most sail right through... orientation doesn't matter unless something is measured in light-years on edge, etc. The flux absorption for someting even as big as the earth might be less than one in 10^10. (just an order of magnatude guess)

      It's only when you get to the truely galactic scales that the effects would show up.

      --Mike--

    6. Re:The Standard View of Gravity by ka9dgx · · Score: 1
      It's entirely possible that there is a small variation in the uniformity of the gravity field which would be detectible in the next century as technology improves...

      or... I could be full of shit. ;)

      --Mike--

    7. Re:The Standard View of Gravity by naasking · · Score: 1

      Then,

      what is holding planets together?
      what is holding stars together?
      what is holding solar systems together (planets in orbits)?
      what is holding galaxies together?
      why would a black hole form in the first place? A black hole is a star that collapsed under its own gravity, but that wouldn't work in your scenario.

      I don't think your theory can even explain how stars ore held together. The expansion pressure of fusion is countered by the crunch of gravity in classical phyics, yet you state that gravity will be pushing with the expansion pressure. Stars wouldn't even form under your scenario.

      I'm not saying your idea isn't possible, but you'd have to explain many common phenomena before people would even begin to consider it.

    8. Re:The Standard View of Gravity by Kupek · · Score: 1

      Except your "theory" is not based on anything but "common sense." With no data to support it, you sound like just another armchair physicist.

    9. Re:The Standard View of Gravity by ka9dgx · · Score: 1
      My theory is that there are a lot of gravitons around out there, in here... everywhere... and that they interact with matter just like you would expect, except they are very small, and have a positive mass. Gravity still works the same, it's just the particle underlying it has to be much smaller, and thus in far greater abundance that that of electrons, for example.

      --Mike--

    10. Re:The Standard View of Gravity by ka9dgx · · Score: 1
      I am an armchair physicist!

      The fact is that nobody has ever seen direct evidence of a single graviton. I've done some googling around, and it appears that even the idea of just trapping an electron, and listening to it fall would be swamped out by noise.

      So, with no direct evidence, it's anybodys guess as to what the true nature of gravity is.

      --Mike--

  58. Finally, conclusive evidence they have no clue by hansreiser · · Score: 2, Funny

    For a long time I have found it irritating that they talk about hypotheses like the big bang "theory" with the pretence that they have even the slightest idea what is going on.

    With this new evidence, they still have no clue what the universe is up to as a whole. The whole thing was just an exercise in speculation no more informed than the Bible. It still is. It will remain that way for a very long time.

    Just accept it, you are a bunch of pretentious hairless mutant monkeys living on an insignificant speck of dirt, and the universe isn't interested in bothering to tell you what is going on, and you are never going to figure it out in your lifetime.

    Kind of amusing actually....

    1. Re:Finally, conclusive evidence they have no clue by CrosseyedPainless · · Score: 1

      So long, and thanks for all the filesystems.

  59. Does this mean... by dotgod · · Score: 1

    No Gib Gnab?

  60. Great news for some by EvilSporkMan · · Score: 1

    In the Crunch candy offices: "Great news, guys! That king-size candy bar we've been working on won't kill us all like we thought!"

    --
    -insert a witty something-
  61. The Real Story by Cuprous · · Score: 5, Informative

    My guess is that they are talking about the results from MAP. This is a satellite that was looking at the CMB. Unfortunately, this won't tell us one bit about dark energy. What it tells us about is the total matter-energy budget of the universe. But we've known that the universe is "flat" since COBE (the last satellite to look at the CMB).

    The basic way at looking at cosmological parameters is this: CMB tells us about the geometry of the universe (Omega_total = Omega_matter + Omega_energy), clustering tells us about the matter content (Omega_matter), and supernovae tell us about the acceleration of the universe (Omega_matter - Omega_energy).

    Only supernovae have given us direct evidence that the universe is accelerating.

  62. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Forgotten · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's kind of a funny term. Heat death is actually the complete conversion of all the free energy in a system (in this case, of all systems) into the corresponding entropy. It's the victory of the second law of thermodynamics. It's not that all the energy goes away, but that it becomes so evenly spread that no further work is possible - there are no more free energy gradients to traverse. So it's not the death of heat, it's a death in heat - literally a tepid cosmos. ;)

    As I noted in another message, an infinitely expanding universe means that the temperature of the heat-dead cosmos will constantly drop as the volume increases. It will asymptotically approach absolute zero.

    Some others have noted that there are theories where energy and/or matter are spontaneously created in empty space. These can coexist with the heat death fate if the new energy is also evenly spread, which it probably would be in such a uniformly boring heat-dead universe. Still no way to create a new free energy gradient.

    I find this an interesting fate because it's also reflected in some religions and philosophies, where everything becomes one at the end of time.

  63. Question by ranolen · · Score: 1

    I still want to know.. if the universe is ever expanding, what is it expanding into? There has to be something on the other side for it to be expanding into. And hypeothetically speaking, what happens if you were to reach the end? Is there a way to get to the other side?

    1. Re:Question by RatBastard · · Score: 1

      There isn't an "into". The Universe is "creating" space as it expands. There is no "outside". There is no "other side".

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    2. Re:Question by spike+hay · · Score: 1

      I still want to know.. if the universe is ever expanding, what is it expanding into? There has to be something on the other side for it to be expanding into. And hypeothetically speaking, what happens if you were to reach the end? Is there a way to get to the other side?

      There isn't anything else. The universe is actually a closed geometry. If you travel far enough, you come back to where you came from. Picture the expanding universe like an inflating (4 dimensional) balloon. We are on the surface of the ballon, and since it is expanding we are getting farthur apart.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
  64. Those wacky people at NASA... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When they aren't discovering the inner-workings of our universe, they're discovering the effects of slamming a multi-million dollar piece of equippment into the earth at thousands of miles an hour.

    They just keep giving and giving...

  65. Dark energy by ajdecon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    NASA definitely will not announce that they had proven the existence of "dark energy"; all they can really announce is that data they collected suggests an infinitely expanding universe. (This would not, btw, require dark energy, though an accelerating universe might; all it would require would be for the total matter and energy in the universe to be below a certain threshold level.)

    I don't really know a whole lot about "dark energy" at this point... a few mentions here and there have given me a murky idea of it as similar to Einstein's cosmological constant, but nothing really definitive. Some recent evidence does, I believe, suggest an accelerating expansion which could lend credence to the theory... but I believe there have been alternative hypotheses advanced as well.

    I am not a physicist, however, merely a freshman physics major. ;-) I know the NASA announcement isn't out yet so primary sources on this particular experiment are hard to come by, but can anyone suggest some background or current research on dark energy and the cosmological constant? My only real source so far has been Scientific American--that is to say, I've got no reliable sources. [grimace]

    Much appreciated....

    --
    "Science is a way of trying not to fool yourself." -Richard Feynman
  66. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You cant destroy energy only change its type or form as such there will always be the exact same amount of energy as such only gathering/converting it becomes harder as the Universe expands. We dont fully(at all really) understand dark matter so for all we know it might be possible to turn it into energy. If so we will have limitless quantities. Im only a sophmore in college and am a chem not a phys major, but of this Im certain. Also not everything is going to turn into led some stuff will simply turn into carbon (much more workable)

  67. Well, that's that then... by nanojath · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "and should end decades of academic dispute."


    Hmm, yeah, well this is the first time someone has definitively claimed to have proven the answer to this issue. I don't really expect there to be any more back and forth on THIS one...


    Damn, now we know the speed of gravity and the color of the universe, what's left? Let's shut down the patent office, man, science is done! Progress is so awesome - I think I'll just kick back in this technoparadise we've created until entropy consumes all things.

    --

    It Is the Nature of Information to Transgress Artificial Boundaries

    1. Re:Well, that's that then... by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      Wait wait! Don't shut science down yet! We still haven't discovered how to make a tasty diet soda! Oh wait. Shit. Forget i said anything.

  68. Not necessarily by dark-nl · · Score: 1
    The "heat death" won't be all at once. The usable energy will thin out further and further but will never quite reach zero. The practical effect will be that "interesting" processes go slower and slower, without ever quite stopping. If consciousness slows down as well, we can still have some fun and maybe not even notice the difference.

    See The Five Ages of the Universe (review), by Fred Adams and Greg Laughlin.

    1. Re:Not necessarily by KDan · · Score: 1

      Hmm... not in our current form. I don't think we'd be able to survive in our current form, even slowed down, if the temperature gradient across our entire Hubble Sphere (the bit of universe we can interact with) was 0.1 degrees...

      Daniel

      --
      Carpe Diem
  69. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  70. Astounding news indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    If NASA in fact were able to make an accurate measurement of a source of dark energy (seems improbable with today's technology), then the new data could impossibly show anything that isn't already known.

    It is already known that the maximum amount of dark energy that *could* exist in the universe stands at an approximate 1 to 10^7 ratio against regular matter (observed universal radio emission compared to gravity, normal distribution). It is also known that energy in space decrements exponentially (law of ripple distribution (eph = md/(e^(1/r)). Therefore, it is possible to calculate a pretty good estimate for how much influence the dark energy has on spacetime. This calculation has been done already! (presented by Brockmeyer in 1999 or 2000)

    The thing we *don't know* is whether dark energy is gravitationally reflective, but that's really no more than a minor parameter, and we only need to know it in other contexts (particularly when studying quasars).

  71. I Guess Daniel Hillis was Wrong by terrab0t · · Score: 1

    He made a long bet on this. Not to belittle his boldness in going on the record, but he probably figured this wouldn't be solved until long after he died.

    In other news: Wine and Cheese celebrations at the Institute for Advanced Study.

  72. We Have This Energy, See... by Myriad · · Score: 1
    NASA is expected to announce this week that it has proved the existence of "dark energy"

    NASA scientist: We have this energy, see, but it's dark, see, and space is, well, dark, you see, so you can't actually see it, see, but it's there!

    My brain hurts.

    --
    "They do not preach that their god will rouse them, a little before the Nuts work loose." Kipling, 'The Sons of Martha'
    1. Re:We Have This Energy, See... by Griim · · Score: 1

      "It's the weird colour scheme that freaks me. Every time I try to operate one of these weird black controls, labelled in black on a black background, a little black light lights up black to let me know I've done it."

    2. Re:We Have This Energy, See... by zztzed · · Score: 1

      "But a black hole's a huge compacted star! It's millions of miles wide! Why didn't you see it on the radar screen?"
      "Well, the thing about a black hole -- its main distinguishing feature -- is it's black. And the thing about space -- your basic space color is black. So how are you supposed to see them?"

      (Okay, so it's not EXACTLY related...)

  73. MAP Announcement Tuesday by Xandu · · Score: 1

    There's no real new info in the Sydney Morning Herald article.

    Tomorrow (Tuesday) NASA will hold a press release and Q&A session at 2pm eastern. Check out the MAP page, or tune in to NASA TV (Real Player) to see the briefing and Q&A session live (2pm eastern Tuesday).

    --


    --Xandu
  74. The correct term... by chill · · Score: 1

    ...isn't "big crunch" but "Gnab Gib".

    Or is it "Gib Gnab"? It's been a while since I've read those books...

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  75. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by KDan · · Score: 1

    Sorry mate, I have a degree in physics and you're talking out of your arse :-)

    Even if we can pick up dark matter and turn it into energy, the quantities are not limitless (though certainly huge). They only push the problem back by a few hundred billion years at the most.

    Daniel

    --
    Carpe Diem
  76. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by WatertonMan · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Some others have noted that there are theories where energy and/or matter are spontaneously created in empty space. These can coexist with the heat death fate if the new energy is also evenly spread



    Are you talking about how there is no global energy conservation due to time assymetry and Noether's theorem?



    I find this an interesting fate because it's also reflected in some religions and philosophies, where everything becomes one at the end of time.



    Don't most religions postulating "one" at the end of time actually have something closer to the big-bang / big-crunch? I mean the final conflagration in Heraclitus on up through the Stoics seems to have much more in common with the earlier view of cosmology. The big cruch returns everything to fire = logos that was had at the beginning of the universe. In this view the fire is raw energy and information.



    I don't know of anything in traditional philosophies or religions that really corresponds to the heat death of the universe.

  77. Re:Then how did the "Big" Bang happen? by gcondon · · Score: 1

    Anything that happened before the Big Bang is outside the purview of science. Ask the same question to your local philosopher or clergyman.

    Not exactly. The physics of the earliest stages of the universe (before 1E-34 seconds) of the Big Bang are currently outside of our scientific knowledge but that is not to say that they will always be. Granted some theorists have hypothesized that the universe began with a singularity through which there can be no continuity of physical laws but it is only a hypothesis. Another hypothesis, not completely unreasonable, is that the universe began with a small but not infinitessimal "big bounce" through which physical laws could pass unchanged - at least at grand unification energy scales. So stop bothering your local philosophers and clergymen and get back to your physics homework!

  78. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by KDan · · Score: 1

    The more interesting religions and philosophies realise that everything is already one :-)

    Yeah, yeah, that's just an opinion, but so's yours :-)

    Daniel

    --
    Carpe Diem
  79. Or perhaps Tool by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Some say a comet will fall from the sky
    followed by meteor showers and tidal waves
    followed by faultlines that cannot sit still
    followed by millions of dumbfounded dipshits

    1. Re:Or perhaps Tool by TheKey · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'm twice as cool as I think I am. Wooo!

      Er, yeah.

      --
      My Journal - 1,337 fans and countin
    2. Re:Or perhaps Tool by marko123 · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's happening in reverse.
      AOL is already here.
      Let's wait for the earthquakes and tidal waves.
      The meteor showers and _then_ the comet.

      --
      http://pcblues.com - Digits and Wood
    3. Re:Or perhaps Tool by kasperd · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm twice as cool as I think I am.

      If you think so, it just proves you are not cool at all. Because the only solution for c=2c happens to be c=0.

      --

      Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
    4. Re:Or perhaps Tool by TheKey · · Score: 1

      Well, see, I don't think so, it just so happens that everyone tells me that. What can I say?

      --
      My Journal - 1,337 fans and countin
  80. Is this the same Steven Hawking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.attrition.org/gallery/spoof/tn/hawking_ pro_wheelchair.jpg.html

  81. I wouldn't buy into this.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a very bold move by NASA, one which won't be bought into easily - personally I believe that this is somewhat incorrect and do side with Einstein and Hawking.

    If the universe began from "the big bang" and like any explosion here on earth which happens in milliseconds it expands (accelerates) and then slows down. Our perception here on earth of time would be different to the measurement of time when one considers the scale of the universe. (we know that gravity effects time).

    Could the universe still be expanding because its still in its explosion state from the big bang - maybe in anothe 10 billion years things will start to slow down.

    1. Re:I wouldn't buy into this.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the universe began from "the big bang" and like any explosion here on earth which happens in milliseconds it expands (accelerates) and then slows down. Our perception here on earth of time would be different to the measurement of time when one considers the scale of the universe. (we know that gravity effects time).

      Einstein never supported the Big Crunch. It was a problem that was never solved in his time.

    2. Re:I wouldn't buy into this.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While that is true, it was never stated that the universe would clapse back onto itself - just like and explosion it doesn't implode upon itself again.

  82. Irony :-) by Spudley · · Score: 1

    I enjoyed the fact that we have a picture of Einstein's face next to a story that claims to prove him wrong.

    Ah, delicious irony.

    --
    (Spudley Strikes Again!)
    1. Re:Irony :-) by thebatlab · · Score: 1

      Well, if I read it correctly, it'll actually prove him right. Even though at one point he claimed his cosmological constant was his biggest mistake ever, this seems to prove it does exist so.....he's right :)

  83. wastelines?!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is that some sort of new GNU/Homo perversion?!!!
    You got tired of seeing who could stretch their anus the farthest, so now you compete to see who can lay down the longest continuous turd?

