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Quantum Equation Suggests Universe Had No Beginning

cyberspittle writes: The universe may have existed forever, according to a new model that applies quantum correction terms to complement Einstein's theory of general relativity. The model may also account for dark matter and dark energy, resolving multiple problems at once. "In addition to not predicting a Big Bang singularity, the new model does not predict a "big crunch" singularity, either. In general relativity, one possible fate of the universe is that it starts to shrink until it collapses in on itself in a big crunch and becomes an infinitely dense point once again. ... In cosmological terms, the scientists explain that the quantum corrections can be thought of as a cosmological constant term (without the need for dark energy) and a radiation term. These terms keep the universe at a finite size, and therefore give it an infinite age. The terms also make predictions that agree closely with current observations of the cosmological constant and density of the universe."

288 comments

  1. Can't disprove Hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Science can't disprove that the Universe already is Hell. Enjoy suffering for all Eternity!

    1. Re:Can't disprove Hell by Tablizer · · Score: 5, Funny

      Comcast Theory

    2. Re:Can't disprove Hell by siddesu · · Score: 1

      Let's start with a good definition. What is 'Hell'? Please be specific.

    3. Re:Can't disprove Hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eternal suffering, of course. Enjoy Hell!

    4. Re:Can't disprove Hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's start with a good definition. What is 'Hell'? Please be specific.

      A small village in Norway.

    5. Re:Can't disprove Hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    6. Re:Can't disprove Hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      > Let's start with a good definition. What is 'Hell'? Please be specific.

      Hell is other people.
            -- Sartre

    7. Re:Can't disprove Hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      A few billion years ago we realized,
      "what if we took species from all different
      planets in the universe, and put them
      together, on the same planet?" Great
      TV, right? Asians, bears, ducks, Jews,
      deer and Hispanics, all trying to live
      side by side on one planet! It's great!
      Well, you don't think the whole universe
      works the way Earth does, do you? No!
      One species, one planet! There's a planet
      of deer, a planet of Asians, and so
      on! We put them all together on Earth
      and the whole universe tunes in to watch
      the fun!

    8. Re:Can't disprove Hell by siddesu · · Score: 1

      There are things outside of this Hell, hence Hell isn't the Universe. Next.

    9. Re:Can't disprove Hell by siddesu · · Score: 1

      Most of the Universe has no people, hence Universe isn't Hell.

    10. Re:Can't disprove Hell by slimshady76 · · Score: 1

      Back to the Sartre reference a few comments above yours ;-).

    11. Re:Can't disprove Hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell is like an online bible written in a language nobody speaks anymore. Anyone is free to edit the articles, wikipedia style and veracity is determined by a slashdot like moderation system.
      The people with lower UID's remember when it explained the universe perfectly. Then some shithead decided to do a beta version, with "deals".
      What started out as a simple story, recitable by children and passed down through countless generation (unless you're a Jew - they insist the generations are accounted for), now takes at least 16 years of intense training, and heaps of mathematical calculations based on false articles of faith, like infinity. The popular version nowdays suggests what you think is real is not real. Proponents of this theory have many different ideas of what hell will be like when they get there.

    12. Re:Can