  84. Good Science. by assaultriflesforfree · · Score: 1

    First lesson: be wary whenever astrophysicists claim to have "proven" anything. Our confidence in this conclusion can only be as strong as our confidence in the consistency and logic of the theories, which are based on observations we can trust only so much as we trust the instruments used to record them.

    In short, this is a question that philosophers and physicists have been working on for some time, and, in my opinion, it's improper to ever say that anything in science (particularly something of this significance and magnitude) can ever be "proven."

    Replacing the word "prove" with "indicate" tends to help. What NASA has done is discovered "hot spots," which it believes indicate that the Universe may be accelerating indefinitely.

    The implications of such a discovery are mind boggling. One thing I'm curious to know is how they can be sure the acceleration is constant. Although we may not be able to determine a good value for the approximation within our lifetimes, such a measurement would be necessary, I think, to confirm their hypotheses. If indeed the acceleration is not constant (which is something I would definitely consider probable), then the Big Crunch may actually be inevitable.

  85. So what... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its the end of the world as we know it....beh...I feel fine...

  86. The Moravec ploy--area under asymptote is finite by cryofan2 · · Score: 1

    Hans Moravec conceived this ploy, I think. Problem is that the area under that curve is finite, right?

  87. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by VEGx · · Score: 1
    Would this save us from global warming? hmmm...

    (Sorry, about this post. I'll go and fetch my brain from the freezer.)

  88. More insight from anime? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aren't there like a bazillion animes that have the universe being swallowed up by dark energy? Is there anything anime can't teach us?

  89. I'm getting confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Is it called the "Bing Bang" or the "Big Band"?

    1. Re:I'm getting confused by tarogue · · Score: 1

      >Is it called the "Bing Bang" or the "Big Band"?

      Easy! Big Band's allowed for the Bing Bangs.

      --
      Life sucks, but death doesn't put out at all. -- Thomas J. Kopp
    2. Re:I'm getting confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the Bing Bang Big Band - Mr Crosby sings all your favourite showtunes.

  90. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by frankthechicken · · Score: 1

    True, we can supposedly only change the form of energy, however I think what is meant is that this energy will be spread more thinly around the universe. So eventually there is not enough to sustain our life.

    Howver I seem to remember in the New Scientist there was an article which stated that the Universe may well collapse despite the evidence of dark energy.

  91. Fear Not! by sterno · · Score: 1

    The human species will have wiped itself long before either of those eventualities come to pass, so no worries :)

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:Fear Not! by charon_on_acheron · · Score: 1

      No the Klingons will do that for us. :^)

  92. Re:The Moravec ploy--area under asymptote is finit by KDan · · Score: 1

    Yup, true... unless you start at t=0 with an infinite speed of thinking, lol :-) Oh well, still, could extend your life by quite a stretch...

    Daniel

    --
    Carpe Diem
  93. Expansion and contraction. by Spudley · · Score: 1

    Ah yes. They keep changing their minds about this one don't they?

    Contraction: universe will eventually implode.
    Expansion: universe will expand forever.

    Sadly, neither is a particularly pleasant ending. In the first case, we all get sucked into the mother of all black holes, in the second case the universe expands until all available matter is so widly dispersed that it can't interact and form galaxies, stars, planets or life.

    But on the bright side, neither scenario will happen within any time frame that we seriously need to worry about. In terms of ancestors and descendants, the number of generations required to get to the time where this would be a problem is an order of magnitude larger than the number of generations since your ancestors were bubbling around in an ancient puddle of mud on a half-formed Earth.

    Comforting thought, eh? :-)

    --
    (Spudley Strikes Again!)
    1. Re:Expansion and contraction. by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > Contraction: universe will eventually implode.
      > Expansion: universe will expand forever.
      >
      >Sadly, neither is a particularly pleasant ending. In the first case, we all get sucked into the mother of all black holes,

      Nit-picky thought:

      In the first case, we are already inside the event horizon of the mother of all black holes.

      A "closed universe" can be pretty easily described as a region of "space" containing sufficient mass that nothing - not even light - can escape it, and inside of which, all matter is inexorably drawn towards a singularity.

    2. Re:Expansion and contraction. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My question is, where is the universe expanding to? What was in the area where the universe now is? And does THAT have a boundry? Is *IT* expanding? If so, what's outside of that?!?!?

  94. Destroying all life?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think anyone has suggested that there would still be life in the universe when this would happen. Not that it couldn't exist right up to the end, but just assuming there's going to be some slugs or birds or something watching the big crunch happen is a little presumptuous.

  95. Thus, the Bing cherry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everybody talks about the heat death of the universe, but nobody does anything about it.

  96. There is no changing matter into energy... by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    matter is just another form of energy.

  97. They need to address Halton Arp's observations by Kelvin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Halton Arp, an award winning astronomer who used to be Edwin Hubble's assistant, has spent years documenting physically connected astronomical bodies with vastly different redshifts. That's simply impossible under the current theories. But they exist.

    He's published several books on the subject including Seeing Red: Redshifts, Cosmology and Academic Science which presents considerable information that's been surpressed by astronomers whose theories have been threatened.

    In Seeing Red, he also lays out an alternate, simplified theory, which is a _slight_ modification of the general theory of relativity that ends up predicting the real world observations without resorting to magic constants, curved space, "dark matter", and other kludges that the currently accepted theories need.

    Here's some other info about it.

    1. Re:They need to address Halton Arp's observations by brettper · · Score: 1
      presents considerable information that's been surpressed by astronomers whose theories have been threatened.


      Right. I would argue that since it's in a book you can buy easily over the internet it's not been very succesfully supressed. Perhaps if it was hidden under a rock in a cave in deepest darkest Afrika (with a sign on saying 'beware of the leopard' of course) then maybe it would count as suppressed.
    2. Re:They need to address Halton Arp's observations by Yunzil · · Score: 1
      He's published several books on the subject including Seeing Red: Redshifts, Cosmology and Academic Science [amazon.com] which presents considerable information that's been surpressed by astronomers whose theories have been threatened.

      Well, there's supressing someone, and then there's ignoring someone because their science is shaky. In Arp's case, it's the latter. :) Do a quick search on groups.google.com and you'll find a lot of skepticism about his data. His ideas also conflict with some other observational data. Oh, and here is a quote from the sci.astro Cosmology FAQ:

      A common objection to the Big Bang model is that redshifts do not
      measure distance. The logic is that if redshifts do not measure
      distance, then maybe the Hubble relation between velocity and distance
      is all wrong. If it is wrong, then one of the three pillars of
      observational evidence for the Big Bang model collapses.

      One way to show that redshifts do not measure distance is to find two
      (or more) objects that are close together on the sky, but with vastly
      different redshifts. One immediately obvious problem with this
      approach is that in a large Universe, it is inevitable that some very
      distant objects will just happen to lie behind some closer objects.

      A way around this problem is to look for "connections"---for instance,
      a bridge of gas---between two objects with different redshifts.
      Another approach is to look for a statistical "connection"---if high
      redshift objects tend to cluster about low redshift objects that might
      suggest a connection. Various astronomers have claimed to find one or
      the other kind of connection. However, their statistical analyses
      have been shown to be flawed, or the nature of the apparent "bridge"
      or "connection" has been widely disputed.

      At this time, there's no unambiguous illustration of a "connection" of
      any kind between objects of much different redshifts.
  98. *Evidence* favors many things. by crashnbur · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Evidence favors many things that may or many not be. Proof favors only reality. This story, based in theory, is only fun to think about and discuss (which is why it's here, I suppose). It's purpose, aside from creating that fun, is supposedly to lead to the eventual proof of one thing or another... like where everything came from or where it's going. Who knows? Not me. Not you.

    Evidence can be used to support anything. To prove it, though, is another thing entirely.

  99. This result is old news. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    MAP is a CMB experiment: It is looking at the primordial plasma (hot ionized gas) from the early universe. One of the things which CMB experiments can constrain is the content of the universe. According to the news articles, they will be announcing the existence of 'dark energy' and eternal expansion of the universe.

    Alas, this is (on the time scale of the advancement of astrophysics research) old news. In fact last spring, the ever-expanding Universe and the exsitence of dark energy was the cover story for Time Magazine.

    The evidence for an eternally expanding universe and dark energy has been around for a couple of years from:

    -Type 1a supernovea of the acceleration of the expansion of the Universe (science magazine story of the year a couple years back)

    -Large Scale structure measurements of the mass density of the Universe

    -Other CMB experiments of the geometry and mass density of the Universe.

    Other CMB measurements to note, which have previously 'announced' this result are:

    Archeops: http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0210306

    BOOMERANG: http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0104460 (Astrophys.J. 571 (2002) 604-614)

    CBI: http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0205387

    DASI: http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0104490 Astrophys.J. 568 (2002) 46-51

    MAXIMA: http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0104459 Astrophys.J. 561 (2001) L1-L6

    VSA: http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0212495

    Of course MAP *may* also be announcing other new things tomorrow, which will make it exciting, but the results listed in the posting are not new.

  100. By the way, you *want* a big crunch by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

    The point is that in a heat death the total amount of information processed is finite. In a big crunch scenario the crunch may happen in finite time but an infinite amount of data processing could take place in that crunch. So if we eventually have the technology (and in a few billion years we *will*, whatever) to keep reconfiguring ourselves to run on whatever hardware is available at time omega-t then we will effectively have infinite subjective lifespans in a crunch scenario.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  101. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Forgotten · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think that Buddhist Nirvana sort of does; entities that become enlightened are never returned to the wheel of life, so there's a constant drain of energy "lost" by the world to nothingness. The peace of Nirvana always seemed something like a perfectly uniform universe to me. Eventually everyone on every plane is enlightened and everything is just sort of frozen (which is a way of looking at heat death, complete equilibrium being equivalent to no motion at all).

    On the other hand Taoism would propose a universe that expands back into the original version of itself, since everything proceeds through an extreme, into and through its opposite, and back into itself. That's broad enough that you could fit either a big-bang-big-crunch, or a heat death where something about the uniform state causes the return of extreme nonuniformity (which is entirely possible, see below).

    One of the things I find provocative about the heat death and "big egg" fates is that they're at some level indistinguishable. Once the universe is uniform, both time and space becomes meaningless, just as they do after a big crunch. So the Taoist view makes sense to me - the universe really does find its opposite (and a rebirth) at the extreme ends of time.

    Oh well. I really have things I should be doing today besides discussing cosmology, if I'm to be able to afford to keep converting free energy myself. ;)

  102. Re:Heat Death by arlow · · Score: 1
    well, it turns out that theres hope for life in an open universe after all -- from Steven Hawking's lecture "Life in the Universe

    ...Most stars will have burnt out in another 15 billion years or so, and the universe will be approaching a state of complete disorder, according to the Second Law of Thermodynamics. But Freeman Dyson has shown that, despite this, life could adapt to the ever-decreasing supply of ordered energy, and therefore could, in principle, continue forever.

    which referrs to freeman dyson's paper "Time Without End: Physics and Biology in an Open Universe

    ...The general conlusion of the analysis is that an open universe need not evolve into a state of permanent quiescence. Life and communication can continue for ever, utilizing a finite store of energy, if the assumed scaling laws are valid.

    so lets hope that those scaling laws hold up :D

    (and yes, the kind of life he's referring to would be quite different than the kind that you and I are familiar with...)

    --

    my other lambda is a Y

  103. Re:To hell with the 'Standard Model' by lugonn · · Score: 1
    I have this theory, that the universe has no beginning or end, and that time and gravity are just side effects of weak/strong/electromagnetic forces.

    In my model, quantum energy (particles you can interact with) become dark matter (particles you can't interact with) when they lose momentum (bad analogy, but can't come up with another). Also, light has no speed limit becuase time does not exist, it is a side effect. It changes depending on were your at in the universe from the its center. And gravity is just a side effect of motion through space. "A road without a mile marker is still a road."

    To hell with the Standard Model!

  104. This isn't exactly news by ArcSecond · · Score: 1

    Cosmologists have been aware of the ACCELERATION of universal expansion for a few years now. I remember seeing an interview with the group that first stumbled across this, and they seemed pretty bewildered, because it was NOT the answer they were looking for: the sign of good physics, I think. Whether the universe is in a "late expansionary phase", or whether this is something that persists over the "life" of the universe, it is still pretty strong evidence that we live in an open "saddle" universe, not a flat one or a closed one.

    Which is actually good news, I think. Sure, heat death may be a bummer for all of us mortals, but there is the potential that life/consciousness could arise which requires only energy to maintain and grow itself... then an open universe is a good thing. This is because the universe will continue to expand, the temperature will continue to drop (approaching 0 Kelvin, but NEVER reaching it), and the amount of information the universe can hold will continue to grow.

    This means, that if we have an open universe with "energy beings" in it near the end (remember, this is a LOOONG time off), those beings could take advantage of the increase in data capacity. I know it sounds weird, but it conforms to both physics and information theory.

    Just trying to show how everything falling apart may not be such a bad way to go, after all. Plus, instead of thinking of the cosmos as an expanding-contracting "ball", we can think of it as a "firecracker" whose embers fly apart and dim, leaving only a cloud of smoke.

    --

    I've got a bad attitude and karma to burn. Go ahead. Mod me down.

    1. Re:This isn't exactly news by Sdrawcab · · Score: 1

      Baxter had this Idea in Vacuum Diagrams. Some civilization built an artifact that stored data thermally, and its capacity would actually increase as the Universe cooled.

    2. Re:This isn't exactly news by TMB · · Score: 1
      Whether the universe is in a "late expansionary phase", or whether this is something that persists over the "life" of the universe, it is still pretty strong evidence that we live in an open "saddle" universe, not a flat one or a closed one.

      Actually, the current evidence, especially from CMB experiments like MAP, strongly suggest that we are in a flat universe. One of the strongest pieces of evidence for dark energy is that by every measurement we've ever made, the mass density of the universe is no more than 1/3 of the closure density, but yet CMB experiments all find that the total energy density is really really close to (if not exactly) the closure density. So the rest of it must be some other form of energy density, and the best current candidate is the cosmological constant.

      [TMB]

    3. Re:This isn't exactly news by damien_kane · · Score: 1

      Actually, the current evidence, especially from CMB experiments like MAP, strongly suggest that we are in a flat universe

      Yeah... and up until very recently (geologically/cosmologically speaking, of course), all the evidence we had pointed towards the world being flat...
      Then we devised new experiments and measuring techniques (in this case someone sailed over the 'edge of the world' and came back)... and suddenly the world was no longer flat.

    4. Re:This isn't exactly news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      and the best current candidate is the cosmological constant.

      Proving once and for all that "best" is a relative and not an absolute term. ;)

    5. Re:This isn't exactly news by gomiam · · Score: 1

      Yes, quite recently. As far as you think 2500+ years being recent. IIRC, both Greek and Roman philosophers proved Earth being spherical (OK, so it is not a perfect sphere, sue me :-)

    6. Re:This isn't exactly news by damien_kane · · Score: 1

      In a timespan of billions of years, 2500+ years is quite recent... Bear in mind I said "geologically/cosmologically speaking...

    7. Re:This isn't exactly news by gomiam · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it makes little sense to talk about our understanding of Earth being either flat or spherical before we got to have the tools to determine it. Unless, of course, you consider our spirits/souls/whatever having been there all along.

    8. Re:This isn't exactly news by damien_kane · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it makes little sense to talk about our understanding of Earth being either flat or spherical before we got to have the tools to determine it. Unless, of course, you consider our spirits/souls/whatever having been there all along.

      True, but can you definitely say that we have the tools today to measure whether our universe is flat, curved, spheical, hyperbolical, whatever?
      Personally I don't think so.

    9. Re:This isn't exactly news by gomiam · · Score: 1
      I thought we were talking about Earth. And, AFAIK, the only space in which two straight lines intersect exactly twice (of course, they should not be the same) is a sphere (or any topological variation of a hypersphere, should you rather).

      Of course, it could also be possible that Earth is not almost spherical, and physics play tricks on us. The outcome is the same: whether our environment is twisted in one or another way, inside it Earth seems to be spheric. The day we can step out of our currently perceived dimensions, we may continue debating.

  105. of course not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "Well, I'm no astophysicist"

    That is pretty obvious from your stupid^H^H^H^H^H^H post

  106. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by schmink182 · · Score: 1
    The universe will be wiped out by the heat death of the universe instead.

    IANA Physicist, but temperature is the average energy of all particles in the object to which we are referring; in this case, it's the universe. Since the number of particles and the amount of energy is supposed to be constant, shouldn't the universe have a constant temperature?

  107. Wheeeeeeeee! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This means that we are ALL moving at escape velocity!!!

    Such excitement!!!

  108. Theology Conotations by Galahad2 · · Score: 1

    It's interesting to note that a constantly expanding universe is much more congruent with the concept of a creator. A constantly expanding universe must have a moment of creation which is unique whereas a cyclical universe doesn't. There's no Armageddon (well, in the "I'm burning!" sense) though, so it's not perfect for creationists. It annoys me when people think that science is utterly incompatible with theology. Indeed, the absolute most recent theory of the creation of the universe is entirely compatible with a Creator: almost eerily so.

  109. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by WatertonMan · · Score: 1
    Didn't traditional Buddhism (as opposed to modern interpretations) tend to see the universe as already infinite? This would be quite different - especially if it postulated a real infinity. For one it would never run out of "souls."

    I also seem to recall some problems moving from Buddhist discussions of nirvana into a more western styled metaphysics of "energy." But that's probably neither here nor there. Is the "everyone on every plane is enlightened" technically part of Buddhism as an end state?

  110. Spiffy graphics by Gaccm · · Score: 1

    Astronomy magazine has an article about this, unfortunitly, there is no free online version. They do have some spiffy graphics that went with the article though, showing the death of the universe: http://www.astronomy.com/Content/Dynamic/Articles/ 000/000/001/165gbnzz.asp

    --

    Only dead fish swim with the stream...
  111. CDK by zmooc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I sounds to me like all the facts are based on the red-shift seen in remote objects. Red-shift can also be caused by the decay of the speed of light. I don't know if it's true or anything, but at least it's interesting with regard to this matter - it's a theory that the speed of light in vacuum is not constant but is slowly decaying.

    --
    0x or or snor perron?!
    1. Re:CDK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I don't know if it's true or anything, but at
      > least it's interesting with regard to this
      > matter - it's a theory that the speed of light
      > in vacuum is not constant but is slowly
      > decaying.

      I'm not a physics expert, so maybe someone can answer me this:
      What is the difference between the speed of light decaying, and the universe expanding? I mean the speed of light is one reference point on which we can define the size of the universe right?

  112. Re:To hell with the 'Standard Model' by 2short · · Score: 1

    Vauge ramblings do not a theory make.

  113. Indeed by dark-nl · · Score: 2, Interesting

    We'd have to make some radical changes :) But at the time scales involved, I don't think a bit of engineering is going to be a problem. If any kind of life is still possible, at any speed, then a way will be found. (Remember that in a low-energy universe, slow and "fragile" processes are much more reliable than they are now. Waiting 10^9 years for a signal to pass from one neuron to another will not be a big problem.)

    1. Re:Indeed by KDan · · Score: 1

      With my luck I bet I'll be the one who's living at normal speed while everyone else has slowed to extremely slow thoughts... How boring...

      Daniel

      --
      Carpe Diem
  114. Because... by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    the more time you have to predict something, the more likely it is to become a certainty. I can't predict with too much a degree of certainty that it will rain tomorrow, but I can predict with a much greater degree of certainty that it will rain sometime this year.

    1. Re:Because... by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1

      the more time you have to predict something, the more likely it is to become a certainty. I can't predict with too much a degree of certainty that it will rain tomorrow, but I can predict with a much greater degree of certainty that it will rain sometime this year.

      Well, sort of, but not really. Your weather argument is a statistical argument ("I've observed that it rarely goes more than a few months without raining, therefore, a year is highly unlikely"), not a predictive argument based on a weather model ("I've calculated the effects of weather in this region, and based on those results I can say that it's highly probably that it will rain the next year").

      The question is actually more complicated that you give it credit. A much better way to state the weather question is, "if they think they can predict that the earth will warm up by 7 degrees over the next century through global warming, why can't they predict the weather tomorrow?". There are two possible answers to this: 1) it makes sense because you can statistically model weather, and local "tomorrow" effects cancel out making long-range modelling possible, or 2) It doesn't make sense, because the longer you forecast, the higher the accumulated error should be. Of course, there is also a third possibility: 3) The weather system is so complex that our understanding is at the level of stone knives and swinging dead chickens.

      Of course, no one knows which possibility is correct. I personally lean heavily toward (3) with a good dose of (2).

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    2. Re:Because... by susano_otter · · Score: 1
      The weather system is so complex that our understanding is at the level of stone knives and swinging dead chickens.

      Technically, this can't be true. Stone knives and swinging dead chickens is at the level of stone knives and swinging dead chickens. Meteorology is on a different level altogether. You might choose to measure these things on such a scale that the distance between the two levels is apparently none, but on any scale that allows for advancement, the two can't be on the same level. The only way they could be on the same level is if the current state of the art truly is theoretically and practically identical to the past state of the art. Hrm. I guess that could be possible, but not so much that I'd hestitate to discard the possibility as ludicrous.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    3. Re:Because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      metaphor ( P ) Pronunciation Key (mt-fôr, -fr)
      n.
      A figure of speech in which a word or phrase that ordinarily designates one thing is used to designate another, thus making an implicit comparison, as in "a sea of troubles" or "All the world's a stage" (Shakespeare).
      One thing conceived as representing another; a symbol: "Hollywood has always been an irresistible, prefabricated metaphor for the crass, the materialistic, the shallow, and the craven" (Neal Gabler).

      [Middle English methaphor, from Old French metaphore, from Latin metaphora, from Greek, transference, metaphor, from metapherein, to transfer : meta-, meta- + pherein, to carry; see bher-1 in Indo-European Roots.]

      metaphoric (-fôrk, -fr-) or metaphorical adj.
      metaphorically adv.

      Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
      Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
      Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

      metaphor

      \Met"a*phor\, n. [F. m['e]taphore, L. metaphora, fr. Gr. ?, fr. ? to carry over, transfer; meta` beyond, over + fe`rein to bring, bear.] (Rhet.) The transference of the relation between one set of objects to another set for the purpose of brief explanation; a compressed simile; e. g., the ship plows the sea. --Abbott & Seeley. ``All the world's a stage.'' --Shak.

      Note: The statement, ``that man is a fox,'' is a metaphor; but ``that man is like a fox,'' is a simile, similitude, or comparison.

      Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.

      [Sheesh, I hate literalist geeks who have no understanding of subtleties of speech]

    4. Re:Because... by dmiracle · · Score: 1

      models are models. You have good models and bad models and experimentation or observation determine which are which. Complexity is not without its successful models. If you think that your 12day forcast comes from statistics you are sorely wrong. In fact it is a causal relation (due to Newton) that is used in most weather prediction. You might be surprised at how extensive the study of complexity is and how often it does not employ statistical formulations. I guess a good place to start is with Lorenz -- famous meteorologist.

  115. ...Looking at the Hitchhiker's Guide by kzinti · · Score: 1

    According to the best cosmological theory we have now: The universe came into being...

    "In the beginning, the Universe was created. This has made many people very angry and has generally been regarded as a bad idea." --Douglas Adams

  116. Don't Panic by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and there goes my plan for a "Restaurant at the End of the Universe." I'll just have to keep getting by on what I make from my "Big Bang Burger Bar".

    (Sorry Douglas. You're probably spinning in your grave right now over this. Kind of like the computer simulation of the couch in Dirk Gently's appartment.)

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
  117. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Temprature is average kinetic energy, energy of motion, not absolute energy.

  118. the playboy subscription by Indy1 · · Score: 1

    was with kip thorne on the existance of black holes or not. Hawking bet (in a cover your ass type bet) that black holes didnt exist, and Thorne bet that they did. The terms of the bet was 1 year of playboy (it might of been penthouse) for Hawking, and 4 years of something more bland for Thorne. Hawking eventually paid up on his bet to Thorne.

    --
    Lawyers, MBA's, RIAA? A jedi fears not these things!
    1. Re:the playboy subscription by Superfreaker · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's it!
      Thorne's wife got mad at him when they started arriving.
      Funny.

      "The only thing I enjoy more than doing the Crossword puzzle, is actually finishing it"

  119. Maybe a little Dennis Hopper too... by reconn · · Score: 2, Funny

    "This is the way the fucking world ends. Look at this fucking shit we're in man. Not with a bang, but with a whimper. And with a whimper, I'm fucking splitting, Jack."

    Like a true slashdotter, I'll leave you to try to remember what it's from.

    --
    Everything that was once directly lived has receded into a representation. -debord
  120. Photons can decay into matter by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 1

    If a photon has enough energy it can decay into a matter anti-matter pair. This has been observed for some time in particle collisions.

    I do wonder if a black hole could "explode"... I'm not aware of any sort of explosion that could escape a black hole. however, black holes do slowly decay and radiate away mass as hawking showed... anyway I should prolly just read more of the thread

    --
    There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
    1. Re:Photons can decay into matter by spike+hay · · Score: 1


      I do wonder if a black hole could "explode"... I'm not aware of any sort of explosion that could escape a black hole. however, black holes do slowly decay and radiate away mass as hawking showed... anyway I should prolly just read more of the thread


      And when the escape velocity becomes less than that of light, it explodes.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
  121. Has to be said by Tyreth · · Score: 1
    I am bound to get modded down as 'off topic' even though it's not, but...

    This has an influence on evolution. Typically when describing the impossible nature of evolution, it has occasionally been the response to describe that the universe expanding, collapsing, and expanding again has given a theoretically infinite number of times for evolution to successfully occur.

    This argument now has no foundation if this final position is what really is happening. It will now be the role of the evolutionist to demonstrate how the incredibly unlikely event of evolution could have occurred with only one try.

    1. Re:Has to be said by Tiny+Elvis · · Score: 1

      Why are you assuming that there is only one universe?

  122. could this foreshadow total protonic reversal? by Phantom+Gremlin · · Score: 1

    Try to imagine all life as you know it stopping instantaneously and every molecule in your body exploding at the speed of light.

  123. offtopic, but what the hell.... by ubugly2 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    http://www.flashbunny.org/content/frenchmagazine.h tml

  124. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Forgotten · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well, I'm being pretty loose in my interpretations. I figure that's ok, though, because the one thing I definitely got from the University Buddhism classes I audited was that there's pretty much a variant for everyone.

    I have definitely seen end states described where everyone reaches Nirvana. I suspect this comes from the simple desire for a happy ending. It also more resembles endings in Christianity so that could be an influence too (but without the "hell" component, which is ongoing in most Buddhist conceptions anyway, whether you're a desire-ridden human or a hungry ghost). The alternative has infinite creation of new entities, but then you need a source for them, which kind of undoes the fact that it's an entirely reincarnation-based belief system (as with its roots in Hinduism).

    It's all pretty metaphorical anyway; I also glossed over having multiple planes of existence in many or most Buddhist strains, of which this dying universe would only be one. But it beats watching TV. ;)

    A critique from a real Buddhist theologian would certainly be interesting.

  125. Throw in some Aliens... by kzinti · · Score: 1

    "Well that's great, that's just fuckin' great man, now what the fuck are we supposed to do? We're in some real pretty shit now man... That's it man, game over man, GAME OVER, man! Game over! What the fuck are we gonna do now? What are we gonna do?" - Hudson, the panicky guy.

  126. Life is the universal contracting force. by jeremedia · · Score: 1
    Life will pull everything back together. Its the obvious result of life in a universe such as ours. Already life on this planet is concerned about heat death! You think by the time heat death is real problem life won't be able to do anything about it?

    Notice I am using life, not humans. A big difference.

    In time, all matter in the universe will be part of living things. Just wait and see. :)

  127. It's a cosmic joke . . . by Eric+Damron · · Score: 2, Funny

    Billions of years ago life crawled out of the primordial sludge.

    Slowly over many millions of years it evolved, learned to walk upright and became intelligent enough to know that it was fucked . . .

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  128. Re:Then how did the Bada Bing Bang happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bada Bing Bang Boom!

    The "dark matter" moved in and all the "white matter" fled like no tomorrow!

  129. Maybe by Iscariot_ · · Score: 1

    The universe came into being.

    I'm gonna have to say maybe on this one. Perhaps the "begining" was more asymptotic and there never was an actual point at which the universe began. Thus you could look back in time ever so closely to the starting "point" but never actually see it.

    Yah dig?

    From this point of view the universe has always "been".

    1. Re:Maybe by Q+Who · · Score: 1

      And you can't really move one meter. Cause at first you move 1/2 of a meter, then 1/4, then 1/8...

      Yeah, I dig.

  130. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Forgotten · · Score: 1
    Are you talking about how there is no global energy conservation due to time asymmetry and Noether's theorem?

    I was thinking of it in vaguer terms - if energy is spontaneously created in some way that depends on the existing distribution (as quantum theory would suggest) and the medium into which it's being created is uniform, the new energy will also be uniform on a large scale. It could still be usable in the way that Dyson describes harnessing it indefinitely though.

    If you want to be more formal I'd guess Noether's theorem underlies it, like all symmetry. Way ahead of her time, that one.

    It is quite possible that what you're suggesting exceeds the limits of my understanding of physics. ;)

  131. dollyknot writes by Dollyknot · · Score: 1

    The future was written in the past

    --
    It's called an elephant's trunk whereas it is in fact, an elephant's nose, a nose by any other name would smell as sweet
  132. On Gravity by graveyhead · · Score: 1

    Has anyone else ever thought that "Dark Energy" could just be polarized gravity?

    Think of it this way: imagine that the electromagnetic force worked across the sort of distances that gravity does, and we didn't have such a complete understanding of it. We might then easily mistake the source of energy for the destination. Maybe gravity, viewed from a larger perspective, has a polarity that we are not detecting from our frame of reference. Then "dark energy" just becomes gravity, with an opposing charge.

    Of course, IANAP, so I am probably just ass-talking here (again). Is Doctor K around to set me straight?

    --
    std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
    1. Re:On Gravity by vertigoalopolus · · Score: 1

      i wish!
      from that, we could derive anti-gravity, contruct devices to harness it, and that would be a huge step in our development. quick and easy trip to mars on a skateboard anyone?

      --
      Dont ask me, im just the bass player!
  133. Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by c64cryptoboy · · Score: 1

    So much from the bang-crunch anthropic principle (roughly stated: "if the universe has bang-crunched forever, then of course at some point the conditions were right for us to come into being so that we could sit around and ponder how unlikely we are") that was so popular in the writings of Paul Davies, Hawking, etc. Evolutionists will have to come up with some other way of stretching their arrow of time to infinity.

    --
    I put the 'fun' in fundamentalism
    1. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So much from the bang-crunch anthropic principle (roughly stated: "if the universe has bang-crunched forever, then of course at some point the conditions were right for us to come into being so that we could sit around and ponder how unlikely we are") that was so popular in the writings of Paul Davies, Hawking, etc.


      A Big Crunch is not needed to apply the anthropic principle. There are other ways to get many universes. But for that matter, you don't need many universes to apply the anthropic principle either. Even with just one universe, it doesn't matter how unlikely that universe is --- the fact is that we're here.


      Of course, nobody said that the anthropic principle is needed for anything. There are many theories of the origins of our universe floating around. Not that it matters: a lack of a scientific theory does not make, shall we say, certain non-scientific alternatives themselves any more plausible. That is the false dichotomy fallacy.


      Evolutionists will have to come up with some other way of stretching their arrow of time to infinity.


      Wrong thread. Evolution is a theory of biological speciation. It has nothing to do with astrophysics and cosmology.
    2. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by c64cryptoboy · · Score: 1

      > A Big Crunch is not needed to apply the anthropic principle. There are other
      > ways to get many universes.

      You're right. By "stretching their arrow of time to infinity" I should have said "making sure they could draw from a space where every permutation is expressed".

      > a lack of a scientific theory does not make, shall we say, certain non-scientific
      > alternatives themselves any more plausible. That is the false dichotomy fallacy.

      Did I post a "a certain non-scientific alternative"?

      What *is* non-scientific is any theory that does not have a built-in means of falsifiability. Without falsifiability, it cannot be tested or repeated, and it is not science. (It might be true, but it is not science.) Most people accept "the fact" of evolution, even if the mechanisms are in question because it is a chosen belief position, and they further believe that all the difficulties will be worked out sometime in the future.

      A related belief system, the anthropic principle-based belief system, generally takes the form of "something much like what I believe with respect to cosmology and evolution must be true, because we're here aren't we?". This is philosophy only, and a far cry from science.

      > Wrong thread. Evolution is a theory of biological speciation. It has nothing to do
      > with astrophysics and cosmology.

      I understand your point. However, cosmology and evolution are inseparable, at least in the second-source paperback science books that the masses read on airplanes. They also are quite similar in that out of all we hold to be science, they are the only two branches in which their respective musings are rarely falsifiable, and therefore not useful for formulating testable predictions. This is why they're plagued with 20/20 hindsight (and tautological) explanations, generally reducing to the form "this theory or one like it must be true, because you can see what we have today".

      --
      I put the 'fun' in fundamentalism
    3. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. By "stretching their arrow of time to infinity" I should have said "making sure they could draw from a space where every permutation is expressed".


      It's not necessary for every permutation to be expressed or expressible to apply the anthropic principle.


      What *is* non-scientific is any theory that does not have a built-in means of falsifiability.


      The anthropic principle is not a theory. That's why it's called a "principle". As for theories with multiple "universes", they may or may not be testable. For instance, the eternal inflation theories predict, as a consequence of inflation, certain observable properties of our universe.


      Most people accept "the fact" of evolution, even if the mechanisms are in question because it is a chosen belief position, and they further believe that all the difficulties will be worked out sometime in the future.


      Evolution is a fact, in that speciation and natural selection have been directly observed in nature. There is a theory of evolution describing the details of how evolution happens, not all of which is fully understood. "The mechanisms of evolution are in question because it is a chosen belief position?" What is that supposed to mean? You could equally well say the same thing about the theory that things fall due to gravity. Evolution is a theory, just like gravity or any other theory in science. It has evidence in its support; it can't be proven, but neither can any other theory. There is no reason to single out evolution.


      However, cosmology and evolution are inseparable, at least in the second-source paperback science books that the masses read on airplanes.


      Not unless they're creationist paperbacks. I don't know any pop-sci books that confuse the two.


      They also are quite similar in that out of all we hold to be science, they are the only two branches in which their respective musings are rarely falsifiable,


      More nonsense. Big Bang cosmology makes very many concrete, falsifiable predictions (CMBR, Hubble redshift, light-element nucleosynthesis ratios, patterns of structure formation, etc. etc.) Evolution does too (e.g. twin nested hierarchy).
    4. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by c64cryptoboy · · Score: 1

      >> Most people accept "the fact" of evolution, even if the mechanisms are
      >> in question because it is a chosen belief position, and they further believe
      >> that all the difficulties will be worked out sometime in the future.

      > Evolution is a fact, in that speciation and natural selection have been directly
      > observed in nature. There is a theory of evolution describing the details of how
      > evolution happens, not all of which is fully understood.

      I was referring to macro-evolution, not micro-evolution. No one should have a problem with micro-evolution, as it is directly observed. By macro-evolution I referring to the position that purposeless thoughtless processes solely account for our origins.

      > "The mechanisms of evolution are in question because it is a chosen belief position?"
      > What is that supposed to mean? You could equally well say the same thing about
      > the theory that things fall due to gravity. Evolution is a theory, just like gravity or any
      > other theory in science. It has evidence in its support; it can't be proven, but neither
      > can any other theory. There is no reason to single out evolution.

      I wasn't trying to indicate that evolution is in question because it is a belief system. On the contrary, everything is an unprovable belief system, and that's ok. The best you can do in any domain is simply reduce it to the smallest set of axioms that yield the maximum set of expressiveness and utility. Sometimes you can disprove it, with respect to a more accepted (believed) set of axioms (which are hopefully based in observables). When discussing origins, most limit themselves to purely naturalistic explanations (which makes assumptions about how you are allowed to explain things, and is ultimately based upon only what we currently know, but that's another thread).

      I was saying that the *mechanisms* of macro-evolution are questionable (not because it is a belief system). Hopefully you'll agree that there is far too much hand waving and complexity avoidance to engender the level of trust and acceptance such theories have enjoyed. Theories are free to be wacky, but when taught in school, they are presented as unchallengeable fact by teachers who simply read straight from their curriculum.

      > More nonsense. Big Bang cosmology makes very many concrete, falsifiable
      > predictions (CMBR, Hubble redshift, light-element nucleosynthesis ratios, patterns
      > of structure formation, etc. etc.) Evolution does too (e.g. twin nested hierarchy).

      Good examples.

      However, books by popular evolutionists such as Dawkins and Gould are jam packed with philosophy, not testable theories. These beetles can fly because it must have helped them survive. These beetles can't fly, because perhaps flying beetles got blown out into the ocean. If the theories explain everything, then they explain nothing. Darwin at least clearly laid out the criteria for falsification in his works.

      Obviously no one else is reading this thread, or else we started getting off-topic mods. :-)

      --
      I put the 'fun' in fundamentalism
    5. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was referring to macro-evolution, not micro-evolution. No one should have a problem with micro-evolution, as it is directly observed. By macro-evolution I referring to the position that purposeless thoughtless processes solely account for our origins.


      You're confused. "Macroevolution" refers to a creatoinist strawman which claims there is some qualitative difference between speciation and lots of speciation over a long time (fish turning into humans or whatever). What you are referring to "macroevolution" (the "purposeless, thoughless processes") part is properly known as the philosophy of naturalism, which underlies all of science.


      When discussing origins, most limit themselves to purely naturalistic explanations (which makes assumptions about how you are allowed to explain things, and is ultimately based upon only what we currently know, but that's another thread).


      Science, by its very nature, limits itself to naturalistic explanations. That doesn't mean that scientists, or most people in general, do so.


      I was saying that the *mechanisms* of macro-evolution are questionable (not because it is a belief system). Hopefully you'll agree that there is far too much hand waving and complexity avoidance to engender the level of trust and acceptance such theories have enjoyed.


      If you mean, do I think evolution is as well understood, supported, and accepted as, say, Newtonian mechanics or something, then the answer is no. On the other hand, I don't think there is credible doubt that the basic ideas of evolution are correct.


      However, books by popular evolutionists such as Dawkins and Gould are jam packed with philosophy, not testable theories. These beetles can fly because it must have helped them survive. These beetles can't fly, because perhaps flying beetles got blown out into the ocean. If the theories explain everything, then they explain nothing.


      Evolutionary biologists are often accused of creating "just-so" stories, as you claim above. However, in existing species, we can actually go and see in the field which traits are selected for. This gives us some basis for extrapolation to earlier species. However, I think you are missing the point. The evidence for evolutionary theory does not depend on finding explanations for why certain adaptations occurred. It depends on establishing links between organisms over time (e.g. genetic and morphological similarities and their divergences).
    6. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by c64cryptoboy · · Score: 1

      > You're confused. "Macroevolution" refers to a creatoinist strawman which
      > claims there is some qualitative difference between speciation and lots of
      > speciation over a long time (fish turning into humans or whatever).

      I don't believe the concept of macro-evolution to be a strawman. I'm tempted to bring up analogies such as the computer code I write only operates within the constraints that I set for it and such, but I think that line of reasoning would take too long to develop.

      Suffice to say, it is a huge jump from bacteria becoming resistant to penicillin, and bacteria evolving into humans. Model it as whatever information-theoretic measure you like (as Kolmogorov complexities perhaps?), and you'll see why I think that simply dismissing it as a continuum that follows from universally agreed upon micro-evolution observables constitutes optimistic hand waving in the extreme. Where you see my strawman, I see your slippery slope.

      > Evolutionary biologists are often accused of creating "just-so" stories, as
      > you claim above. However, in existing species, we can actually go and
      > see in the field which traits are selected for. This gives us some basis for
      > extrapolation to earlier species. However, I think you are missing the
      > point. The evidence for evolutionary theory does not depend on finding
      > explanations for why certain adaptations occurred. It depends on establishing
      > links between organisms over time (e.g. genetic and morphological
      > similarities and their divergences).

      So that we're not doomed to "just-so" stories, what criteria should bring an evolutionist to consider that the basics of evolution (as a means of origins) are in question? (The criteria is always clear for the so called "hard" sciences, which is why we can put confidence in them.)

      Also, you seem very qualified to represent the evolutionist's position. This being the case, I'd like to hear your opinion on what you think chiefly contributes to one's belief in purely naturalistic explanations of origins as opposed to belief in extra-naturalistic origins.

      --
      I put the 'fun' in fundamentalism
    7. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I was referring to macro-evolution, not micro-evolution. No one should have a problem with micro-evolution, as it is directly observed. By macro-evolution I referring to the position that purposeless thoughtless processes solely account for our origins.


      You're confused. "Macroevolution" refers to a creatoinist strawman which claims there is some qualitative difference between speciation and lots of speciation over a long time (fish turning into humans or whatever). What you are referring to "macroevolution" (the "purposeless, thoughless processes") part is properly known as the philosophy of naturalism, which underlies all of science.


      When discussing origins, most limit themselves to purely naturalistic explanations (which makes assumptions about how you are allowed to explain things, and is ultimately based upon only what we currently know, but that's another thread).


      Science, by its very nature, limits itself to naturalistic explanations. That doesn't mean that scientists, or most people in general, do so.


      I was saying that the *mechanisms* of macro-evolution are questionable (not because it is a belief system). Hopefully you'll agree that there is far too much hand waving and complexity avoidance to engender the level of trust and acceptancenurban@crib:~$ cat sart

      I don't believe the concept of macro-evolution to be a strawman. I'm tempted to bring up analogies such as the computer code I write only operates within the constraints that I set for it and such, but I think that line of reasoning would take too long to develop.


      The question is, where does the breakdown between "macroevolution" and "microevolution" occur? How fine a gap do you need in the transitional forms before you'll believe that it happens?


      Suffice to say, it is a huge jump from bacteria becoming resistant to penicillin, and bacteria evolving into humans.


      Fortunately, we have many, many more links in the chain in between "bacteria" and "humans".


      So that we're not doomed to "just-so" stories, what criteria should bring an evolutionist to consider that the basics of evolution (as a means of origins) are in question?


      What do you mean "evolution as a means of origins"? I hope you're not confusing evolution with abiogenesis, like you were with cosmology.


      Anyway, what would cause problems for evolution? Most of the easy ways to kill evolution have already been examined and found not to do so.. but... hmm.. finding that genotypic similarities among descendents often don't produce similar phenotypic similarities... if the nested hierarchies had major discrepancies in ordering via different criteria (e.g. genetic code vs. morphology)... finding that organisms appear in the fossil record at times inconsistent with their positions in the nested hierarchy (e.g. finding that they appear simultaneously or in reverse order when they're supposed to appear in a certain order), evidence that the fossil record is much younger than we think... evidence that traits in transitional organisms would have been fatal to the species (tough one, since fitness depends on the environment)... evidence for biochemistries completely unrelated to existing life (well, that would be trouble for just the common-descent part of evolution)...


      A biologist would probably be able to come up with a better list.


      Also, you seem very qualified to represent the evolutionist's position.


      I don't think so. I'm a physicist, not a biologist. I study cosmology; evolution is a side hobby and I am strictly a layman.


      I'd like to hear your opinion on what you think chiefly contributes to one's belief in purely naturalistic explanations of origins as opposed to belief in extra-naturalistic origins.


      Even if there were no naturalistic explanations of origins at all, I would not entertain supernaturalistic explanations at all unless there was something that I considered positive evidence in favor of supernaturalism. Once upon a time, there was no naturalistic explanation for the phenomenon of thunderstorms, but in my opinion that does not constitute evidence in favor of the theory that thunderstorms are a battle of the gods. Actually seeing some guys up there duking it out might, though.
    8. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by c64cryptoboy · · Score: 1

      > What do you mean "evolution as a means of origins"? I hope you're not
      > confusing evolution with abiogenesis, like you were with cosmology.

      By "evolution as a means of origins" I was trying to avoid the term "macroevolution", since you seem to get hung up on it. By the way, put "macroevolution" as your term in an Amazon book search, and none of the books returned are religious. It is a term and distinction created by the evolutionist community (at least as old as the 1970's when Stanley first proposed alternatives to "Punk Eek", but let's not get sidetracked by that).

      > Anyway, what would cause problems for evolution? Most of the easy ways to
      > kill evolution have already been examined and found not to do so.. but... hmm..
      > finding that genotypic similarities among descendents often don't produce similar
      > phenotypic similarities... if the nested hierarchies had major discrepancies in
      > ordering via different criteria (e.g. genetic code vs. morphology)... finding that
      > organisms appear in the fossil record at times inconsistent with their positions
      > in the nested hierarchy (e.g. finding that they appear simultaneously or in
      > reverse order when they're supposed to appear in a certain order), evidence
      > that the fossil record is much younger than we think... evidence that traits
      > in transitional organisms would have been fatal to the species (tough one,
      > since fitness depends on the environment)... evidence for biochemistries
      > completely unrelated to existing life (well, that would be trouble for just the
      > common-descent part of evolution)...

      If/when evidence is found that poses problems for any of the criteria you listed, you and I both know that the evolutionist community will still stay committed to the "fact" of evolution, and will simply insert placeholders for future explanations to come along that will hopefully fit the observables. The only self-correction that evolution allows is one that perpetuates it.

      >> I'd like to hear your opinion on what you think chiefly contributes to one's belief
      >> in purely naturalistic explanations of origins as opposed to belief in
      >> extra-naturalistic origins.

      > Even if there were no naturalistic explanations of origins at all, I would not entertain
      > supernaturalistic explanations at all unless there was something that I considered
      > positive evidence in favor of supernaturalism. Once upon a time, there was no
      > naturalistic explanation for the phenomenon of thunderstorms, but in my opinion
      > that does not constitute evidence in favor of the theory that thunderstorms are a
      > battle of the gods. Actually seeing some guys up there duking it out might, though.

      Heh heh. In other words, you would only entertain extra-natural ideas if illustrated by purely natural means. Is it more of a "if I can't test it, it doesn't exist", or "if I can't test it, it doesn't matter"?

      I can't think of a type of extra-natural phenomena that people wouldn't merely craft naturalist explanations for. Can you? And the explanations wouldn't have to be plausible, because the hope is always that they'll be replaced by something better in time.

      --
      I put the 'fun' in fundamentalism
    9. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By "evolution as a means of origins" I was trying to avoid the term "macroevolution", since you seem to get hung up on it.


      You didn't answer my question.



      If/when evidence is found that poses problems for any of the criteria you listed, you and I both know that the evolutionist community will still stay committed to the "fact" of evolution, and will simply insert placeholders for future explanations to come along that will hopefully fit the observables.


      Evolution, in the sense of differential change in a population, is a fact and will always remain a fact. If evidence comes out against the mechanisms and history of evolution, then the scientific community will revise or discard the existing theory of evolution.


      Heh heh. In other words, you would only entertain extra-natural ideas if illustrated by purely natural means. Is it more of a "if I can't test it, it doesn't exist", or "if I can't test it, it doesn't matter"?


      I didn't say anything about "natural means". I said that if I'm going to entertain a supernatural explanation, I need evidence FOR a supernatural phenomenon. The absence of a natural explanation does not constitute support for a supernatural explanation.


      I can't think of a type of extra-natural phenomena that people wouldn't merely craft naturalist explanations for. Can you?


      It's always possible to craft a natural explanation for any phenomenon: "You're hallucinating."It's also always possible to craft a supernatural explanation for any phenomenon: "Goddidit". That doesn't mean that people can't be persuaded towards one position or another by evidence; it just means that you can't prove that one explanation or another is impossible.


      And the explanations wouldn't have to be plausible, because the hope is always that they'll be replaced by something better in time.


      Just like "Goddidit". An "explanation" that "explains" anything and everything, explains nothing. Just like the just-so stories you were complaining about with evolution. Fortunately, evolution does not require on just-so stories, and is falsifiable, unlike "Goddidit". Now, specific claims of how a supernatural agent may have accomplished something could in principle be falsifiable, but such specific proposals -- such as most forms of "scientific" creationism -- tend to get shot down pretty quick.


      As Feynman said, it's impossible to prove a vague theory wrong. The issue isn't naturalism vs. supernaturalism, it is specific natural theories vs. specific supernatural theories.

    10. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by c64cryptoboy · · Score: 1

      >> By "evolution as a means of origins" I was trying to avoid the term "macroevolution", since you seem to get hung up on it.

      >You didn't answer my question.

      Your question was "What do you mean 'evolution as a means of origins'?". And my answer was macroevolution (see above).

      Ok, to get past this impasse we apparently need some definitions of macro and micro evolution. Here's some sample definitions take from http://www.cyber.vt.edu/geol3604/macro1.pdf

      ---------------(start of copy/paste)---------------

      Microevolution - evolutionary processes (e.g., neodarwinian evolution) that operate at the level of individual organisms

      Examples of microevolutionary processes:
      * natural selection
      * genetic drift

      Macroevolution - evolutionary processes that operate above species level. Large-scale, long-term evolutionary processes and patterns

      Examples of macroevolutionary processes:
      * origins of new body plans
      * changes in frequency of particular phenotypic characters across many groups or the entire biosphere
      * changes in rates of speciations across groups and through time

      Is macroevolution decoupled from microevolution?

      1. All macroevolutionary patterns can be explained by microevolutionary processes (the reductionistic neodarwinian view)
      2. Macroevolutionary patterns cannot be explained as a cumulative sum of microevolutionary processes. Thus, there are unique macroevolutionary rules and processes

      ---------------(end of copy/paste)---------------

      The serious hand waving kicks in when the reductionistic neodarwinian view postulates that macroevolution is nothing more than lots of microevolution.

      >> If/when evidence is found that poses problems for any of the criteria you listed, you
      >> and I both know that the evolutionist community will still stay committed to the
      >> "fact" of evolution, and will simply insert placeholders for future explanations to
      >> come along that will hopefully fit the observables. The only self-correction that
      >> evolution allows is one that perpetuates it.

      > If evidence comes out against the mechanisms
      > and history of evolution, then the scientific community will revise or discard
      > the existing theory of evolution.

      Come on. They may throw out a particular theory, but they would never discard the position that some purely naturalistic history of evolution accounts for the presence of humans, no matter how non-conformant any choice of mechanisms were to observables. It is simply too useful as a explanatory placeholder for keeping the proverbial divine foot from entering the door.

      >> Heh heh. In other words, you would only entertain extra-natural ideas if
      >> illustrated by purely natural means. Is it more of a "if I can't test it, it doesn't
      >> exist", or "if I can't test it, it doesn't matter"?

      > I didn't say anything about "natural means". I said that if I'm going to entertain
      > a supernatural explanation, I need evidence FOR a supernatural phenomenon.

      This means you'd have to create a natural test methodology for supernatural evidence. Framed that way, no evidence would ever match your criteria. So once again, do you think extra-natural doesn't exist, or that it doesn't matter?

      > Now, specific claims of how a supernatural agent may have accomplished something
      > could in principle be falsifiable, but such specific proposals -- such as most forms
      > of "scientific" creationism -- tend to get shot down pretty quick.

      Theology works much differently than science. It deals with the extra-natural, and therefore (I believe) it should not be used to create *specific scientific* explanations (even if that's what it would take to be falsifiable via standard scientific inquiry). Of course, we both seem to agree that nothing can ultimately be proven. A love for one's spouse (don't forget Valentine's day today) or enjoyment of music doesn't have to be proven to have meaning and relevance, or to even be at the core of one's beliefs and decision making.

      That being said, I personally find the pre-commitment to naturalism to be a gross oversimplification. It does a lousy job at addressing the irreducible complexities of what we observe around us, and has no chance of explaining where its naturalistic laws come from. If the naturalist laws are its axioms, and such axioms fall outside of naturalism's explanatory power (since naturalism is based upon them), then those laws are by definition extra-natural (in that they didn't result from naturalistic processes). It is just a game of "let's see how far we can go when restricting ourselves to only naturalistic explanations". Conversely, those who believe in the extra-natural embrace extra-natural first causes, as incomprehensible as they might be.

      --
      I put the 'fun' in fundamentalism
    11. Re:Atheists lost their "b-c anthropic principle" by c64cryptoboy · · Score: 2, Funny

      There will come a point when this /. thread no longer allows new replies. When that happens, if you still inclined to further enlighten me, my address is david@youdzone.com . (I assume yours is nurban@crib.corepower.com .)

      --
      I put the 'fun' in fundamentalism
  134. What about Milliways? by Niadh · · Score: 1

    Does this mean the hitchhikers guide to the galaxy is wrong???

    [Niadh panics]

  135. Re:To hell with the 'Standard Model' by bogie · · Score: 1

    Yes, Homer's theory of a donut shaped universe is a lot more plausible. ;)

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
  136. Whats new ? by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1

    What's new - we have known this since 1999 when two independent groups working on observations of type SNe 1a supernova came to the same conclusion. That the expansion of our universe is accelerating. All that NASA can provide is further confirmation.

  137. So many problems by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 1
    From here.


    Cosmology is a global study, one in which the universe itself is the object of contemplation, and not any of its parts. The conveyance from the local structure of the universe (the sun, the solar system) to the universe as a whole must be negotiated by a daring series of inferences.

    In describing matter on a cosmic scale, cosmologists strip the stars and planets, the great galaxies and the bright bursting supernovae, of their uniqueness as places and things and replace them with an imaginary distribution: the matter of the universe is depicted as a great but uniform and homogeneous cloud covering the cosmos equitably in all its secret places. Cosmologists make this assumption because they must. There is no way to deal with the universe object by object; the equations would be inscrutable, impossible to solve. But however useful the assumption of homogeneity may be mathematically, it is false in the straightforward sense that the distribution of matter in the universe is not homogeneous at all.

    Having simplified the contents of the universe, the cosmologist must take care as well, and for the same reason, to strip from the matter that remains any suggestion of particularity or preference in place. The universe, he must assume, is isotropic. It has no center whatsoever, no place toward which things tend, and no special direction or axis of coordination. The thing looks much the same wherever it is observed.

    The twin assumptions that the universe is homogeneous and isotropic are not ancillary but indispensable to the hypothesis of an expanding universe; without them, no conclusion can mathematically be forthcoming.


    It's the isotropic assumption I have the hardest part with. Even the expanding balloon analogy has a conveniently ignored center, some spot inside the balloon.

    Has anybody plotted the galactic courses and traced them backward to where they converge? The center of the universe so to speak? Have we pointed a scope at it? I know it looks the same in every direction, but the convergence point has to be somewhere I've googled extensively and can't find an answer, just explanations of why every point "thinks" it's the center.
    --

    Operator, give me the number for 911!
    1. Re:So many problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the isotropic assumption I have the hardest part with. Even the expanding balloon analogy has a conveniently ignored center, some spot inside the balloon.


      You missed the point of the analogy. Space is suppose to be the balloon itself. There is nothing inside or outside of the surface of the balloon; there is no direction in space (i.e., within the balloon's surface) that you can point to and say that's the center. The balloon analogy is just an analogy; we imagine space (the balloon) as being embedded in a higher-dimensional space for the purposes of visualization, but that hyperspace doesn't really exist.


      Has anybody plotted the galactic courses and traced them backward to where they converge?


      They all converge to our own location. If someone in a distant galaxy were to repeat the experiment, they'd find that all the galaxies traced back to their own location. That's when the universe was of zero size, so everything was at the same place, ourselves included.
    2. Re:So many problems by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 1

      OK. That makes sense to me until I read something like..'Peering almost to the edge of the universe, 14 billion light years away, astronomers...whatever'

      An isotropic universe can't have edges. If it has edges, then it has some kind of center. If it has no center and no edges then it must be of infinite size. If it has a defined size, then somewhere there are edges to tell us where the size ends. If you go a trillion light years out what do you find? Back where you started? We're all flies trapped in a 3D game of Yars Revenge?

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
    3. Re:So many problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK. That makes sense to me until I read something like..'Peering almost to the edge of the universe, 14 billion light years away, astronomers...whatever'


      An isotropic universe can't have edges.



      What they meant was, the edge of the observable universe. There are parts of the universe that we can't see, because light from them hasn't reached us yet. The boundary between the parts we can see and the parts we can't is the "cosmological horizon", which is what they mean by "the edge of the universe" in this context.
    4. Re:So many problems by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 1

      Fine bad example but you see the dilemma, does it have real edges or doesn't it? If it has boundaries and a specific size then some sort of center must exist. No edges, then what? No size?

      That's what I can't get my brain around, if it's expanding then the size must be getting bigger, is that not the definition of expanding? Anything that has a size has boundaries to that size. I'm being simple here for a reason, I want a simple answer to the question in italics. I've been asking since I was 8. I took astronomy courses in college, the ones with requiring calculus, I read Brief History of Time, I've never found an answer to that question that made sense.

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
    5. Re:So many problems by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 1

      !@#$* Don't give up tobacco and post I guess.

      Does it have real edges or doesn't it? Close tag. no karma bonus here. rub nicotine patch vigorously into skin...quit posting.

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
    6. Re:So many problems by cthulhubob · · Score: 1

      Has anybody plotted the galactic courses and traced them backward to where they converge? The center of the universe so to speak? Have we pointed a scope at it? I know it looks the same in every direction, but the convergence point has to be somewhere I've googled extensively and can't find an answer, just explanations of why every point "thinks" it's the center.

      I think you need to go back and actually read those explanations.

      The reason there is no center is because there is no way of getting an "absolute" velocity of every system. You need a frame of reference to find the velocities of each galaxy/planet/what have you. But what's the velocity of your current frame of reference? That would be zero, since your frame is moving along with your current galaxy/planet/whatever. Therefore every point you wish to measure the center of the universe from will BE the center of the universe.

      --

      In post-9/11 America, the CIA interrogates YOU!
    7. Re:So many problems by PhuCknuT · · Score: 1

      Back to the balloon analogy. If you imagine the surface of the balloon as a 2d universe, and the balloon is expanding, then
      a) there is no center from the point of view of one of the 2d inhabitants of the universe
      b) there is no edge
      c) the farther apart two points are on the surface, the faster they receed from each other
      d) if they are far enough apart there hasn't been enough time for light to get from 1 to another, hense the "edges of the OBSERVABLE universe"
      e) if it were possible to travel faster than light (time travely theories aside) then you could go in a straight line and end up where you started. have to go faster than light to outrun the expansion though, so this is unlikely to ever happen.

      Now all you have to do is try to imagine *3* dimensions wrapped around a point (a 4d balloon with a 3d surface) and you have what we've observed of our universe. No center, no edges, everything moving away from everything else at the same speed proportional to the distance apart, etc.

      Get it?

  138. Clarifications by Cuprous · · Score: 3, Informative

    The rate of expansion IS decreasing, the question is will that be enough to cause the crunsh or not because the rate of decrease (second derivitie of velocity) is decreasing as well.

    That's the old (early 90's) model. Before the supernova data, we thought that the universe would be decelerating. However, now we're pretty sure that the universe is accelerating, not decelerating.

    However, that doesn't mean that the universe won't decelerate later (or didn't decelerate earlier). There are still a lot of questions as to what the dark energy is and all of the accelerating/decelerating depends on what it is.
    Google for quintessence. It's beyond my area of expertise.

    Regardless of what the dark energy actually is, the universe is accelerating right now.

    1. Re:Clarifications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you talking about real negative acceleration or simply accelerating at a slower rate?

  139. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Thing+1 · · Score: 1
    As I noted in another message, an infinitely expanding universe means that the temperature of the heat-dead cosmos will constantly drop as the volume increases. It will asymptotically approach absolute zero.

    So... If the universe did at one point "cycle" by expand/collapse phases, then that means that we're living in the "final" universe.

    A completely separate though: given that will soon be able to make computers which accurately simulate reality (think Matrix), and everyone has one of those computers and can run a Matrix themselves, so there are 6 billion Matrices running, each of them containing "us"...

    What are the chances that we're existing in the original?

    --
    I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
  140. The universe is spiraling by asscroft · · Score: 1

    Isn't it obvious that everything spirals in a funky multi-dimensional way. stars, galaxies, quarks. The all spiral out like a big fractal. from one angle it looks like a simple spin, from another like a spiral. And in space time like a straight line? not sure, but I know one thing, on the other side of the vortex is more of the same - same but different.

    --
    because I have been enjoined by this Holy Office to abandon the false opinion which maintains that the Sun is the centre
  141. NASA, eh? by strook · · Score: 1

    Is it just coincidence that NASA is going to announce something cool that it's done right after so many critics are calling for the space program to be dismantled?

    --

    "TV is great! Every New Year's I make a resolution to watch more TV." - Ann Coulter

    1. Re:NASA, eh? by skwang · · Score: 1

      This so called "discovery" is nothing but the annoucment of the results of MAP, or Microwave Anisotropy Probe. It was launched a couple of years ago and took 4 pi sterradian measurements of the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation (or CMB). The news conference was originally planned for last thursday the 6th, and scheduled before the space shuttle Columbia was lost during reentry. It was delayed because the scientists (and NASA) didn't want this to turn into a "Columbia Disaster" press conference where all the questions would be Off-Topic.

  142. The basic form for ad hoc theory: by dmiracle · · Score: 1

    This is true . . . unless there is another mechanism that acts as external forcing causing the universe to be constantly forced away from equilibrium. This could result in a classic pattern formation system.

    (whatever)

  143. Grand Unified Theory?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Before the discovery of this new "Dark Energy" force, there was only four basic forces at work: Gravity, Electromagnetic Force, Weak Nuclear Force, and the Strong Nuclear Force.

    From my understanding, physicists have been able to unify the electromagnetic force, strong and weak nuclear force into one set of theory. The real trouble was to come up with a Grand Unified Theory (GUT) that can explain both the gravity and the electromagnetic force together. This was what Einstein had tried, but failed.

    Now with this fifth "dark energy" force discovered. Would this be the missing link in the GUT? Or did the matter just get worse (now we have three separete forces need to be unified.)

    ---Tyger tyger burning bright,
    In the forest of the night.
    What immortal hand or eye,
    Dare frame thou fearful symmetry.

    1. Re:Grand Unified Theory?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not at all clear whether "dark energy" is a new force. It could just be a new kind of field, interacting through the usual forces. Or it could be due to modifications in our understanding of existing forces (such as the addition of a cosmological constant to the laws of gravity).

  144. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's retarded!

  145. Seen The News Release? Now Read The Book by cmholm · · Score: 1
    For an accessable treatment of the expanding universe hypothesis, see "Five Ages of the Universe: Inside the Physics of Eternity" (Fred Adams, Free Press, 1999, ISBN 0743237722).

    Fred uses a log scale to break down the history of the universe into five cosmological decades, starting from nanoseconds after the Big Bang, out until a trillion years is but a twitch on the flanks of time. If nothing else, it provides a reference scale to remind you that eternity is indeed a very long time.

    Yep, it's on Amazon.

    --
    Luke, help me take this mask off ... Just for once, let me butterfly kiss you with my own eyes.
  146. The dark force by heroine · · Score: 1

    But the part of this theory no-one likes to mention is eventually the stars are going to run out of energy and everything we've created is going to freeze no matter where we move to.

  147. Re:Heat Death by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except that life implies organization of energy, and in a static chaotic it would seem to me that introduction of any organization would in return create more order. Especially if this life form reproduces...
    Maybe in our universes next life, the 2nd law will be the opposite of our version.

    Anyone who hasn't read Cities in Flight by James Blish and is looking for a good hard sci-fi book should pick it up, it seems quite relevant to this discussion, or at least quite entertaining.

  148. the last question by Jafa · · Score: 1

    Well, lucky for us a sci-fi writer, in this case Asimov, already has an idea of how this will be solved. One of my favorite short stories: The Last Question ("for educational use") talks about entropy and the end of the universe as a whimper, with a great ending.

    Jason

  149. It's not that the temperature being low by Ayanami+Rei · · Score: 1

    The average temperature is not the limiting factor, but that enough times passes since the beginning of the last universe so that it is likely for such an unlikely event to occur.

    Statistically, these quantum fluctuations don't exist (except when they do..., ^_^ ) so you have to wait an inordinate amount of time for it to decide to happen.

    First quasi-pseudo-physics post

    --
    THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
  150. Won't the Dimensions roll up ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    It's my understanding that the universe has 11 or 12 dimensions. What to keep our current ones from rolling up under some conditions and allowing others to expand. I suspect near perfect entropy is required for dimensional roll up. Thus the universe would big bang by unrolling dimensions.

  151. Never worked out for me... by JAHA · · Score: 1

    I was a physics major in college and the whole big bang theory never really worked out in my mind. The expansion isn't so straight forward. Why don't we see any effect of the expansion on a small scale? Gravity or electromagnetic forces might dwarf the expansion on small scales - but I would expect at least pertubations from our current theories...hmm, probably from quantum gravity too though - maybe they're really that small? But it's too ill described as to definition of expansion. Is space a tangible thing? Is the expansion a wind like force? Or is it like a bunch of 'space molecules' where they all multiply at once? Again there's no expansion even in star clusters or within a galaxy. Must we not have a suitable description of space before we say it's 'expanding'? I don't think people should stop trying to answer big questions like this, but I really dislike the sensationalism of it all. We don't have near enough information to make these judgements so why announce them as 'truth'? Selling newspapers? Funding research? Inspiring students? Maybe these are important things but it still makes me feel like science is becoming Entertainment Tonight or something.

    1. Re:Never worked out for me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was a physics major in college and the whole big bang theory never really worked out in my mind. The expansion isn't so straight forward. Why don't we see any effect of the expansion on a small scale? Gravity or electromagnetic forces might dwarf the expansion on small scales - but I would expect at least pertubations from our current theories... hmm, probably from quantum gravity too though - maybe they're really that small?


      Yes, they really are that small. You can calculate the factor by which, say, the Solar System will expand due to the universal expansion, and it is utterly negligible. I think there is a link to a paper with a calculation somewhere in Ned Wright's Cosmology FAQ.


      But it's too ill described as to definition of expansion.


      Expansion: distances between points of space increase. Things move farther away.


      Is space a tangible thing?


      Define operationally (in terms of the outcome of an experiment) how to tell whether something is "a tangible thing", and I'll tell you whether space is.


      Is the expansion a wind like force?


      No. Its simply that the geometry of space changes with time: even if two objects are at rest relative to each other, the distance between them can change without either one experiencing a force.


      Or is it like a bunch of 'space molecules' where they all multiply at once?


      No new points of space are created.


      Again there's no expansion even in star clusters or within a galaxy.


      No observable expansion.


      Must we not have a suitable description of space before we say it's 'expanding'?

      What's wrong with general relativity's description?
  152. Contrary to what the other replies say... by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

    Thats a nice reference to Isaac Asimov. I can't remember the name of the short story, but in it the long line of super computers used by man is asked a question over and over. The question boils down to is there a way to beat entropy. The computer always responds that there is not enough information. Then after the last human essense joins with the Universal computer, it continues to process the, until then, unanswerable question. It then produces the answer with the line "Let there be light", reproducing creation.

    --
    I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
    1. Re:Contrary to what the other replies say... by A+Bugg · · Score: 1

      The Last Question is the name of the Asimov short story.

      A Bugg

  153. Cardboard model. by Benm78 · · Score: 1

    If you where to glue those cardbord discs really well to the elastic surface, they would eventually shear to pieces on continual expansion. In case of space-time, one could differentiate between two scenarios: - objects get 'blown' further apart in space with time - space itself expands with time I would state the the last statement would have to be true (not implying the first one is not), since the 'big bang' theory starts out with the absence of space itself. However, I agree with you on atoms and molecules staying the way they are in the 'short' term. With continual expansion in the 'long' term however, it seems plausible these strong structures could be torn apart. Breaking up molecules and atoms would 'cost' a great deal of energy, but would 'yield' an enormous amount of entropy once the universe became infinitely large.

    1. Re:Cardboard model. by PhuCknuT · · Score: 1

      Yes, but atoms and molecules aren't "glued" to specific points in spacetime, they can move freely. Spacetime will expand right under them without exerting enough force on them to overcome any of the internal forces that hold them together. It is only on HUGE scales that the expansion is noticable, not because it is pulling apart individual structures, but simply because the amount of free space between them is expanding. The expansion is so tiny even on the scale of a whole galaxy that it's not enough to even come close to countering the gravity holding the galaxy together.

  154. Damn. by waytoomuchcoffee · · Score: 1

    So much for my plan of reincarnation to keep me alive forever.

    1. Re:Damn. by astafas · · Score: 1

      You could still do that by skipping across universes :) From one quantum universe to another, it might become possible.

  155. Albert Einstein discovered Dark Energy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....Albert Einstein, have argued that the universe eventually will stop expanding and then implode under the force of gravity, destroying all life.

    WRONG! Albert Einstein was one of the originators of the dark energy theory, a man ahead of his time. Eventually, though, convention got the better of him and he renounced his belief in a universal repulsive force

    1. Re:Albert Einstein discovered Dark Energy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Convention had nothing to do with it. Einstein introduced his cosmological constant in order to get a static (non-expanding universe). But the only way he could get one is by fine-tuning the value of the cosmological constant, so he never liked it. When the universe was revealed to be expanding, there was no further reason in his mind to keep it in the theory. Today, we have a reason (the accelerating expansion of the universe).

  156. Schedule of Press Release by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is my understanding that the NASA press release will take place tomorrow (Tuesday 2/11) at 2pm EST. The initial press release was scheduled for Thursday 2/6, but was postponed due to the shuttle disaster. You may find more information at the following URL after the press release:

    http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/cosmolog.htm#New s

  157. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by susano_otter · · Score: 1

    And it does. The "heat death" thing refers to what happens when the average temperature is evenly distrubuted across all the particles in the system.

    See, discrete objects exist, and discrete events occur, because there's an energy gradient between one state and another. This energy gradient makes change possible. This is achieved by an uneven distribution of the average temperature. Stars are hotter than the average temperature of the universe, and on a good day revenge is colder than the average temperature of the universe. Distribute the average temperature evenly throughout the universe, and you won't be able to tell the difference between stars and revenge.

    And that would take all the fun out of life.

    --

    Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  158. The truth of the matter is... by Tuffnut · · Score: 2, Informative

    The human race will cease to exist in the year 2095 AD.

    Sorry guys, but just don't waste your time with all this "universe big bang collapse" theory stuff, because in the end no one will be around to give a flying crap.

  159. Hawking believes in ever-expanding doesn't he??? by thebatlab · · Score: 1

    I could have sworn that I read somewhere that Stephen Hawking believes not in the Big Crunch but in the ever expanding universe idea? Could be he used to believe in the big crunch theory but reversed his mind and nobody realizes it? :)

  160. Phew! by StarTux · · Score: 1

    I was getting so worried about the sky falling on our heads! This makes me a feel a lot better!

    StarTux

  161. The Last Question (Isaac Asimov) by Sgs-Cruz · · Score: 1
    Seriously... read this short story... it has to do with the heat-death of the universe and is a fabulous read. It blew my mind the first time I read it.

    Isaac Asimov, The Last Question

    --

    Karma: pi (Mostly due to circular reasoning in posts).

  162. Nothing to hope for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With the big crunch idea we can assume that after the big crunch there will be another big bang and the cycle will repeat but in a situation where we will expand forever one day everything will be dead and there will be no chance for any kind of new life springing up. Personally I'd rather worry about a big crunch in 100 billion years rather than knowing this is all going to be desolate for eternity. visit The Daily Monkey Dot Com.

  163. I trust NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should know with all the deep space
    exploration and bold experimental work
    they have done on universal origin theory
    in the last twenty years.

    Go NASA!!!
    BOOM!

  164. Not Until the Day... by NSupremo · · Score: 1

    ...we finally get to see our closest 'neighbor universe' (simply another bubble of matter very similar to ours, which we call 'the known universe').

    I feel, like NASA is now claiming, that 'space' is infinite. We also know that all matter is mostly empty space (no matter what scale you use). Therefore it should be a matter of fact that our 'universe' (an area of mass that has been expanding for 15 billions years) is simply one of an infinite number of 'specks' in the infinity of existence. Eventually 'our universe' will collide with another. (Not an alternate universe. Simply another shell of matter that has been expanding for 15 billion (or trillion) years.)

    How American of us to think that our universe is the only mass in infinity.

    --
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_U.S._Election_co ntroversies_and_irregularities
    1. Re:Not Until the Day... by junkgrep · · Score: 1

      Well, a flat universe is infinite too... but only just. A saddle-shaped universe is REALLY darn infinite. :)

  165. dammit by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 1
    You beat me to it!

    ;)

    Ænima is probably my favorite Tool song...

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
  166. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by dragons_flight · · Score: 1

    Some others have noted that there are theories where energy and/or matter are spontaneously created in empty space. These can coexist with the heat death fate if the new energy is also evenly spread, which it probably would be in such a uniformly boring heat-dead universe. Still no way to create a new free energy gradient.

    The lack fo a free energy gradient doesn't neccesarily follow. Keep in mind that the whole universe (after the first million years or so) condensed out of a virtually uniform distribution of energy, in the form of hydrogen and helium atoms, that gravitationally collapsed into ever larger concentrations starting from only the weakest of quantum fluctutations in the density field.

    It's possible that any matter or energy that gets spontaneously created in empty space could be self-concentrating in a way similar to the gravitational concentration of hydrogen, leading to the spontaneous creation of new energy gradients.

  167. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    It could still be usable in the way that Dyson describes harnessing it indefinitely though.

    Isn't Dyson the guy that built that big sphere thingy? Ya, i think it was.

  168. Re:Heat Death... unless - funny? by caveat · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hm, I'd say that's more Insightful than Funny - I mean, it is a rather serious metaphysical question if we really are facing a gloomy, dark, cold, lonely end to things, is there some way we can reverse entropy, maybe going beyond pure science and empiricism?

    Anybody remember the Asimov short story, name escapes me, with the central computer that answered questions, and from time to time different generations would ask it "How can entropy be reversed?"; every time the answer was "There is as yet insignificant data to compute an answer." Eventually, mankind dies off and leaves this multidimensional hyperspatial uber-computer, which is left with one unanswered question, and it churns away, until the Universe reaches the end, heat death...and this computer finally gets the data, and the answer, and it booms out..."Let There Be Light".

    --

    Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
  169. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by BigCdawg · · Score: 1

    The human race isnt going to live long enough to see the universe eat itself. There will be a nuclear holocaust long before then i assure you..

  170. We die anyway... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even if all life isn't demolished in a "big crunch" eventually everything will be so spread out that no life can exist. Dang increasing entropy!

  171. Re:The Moravec ploy--area under asymptote is finit by togofspookware · · Score: 1

    So from the outside, you'd look like you were living a loooong time, but from your point of view, everything around you (if you had enough energy to detect it at all) would constantly be speeding up. And you wouldn't actually feel like you were living forever. At some point, you'd have to have a last thought. Like, "Wow. Thi s i s r e a l l y b o r i--" dead.

    --
    Duct tape, XML, democracy: Not doing the job? Use more.
  172. hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find this interesting, I know that this will expand our knowledge and give us an
    understanding of physics that will allow intriguing new concepts and technologies to one
    day exist. But to the average man this basically means dwindling starvation instead of
    crunching for our descendants

    -troy

  173. The Next BIG Question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If we assume as they have that based on observations there must be some kind of "dark energy" stopping the universe from destroying it self.

    The next question is when NASA start experimenting with "Dark Energy" would it be possible to destroy the universe?

    I am of course thinking along the lines of creating anti-gravity technology.

  174. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by ruiner13 · · Score: 1
    " and should end decades of academic dispute. Scientists ranging from Stephen Hawking, the Cambridge University physicist, to Albert Einstein, have argued that the universe eventually will stop expanding and then implode under the force of gravity, destroying all life."

    That part cracks me up. Kinda makes it sound like they're full of shit. I kinda doubt that.

    --

    today is spelling optional day.

  175. Hello? by bluesoul88 · · Score: 1

    You people still haven't cured cancer yet! Get off your stargazing asses and hop to it!

  176. Damn optimists, temper your enthusiasm! by zerofoo · · Score: 1

    Great, all life won't die in one big crunch. Yay!

    Then I read this:

    Although NASA's discovery means the universe will go on forever, the same is not true for human life. As the universe expands, all the energy needed to keep the stars and galaxies alight will be used up. What will remain is a universe full of black holes, which after trillions of years will explode to leave nothing but dark energy.

    So all life doesn't get squished, but all the energy in the universe is used up. Gee, that's a much better alternative....

    -ted

  177. Of course, now that we know... by naasking · · Score: 1

    Of course, now that we know how the universe works, it will spontaneously change into something completely unrecognizable. :-)

  178. bring on the new ice age! by m1chael · · Score: 0

    ill believe it when i see it. anyway by the time this proposed event happens the human race will have wiped out by the Vogons or evolved to such an advanced state that they dont need the universe to survive.

    --
    I know you are psychotic, but please make an effort.
  179. What a waste of space by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

    I agree. I'd rather see the possbility of at least recycling the universe than seeing it die by a slow pathetic decay.

    To imply that life will go on because the universe is open instead of closed is a misconception. Eventually the remaining free gas in the galaxy will be used up and star formation will cease. All stars will eventually become cooled off white dwarfs, neutron stars or black holes. Galactic clusters will become more isolated and even black holes will fade out due to Hawking radiation. Toss in the possibility of proton decay and you are looking at a universe consisting of a "photon haze". Doesn't sound like a very life friendly future.

    --
    It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
  180. Actually... by NeoChichiri · · Score: 1

    Actually...during the course of the travel through space, while it may be very small, the pull of gravity from stars would affect the acceleration of the body in motion. The pull of gravity would become greater as it traveled near a black hole as the gravity around a black hole is greater than traditional stars as they pull matter into themselves.

    --
    NeoChichiri
    http://www.neochichiri.net
  181. Re:Heat Death... unless - funny? by timster · · Score: 1

    The short story is "The Last Question" (not to be confused with "The Last Answer"). I remember reading a comment by Asimov that nobody could ever remember its name. As I recall he thought it was his best short.

    --
    I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
  182. Apologies by etymxris · · Score: 1

    As others have pointed out, I'm incorrect in concluding that the apple must fall back to Earth.

    Yes, I've taken calculus (degree in math, if you can believe it). Just wasn't my best and brightest today.

  183. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 1

    Also, it's a rather lonely future even before then, as galaxies grow so far apart that you eventually can't see anything but your own big front yard.

    Does that mean those damn kids will finally stay off my lawn?

    --
    Moderate drunk! It's more fun that way!
  184. Expanding Dark Energy The Result of Spam by Ilan+Volow · · Score: 2, Funny

    Several billion years ago someone got an e-mail message titled "INCREASE YOUR UNIVERSE SIZE!!!".

    They hit reply and the rest is history.

    --
    Ergonomica Auctorita Illico!
  185. I knew this was happening! Half the time things just go missing never to be found again all over the place for me!

  186. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by marko123 · · Score: 1

    The same way you can predict a gambler will end up broke if he doesn't stop, yet you can't say whether he will win or not tomorrow.

    --
    http://pcblues.com - Digits and Wood
  187. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like the sort of bland/tepid/boring end to the universe idea. It's sort of cosmological parody of those all-too-familiar dystopian Slashdot predictions for a bland/tepid/boring end to Western Civilization where everything is replaced by AOL/Microsoft/IKEA/Your Favorite Hated Corporate Entity.

    I personally think ideas like these probably make for better fantasies than histories, but it will be interesting to see what develops.

  188. A Rose by any other name....? by Etrigan_696 · · Score: 1

    Dark Energy:
    Properties: No mass. Does not interact with matter on a scale visible to the human eye in daylight. Has a minimum density at all points in space, even in vaccuum. may or may not be affected by gravity - no one knows yet. exerts minute amount of force over great distances and time - which adds up quickly to be great force.

    Ether:
    Properties: No mass. Does not interact with matter on such as scale as to be observable to the human eye in daylight. Exists throughout all space (thereby having some minimum density that must be over zero). exerts minute force over great distances that quickly add up to great force. Is the medium of transport for light.

    Didn't science fight like hell about a hundred years ago to throw out the notion of a sea of magical invisible goop that pervaded space? Didn't scientists throw out the notion of ether saying it was a bunch of superstitous bunk - that if you couldn't see it or taste it or touch it, it was best left to wizards and alchemists?
    They fight like hell to throw out ether, then they put a funny new name on it - not once, but several times (ether->quantum foam->zero point energy->dark energy) and want me to swallow it? I don't doubt there is a thing such as this - the idea makes the universe make more sense - but pick one side of the fence to stand on, boys, and stay there.

    1. Re:A Rose by any other name....? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dark Energy:
      Properties: No mass. Does not interact with matter on a scale visible to the human eye in daylight. Has a minimum density at all points in space, even in vaccuum. may or may not be affected by gravity - no one knows yet. exerts minute amount of force over great distances and time - which adds up quickly to be great force.


      Dark energy might have mass. Dark energy has to be affected by gravity for the theory to work. (In relativity, you can't have something that affects gravity but is unaffected by it.)


      Ether:
      Properties: No mass. Does not interact with matter on such as scale as to be observable to the human eye in daylight. Exists throughout all space (thereby having some minimum density that must be over zero). exerts minute force over great distances that quickly add up to great force. Is the medium of transport for light.


      Whether ether had mass or not was unknown, since nobody ever had a material theory of it. Whether ether exerts a force depends on how you interpret things, but if it does, it's the ordinary electromagnetic force.


      Why are you picking on dark energy? You could make the same statements about the electromagnetic field itself, but that doesn't make the electromagnetic field an aether.


      Didn't scientists throw out the notion of ether saying it was a bunch of superstitous bunk - that if you couldn't see it or taste it or touch it, it was best left to wizards and alchemists?


      There is a difference between "intrinsically undetectable, even in principle", and "really hard to detect". After all, people believed in atoms before we could image them with microscopes.


      ether->quantum foam->zero point energy->dark energy


      All of those things are different concepts in physics, not different words for the same thing.
  189. Emperical Evidence by Questioning · · Score: 1

    Hey, guess they will decisively know something within the next ten billion years.

    ~Questioning

  190. Re: sounds like snake oil to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if cryo is such a great idea - then why don't you go do it right now!!!

    harrumph

  191. Re:Heat Death... unless - funny? by caveat · · Score: 1
    It's a great short; some people have already posted links. I got some karma to burn, so here's the last 'chapter', the one I find most...moving? (AC is the ultimate evolution of Man's computer, transdimensional, infinitely powerful, The Question is simply "how can entropy be reversed")...
    Matter and energy had ended and with it space and time. Even AC existed only for the sake of the one last question that it had never answered from the time a half-drunken computer attendant ten trillion years before had asked the question of a computer that was to AC far less than was a man to Man.

    All other questions bad been answered, and until this last question was answered also, AC-might not release his consciousness.

    All collected data had come to a final end. Nothing was left to be collected.

    But all collected data had yet to be completely correlated and put together in all possible relationships.

    A timeless interval was spent in doing that.

    And it came to pass that AC learned how to reverse the direction of entropy.

    But there was no one to whom AC might give the answer of the last question. No matter. The answer---by demonstration---would take care of that, too.

    For another timeless interval, AC thought how best to do this. Carefully, AC organized the program.

    The consciousness of AC encompassed all of what had once been a Universe and brooded over what was now Chaos. Step by step, it must be done.

    And AC said, "Let there be light!"

    And there was light---
    --

    Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
  192. When slashdot is not even a memory... by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

    When we are all dead and gone, and all of our thoughts and ideas are long lost, these things will come to pass. Homosapiens will just be a memory in some ancient anthropological archive - provided we or our ancesters don't extinguish all life before then.

    This is one science experiment we can't observe the end of (unless you exist in a Douglas Adams novel).

    --

    Lodragan Draoidh
    The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
  193. But is it expanding quickly enough? by pyro_peter_911 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Okay, great. The universe is expanding. But is it expanding quickly enough? By my calculations, the universe is not expanding quickly enough. The theoretical Heat Death of the expanding universe will not occur until long after the Starbucks Death of the universe.

    That's right, the volume of Starbuckses is increasing at an accelerating rate. If this trend continues the entire universe will be filled with Starbuckses in 10^8 years, a tiny fraction of the time required for the Heat Death of the universe.

    Peter

  194. truly expanding, or variable speed of light? by Maditude · · Score: 1

    If light is traveling more slowly than it has in the past, wouldn't that look an awful lot like the universe's expansion was accelerating?

  195. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Observed T symmetry violation (coupled indirectly to the theta_b parameter in the Standard Model) might be an artifact of the lack of asymptotic freedom in the overall gauge theory... weakly coupled C-Y charmonium interactions via technicolor processes could well account for the excess we need in order to have CPT invariance. So don't give up on energy conservative just yet!

  196. Re:Heat Death... unless - funny? by manofherb · · Score: 1

    the story ya'll are referring to I have in a book by Issac Asimov called Nine Tomorrows, the copyright is from 1959, the story starts on page 170 and continues to page 183 in my softcover version I have. The question asked to Multivac was, " How can the net amount of entropy of the univserse be massively decreased," was asked by alexander adell on May 21, 2061, and was solved by the fusion of Cosmic AC and the last man 10 trillion years later and since it couldn't tell the last man the answer it decided to do a demonstration proving it by starting with "Let there be light!" and there was light -

  197. Thanks by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

    I have the book somewhere around here, I just couldn't find it in time to make any use of it

    --
    I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
  198. If... by rdhill316 · · Score: 1

    the universe *does* turn out to be in the process of expanding infinitely, instead of eventually collapsing, it brings up an interesting question ... where did the energy for the "Big Bang" come from? Please forgive me, I have very little exposure to astrophysics ... I've always heard the infinite regression theory, that the energy came from a previous universe that collapsed, then exploded, creating our universe, and that previous universe had come from another universe before it. Ignoring the inherent "infinite regression" fallacy, this explanation seems to make some kind of sense. But if our universe will expand forever, it can't collapse to give birth to another. If it does expand forever, will it die a "cold death" when all the energy from stars and stuff will be released as entropy? Does that mean that an unknown number of previous universes collapsed, but that ours is the last universe? (sounds like a book title, "the last Universe") Or is ours the *only* universe? That possibility caused me to ask my original question: Where did the energy for the "Big Bang" come from?

    --

    --
    Me: http://www.robertdhill.com/
    1. Re:If... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      We don't even know if the question "where did the energy for the Big Bang come from" makes sense. After all, if time began at the Big Bang, then the universe has always had energy --- there was no instant before the Big Bang when there was no energy.


      In another sense, the universe could have zero total energy (positive energy from matter and radiation, negative potential energy from the gravitational field), which renders the issue even more subtle.

    2. Re:If... by rdhill316 · · Score: 1

      My head hurts now ... :-)

      --

      --
      Me: http://www.robertdhill.com/
  199. except.... no. by pyth · · Score: 1

    Light has not slowed down, or sped up, or anything like that. (Well, okay, it may have changed by a tiny undetectable fraction like 10^-16). The fact is, if we look back 8 billion years, we see spectroscopic effects showing that back then, the universal constants were the same as they are now.

  200. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm just a Zen Buddhist layman, I also took a small course on religions (not audit =P), I'll offer a little. I'd say the idea of samsara is more of a Hindu thing. I mean, Buddhism has ties to Hinduism, but still. Think of the caste system in India. Imagine trying to convince the many poor to stay peaceful with the few rich in their face. Reincarnation, combined with better life in a higher caste with good karma. And then think about Buddhism, it was a rich guy that tried to be a samana and then decided the middle ground was a good idea. The idea of the caste system isn't very strong, even though it heavily influenced Buddhism. Buddhism as I practice it doesn't have reincarnation. Although Lamaism (Tibetan Buddhism), the Dalai Lama is reincarnated. But hey, gotta have spiritual leaders. Free Tibet!

  201. still not the same by pyth · · Score: 1

    Yes, I know you want to make it sound like they share characteristics, but many physical phenomena do.

  202. Interesting parallel here... by RedBear · · Score: 1

    I laughed too, at first, then I thought that it really is an interesting question, and that some people might really want a good answer to it.

    So, think about this. The movements of astronomical objects can be compared to watching a perfectly round steel ball rolling down a perfectly straight, very long, slightly inclined ramp, in which there is a groove cut so that the ball can't roll off. The ball (astronomical object) can only do one thing: roll down the slope. Using a simple clock, we can observe the motion of the ball and easily calculate how fast it's going, how fast it's accelerating, and when it will reach a certain point on the ramp with a high degree of accuracy. (They were doing this experiment with great accuracy hundreds of years ago.) The reason it's so easy in that case to predict what will happen, is that there is really only one (non-changing) vector force operating on the ball.

    Now, compare that to let's say dropping a feather off a cliff, and then trying to observe the motion of the feather and predict when and where the feather is going to land when it gets to the bottom of the cliff. You're trying to predict the time to within a second, and the spot to within a millimeter. This is quite obviously impossible, but why? Because the moment the feather leaves your hand, it enters a chaotic zone where its position, direction, speed and acceleration are being operated on by billions of gas molecules, which collectively assert thousands or perhaps millions of different (changing!) vector forces on it. The molecules that directly touch the feather are in turn affected by billions of other molecules with their own vectors, and so on and so forth out to the limits of the atmosphere.

    The only possible way to predict the motion of the feather would be to have some way to observe and predict the motions of every molecule of air surrounding it, out to the limits of measurable interaction. Obviously, molecules of air a mile away won't measurably interact with any molecules that interact with the feather for quite some time, so you can probably just deal with all molecules within a radius of [100 feet|1 mile|10 miles], I have no idea.

    The point being, dealing with the movement of an atmosphere is an incredibly complex problem, even second-to-second, while all those astronomical objects out there in space will be following the same "ramp", or vector, in general, for the next quadrillion years. That's how they can say they think they know what will happen, when they still can't predict the motions of every molecule in Earth's atmosphere.

    Here's where it gets interesting, to me anyway. If you think about this, we're talking about the difficulty of predicting the behaviour of objects on a macro scale, as opposed to a mega scale. We get the same sort of difficulties when we're talking about the difference between what happens on a quantum level (can't be predicted) and what happens on a classical level (if the atoms in your hand contact the atoms in a desk, they both maintain integrity and don't mix or explode, in other words, we can predict things that happen to atoms).

    Quantum (truly impossible to predict) Micro (fairly easy to predict)
    Macro (almost impossible to predict) Mega (very easy to predict)

    I just felt that was interesting. Is there a level above the mega (astronomical) scale, that is so predictable that it makes the mega scale seem difficult to predict? What a strange concept.

  203. crunchy would be better for life. by pyth · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Although the crunch effectively puts a maximum lifetime on any specific life, there is that slim theoretical possibility that another universe would arise from the crunch. As it is, the universe grows and cools to a homogeneous soup, and that's it. We can't reuse the universe, we have to get a brand-new one.

  204. More Physics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think your are incorect on you mechanics.
    the instant acceleration of an explosion is very high, but after a second or so, its 0. While the limit of gravity as it goes to inf+ is 0, since keplar was the man(inverse square law of gravity) in reality zero is a lower bound that it never gets to. So from a newtonion mechanics view the universe will expand for a time, and then colapse back to a singularity.

    On the other hand the universe will frezze before that becouse of the second law of thermodynamics. (entrapy)

    But I doubt this will happen becouse all the dark mater (anti-mater?) will explod, effectivly rejuvinating the universe for at least 50% longer. (the universe has more mass then it should, so we make up dark mater)

    Or maybe we realize that physics is really really really good, but still isn't perfect, we don't have the math tools to do somethings we need to (complex dynamic systems, aka turbulance) so when you see stuff like this, its a theory, with maybe *some* data to explane it, but its not the gospal, its a just rumors, I meen news, I meen slashdot.
    -James

  205. the boundary of the universe by pyth · · Score: 2, Interesting
    If there really is a place in the universe where there's galaxies on one side, and a void on the other, then it's beyond our sight. But who says there has to be an edge? After all, does the surface of a sphere have an edge? Its surface has a finite size, certainly. But then, there are infinite things, like say a (theoretical) infinite sheet of plastic - no edge, but plenty of size. Infinite size.

    Basically, we can think of the universe as expanding linearly with distance (hubble's law). Now, there's a very special characteristic of this type of expansion: nobody can tell if they're the center. If there were a center, it would have no effect.

    Think about the raisin bread - how can a raisin tell where the center is? Remember, they don't know anything about "absolute rest" either.

  206. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Depends on the sect of Buddhism. Theravada Buddhists are definitely reincarnated, and many choose to live samsaric lives. I mean that's really where their ethical sense comes from. You can be pretty sure that Siddharta believed in reincarnation.

  207. For a practical outcome of these results by pyth · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Visit RTB. There's no question about it, the universe was created with life, no, human life in mind.

  208. Nibanna means "not burning" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nibanna is the older pali form of the Sanskrit redered as "Nirvana". Ni means "not"; banna means "burning." The goal of the traditional Buddha was not enlightenment, but it's opposite: extinction. It's nice to see a concrete sign that after untold kalpas of trying to shepard all you greedy morons to Nibanna I will finally succeed.

    Your local anonymous bodhisattva

    1. Re:Nibanna means "not burning" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I always figured they were the same thing.

      If life is suffering, you can only escape suffering by escaping (the cycle of) life. So from the perspective of the living, enlightenment == extinction. Oblivion is peace. Many atheists share the same view.

      I always knew you bodhisattvas were no good.

    2. Re:Nibanna means "not burning" by Ame-Tsuchi · · Score: 1

      You seem to have forgotten about the Second Noble Truth: suffering occurs because of ignorance; the ignorance that leads one to imbue things with a self and attach to those things which will someday dissolve, causing suffering -- it is craving that is the source of suffering, and it is the extinction of craving that is Nirvana. Parinirvana is not a nihilistic oblivion. Please refer to this essay of mine.

  209. The Big Crunch? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can buy one of those down the street at KFC. NASA must really be behind the times if the Colonel figured this out years ago.

  210. That's the scariest part... by chriso11 · · Score: 1

    The Catholic Church is actually one of the MOST accepting of science! Amazing! I guess most of the other religions haven't burned enough heretics yet...

    --
    No, I don't trust in god. He'll have to pay up front, like everybody else.
  211. Re: life will be wiped out in a "big crunch" ... by hany · · Score: 1
    The announcement will effectively demolish the theory that life will be wiped out in a "big crunch" when the universe collapses, and should end decades of academic dispute.

    ... starting a new dispute about when will be energy spread too smoothly over universe to make life unable to retrieve enought of it to be able to live.

    I.e. when will entropy kill energy sources?

    (but beware: I'm not physicists! maybe life is eternal, maybe souls goes to another dimension, ...)

    --
    hany
  212. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by kinnell · · Score: 1
    I don't know of anything in traditional philosophies or religions that really corresponds to the heat death of the universe.

    Apparently there is a norse myth that predicts "Fimbulwinter" - an everlasting winter at the end of the world. But then I read this in a 2000AD comic strip, so I can't guarantee its validity ;-)

    --
    If I seem short sighted, it is because I stand on the shoulders of midgets
  213. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Are you talking about how there is no global energy conservation due to time assymetry and Noether's theorem?

    conservation of energy is related to invariance under translation (t -> t+dt) not inversion (t -> -t) of time - time assymetry relates to inversion.
    Nice try tho'

  214. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is that observed already? last time i heard there were only attempts and not enough data by far :)
    although in theory it should exist due to CPT being a 'good' symmetry and CP not being one ...

  215. Meanwhile, in other news... by jim3e8 · · Score: 1

    America: Evidence Favors Infinitely Expanding Waistlines

  216. Oh few by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was worried their for a moment, and though I'd live for ever now it turns out in 3 trillion years were all gona die.

    "It's like I always said: we're all gona die."
    -Rat Trap: Beast wars.

  217. entropy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well, entropy increases right?
    surely this is the only possibility.
    but then again, the multiple universe theory can crush ours.

  218. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by gomiam · · Score: 1

    Hey, you are right. Inflation assumes there was not even air there at the beginning, doesn't it? :-)

  219. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I don't know of anything in traditional philosophies or religions that really corresponds to the heat death of the universe.

    Oh, I don't know - Sunday School always seemed pretty boring to me.

  220. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by gomiam · · Score: 1
    Not quite. A gambler will usually end up broke, as soon he hits a long enough bad spell to spend all his money. But the reverse can happen too, and then it would be the house being broke.

    Of course, I wouldn't bet (pun intended) on the gambler's chances of winning in the end.

  221. Re:To hell with the 'Standard Model' by battjt · · Score: 1

    Great. Work out the details.

    I have a much better (though terrible, but better) understanding of the popular models of the universe after trying to work out the details to my own model (similar to yours).

    They are all just models. Reread the first chapter to Brief History of Time.

    Joe

    --
    Joe Batt Solid Design
  222. Anti-grav by Coppit · · Score: 1

    Something that counteracts gravity... Gimme my anti-grav boots!

  223. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by marko123 · · Score: 1

    It was meant to be a flip comment, but:
    If the house takes 10%, and the games are true games of chance, the player will approach a 10% loss of everything bet over a long enough time. Yet to meet a gambler who stopped because they won too much :)

    --
    http://pcblues.com - Digits and Wood
  224. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by mentalist23 · · Score: 1
    I would have thought a chemistry major would have to understand the difference between energy and work, in thermodynamic terms...

    I thought iron - not lead - was the point of inflexion for fission / fusion?

    And presumably, now that we are given to understand there will NOT be a Big Crunch, I would expect the final near-steady-state will include a broad mix of all forms of energy, including various elements, photons, leptons, yada yada... and not that everything will turn to lead.

    --
    Unix does not prevent you from doing stupid things; that would also prevent you from doing clever things.
  225. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by mentalist23 · · Score: 1
    "Once the universe is uniform, both time and space becomes meaningless, just as they do after a big crunch." True, I suppose...

    Two of the three "arrows of time" no longer function.

    • Entropic arrow: No significant entropic differences in the end-state - that's what "heat death" means!
    • Psychological arrow: No intelligences. See above.
    • Cosmological arrow: Guess this one keeps ticking.
    --
    Unix does not prevent you from doing stupid things; that would also prevent you from doing clever things.
  226. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it is evenly sperad then that means perfect order but entropy as I understand is about perfect disorder. So by law of entropy heat gradients will exists any way.

  227. Universe - Goth Paradise by Uninvited+Guest · · Score: 1
    What will remain is a universe full of black holes, which after trillions of years will explode to leave nothing but dark energy.
    So, the universe will turn into one big paradise for goths?
    --
    Sometimes I worry that I'll develop Alzheimer's disease, but no one will notice.
  228. What about the flat earth theory by kperrier · · Score: 1

    At one time, that majority of scientists believed that the earth was flat we well.

    It would not be the first time scientists were wrong.

    Kent

  229. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by pomakis · · Score: 1
    A completely separate though: given that will soon be able to make computers which accurately simulate reality (think Matrix), and everyone has one of those computers and can run a Matrix themselves, so there are 6 billion Matrices running, each of them containing "us"...

    What are the chances that we're existing in the original?

    Something similar to this was discussed in the book Mind Children by Hans Moravec (1988, ISBN 0-674-57618-7). However, the biggest flaw in your argument is the statement "given that will soon be able to make computers which accurately simulate reality...". This is far from given!

  230. All right! Flying cars at last! by payndz · · Score: 1

    If this 'dark energy' is acting *against* gravity, then can we call it *anti*gravity? If so, I'd like to be first in line to put a deposit down on a flying car...

    --
    You must think in Russian.
  231. again??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow...didn't they announce this same thing about the space shuttle last week??

    (sorry...)

  232. spaceship by Lt+Razak · · Score: 1

    Couldn't we just get in a spaceship and shoot away from the Big Crunch?

  233. Re:To hell with the 'Standard Model' by lugonn · · Score: 1
    I read the first couple chapters of the Elegant Universe and now I like to post buzzwords to piss off the heads. I'm sure in like ten years I might learn enough to make some calculations, but I'm still a youngin.

    It didn't take me to long to realise the point the author was trying to make though. That the universe is radically different than what the Standard Model suggests. Most people who've studied that model their whole life don't want to abandon it, because it appears to work at macroscopic levels, were electromagnetic forces and gravity are balanced (sort of). But at the particle level, gravity doesn't seem to really exist, its an effect. I may be full of shit, but it seems pretty basic to assume we are as stalled with Special Relativity as we used to be with Newtonian Physics. Time and Gravity aren't understood at a fundamental level. It requires thinking about them differently.

  234. Re:To hell with the 'Standard Model' by lugonn · · Score: 1
    Ah, the enigma of the candy sprinkle defies mankinds observations of himself.

    And let's face it, the pink frosting makes it easier to swallow.

  235. I thought it was more like a plate by Lord_Of_The_Beer · · Score: 1

    With raised edges so the water doesn't run off the side.....

    --
    D.A.K.D.A.E.---- Deny all Knowledge, Destroy All Evidence
  236. Re:To hell with the 'Standard Model' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the universe is radically different than what the Standard Model suggests. Most people who've studied that model their whole life don't want to abandon it,


    Hardly. Most high-energy physicists are bored with the Standard Model. Very little new fundamental physics has been discovered since its invention, other than neutrino mass.


    because it appears to work at macroscopic levels,


    Also microscopic levels.


    were electromagnetic forces and gravity are balanced (sort of)

    Not really.
  237. Oh, great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...then no matter what you do, it will end up as a mess of cold virtual particles in a few googleplex years. Why bother?

  238. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it's really evenly spread, absolutely everywhere, perfect order becomes the same thing as perfect disorder. It becomes impossible to even measure because there's no reference to compare to. Billions of light years may as well be no distance at all. So it's the same as if everything in the universe just fell back together, cyclic.

    It's the ultimate "nothing to see here, move along", only there's no Here to move along from or There to move to. ;)

  239. Re:To hell with the 'Standard Model' by lugonn · · Score: 1
    Most high-energy physicists are bored with the Standard Model.

    Then why don't they work on m-theory?

    were electromagnetic forces and gravity are balanced (sort of)

    Not really.

    By that I ment that at macroscopic levels (planets, humans, cars) gravity can act on electromagnetic forces(i.e. planets revolve around star), they seem to effect one another. At a particle level gravity has no effect whatsoever, they don't effect eachother with competing/balancing forces. See what I meant?

  240. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not observed yet, alas :-( ... it would make things so much prettier.

  241. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Ame-Tsuchi · · Score: 1

    I think that Buddhist Nirvana sort of does; entities that become enlightened are never returned to the wheel of life, so there's a constant drain of energy "lost" by the world to nothingness.

    What energy is lost? Are you referring to some sort of energy embodied in a soul? There is no persistent self, ego, or soul. Upon death the body, and thus mind, are dissolved. The matter comprising a person does not vanish anywhere. Consciousness is dissipated upon the cessation of stimuli, for such is how it arises.

    Please refer to the following:

    The Gospel of Buddha, by Paul Carus -- specifically "The Bodhisattva's Search"

    What the Buddha Taught, by Walpola Rahula -- the earlier chapters; unfortunately, as I am currently at work, I cannot reference them.

    The peace of Nirvana always seemed something like a perfectly uniform universe to me.

    A key point regarding the conception of Nirvana lies in the following statement by the Buddhist logician Nagarjuna:

    "There is nothing whatever which differentiates the existence-in-flux (samsara) from nirvana;
    And there is nothing whatever which differentiates nirvana from existence-in-flux."
    --Nagarjuna, "Fundamental of the Middle Way" (25.19)

    Nagarjuna espouses the idea of sunyata, or emptiness. For a further explanation of sunyata, please consult an essay that I have written:
    Emptiness, Nihilism, and the Middle Way. While this essay deals with sunyata in a different context, I believe that it comprises an adaquete introduction towards the concept. (I am not a monk, but at the very least my professor had no qualms with it)

  242. Check this out by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 1

    I posted a link to this story earlier in the day in my journal. Interestingly enough, it is titled "The New Convergence".

    --
    Forget the whales - save the babies.
  243. Great... by sean23007 · · Score: 1

    So let me get this straight: instead of the universe collapsing and destroying everything in it, it will eventually expand far enough that it will require so much energy that all the stars will turn into black holes and everything will explode? Can't we pretty much agree that the universe will end in several billion years, regardless of whether it will implode or explode?

    --

    Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
  244. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Time flies like an arrow?

    (Fruit flies like a banana)

  245. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not Buddhist (or anythingist), but I've been interested in a Buddhist refutation of nihilism like this one for some time. Thanks very much, this will be an interesting read.

  246. never fear, the PHARAOS PROJECT WILL SAVE US... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't anyone remember? Wasn't it in 1979 that the Doctor (Doctor Who) saved our universe by redirecting the energy from E-Space into our universe via the Pharaos Project after the Master wiped out Logopolis? Geez....such a waste of time to pontificate on a problem already solved...

  247. Re:To hell with the 'Standard Model' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most high-energy physicists are bored with the Standard Model.


    Then why don't they work on m-theory?



    Many of them do. I think that something like a third of all high-energy theorists in the U.S. are string theorists. On the other hand, many high-energy theorists are not comfortable with all the speculative assumptions that string theory makes, and are interested in more conservative extrapolations of the Standard Model. Then, there are the many theorists who realize that there is still a lot to be understood about the Standard Model, even though it isn't exciting, because after all it's still the best theory we have at the moment.


    were electromagnetic forces and gravity are balanced (sort of)


    Not really.


    By that I ment that at macroscopic levels (planets, humans, cars) gravity can act on electromagnetic forces(i.e. planets revolve around star), they seem to effect one another. At a particle level gravity has no effect whatsoever, they don't effect eachother with competing/balancing forces. See what I meant?


    Gravity does have an effect, it's just weak. But a planet and a particle both move in the same gravitational field. Anyway, I still don't know what you mean by suggesting that electromagnetic and gravitational forces can be "sort of" balanced.
  248. Re:Whew! That's a relief! by Wolfrider · · Score: 1

    >> It is quite possible that what you're suggesting exceeds the limits of my understanding of physics. ;)

    "You and everybody else..." -- "Oscar", 1991

    ( http://us.imdb.com/Title?0102603 )

    --
    .
    == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
  249. TOE by Kevin_Cedrone · · Score: 1

    A so called theory of everything has not yet been created, and leading attempts to do so (through the use of superstring theory, m-theory and the like) have been largely unsuccessful. Explaining/predicting what happens/will happen is a great deal easier than explaining why it will happen.

    Additionally, it is wholly possible that a fifth fundamental force exists, but the universe isn't big enough (strange notion) for it to be effective. I will attempt to explain this by analogy. On the subatomic scale, gravity does almost nothing (it is by far the weakest of the four fundamental forces) but on the macroscale that we are all familiar with, it plays a dominant role.

    Consider that the static electricity of a comb can lift a piece of paper on your desk, paper being held in place by the six sextillion ton Earth.

    I just think that the judgement that gravity may overcome the expansion of the universe is a bit premature, since before that happens (and perhaps as a catalyst to the heat-death of the universe) a fifth fundamental force (one which is repulsive at very large distances, but non-existent at small distances) may make itself visible.

    I like the idea that the universe will collapse. It gives the universe a cyclical quality, and plays well with certain iterations of string theory (where the radius of a string, and its properties are identical to a string whose radius is the reciprocle)

    In either case, I am not sufficiently familiar with the mathematics or the reasoning behind the conclusions to state anything with certainty... I don't really plan on being around when this type of thing will become important, how about you?

  250. AOL discs by GQuon · · Score: 1

    You have obviously forgotten that the AOL Disc Death of the Universe will occur before that. Because of the accumulation of AOL discs, Earth will become a black hole, and suck in the entire Universe into a big crunch!

    --
    Irene KHAAAAAAN!
    1. Re:AOL discs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because of the accumulation of AOL discs, Earth will become a black hole, and suck in the entire Universe into a big crunch!

      Suck? It has to chew for the crunch to occur. If it sucks, it has to be called "the Big Slurp".

  251. New theory of fuzz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a few very fuzzy thoughts about all this.

    If the universe expands to the point of zero density, zero temperature then wouldn't it then mesh into that which is NOT the universe and mesh with that which existed before our universe that which is beyond the boundaries. And if that is the case then what happens when all the mass that was in the universe is placed into a non-universal plane, what does it fall? Or spark some form of recreation.

    Also on the thought of the 'big crunch' theory; if the universal falls back onto its self with all the original atoms, wouldn't they under infinite density organize themselves into the same order as they previously had and if this is so then on the next 'big bang' wouldn't all matter be doomed to end up in the exact same place, hence have this discussion again, and again...

  252. Re:To hell with the 'Standard Model' by lugonn · · Score: 1

    I don't mean balanced as in canceling eachother out. I mean that they compliment eachother at big scales, but at smaller scales electromagnetic force is like 1000 times stronger. It was a really bad analogy.

  253. Re:Heat Death... unless - funny? by Tenebrious1 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it's one of my favorite short stories- I've always wondered if Asimov wrote it front to back, and came up with fantastic ending, or if he started with the ending and wrote up to it.

    That and "Feeling of Power", where they 'rediscover' how to do math. Love those two. Well, ok, most of his short stories are good... but those two stick out in my mind.

    --
    -- If god wanted me to have a sig, he'd have given me a sense of humor.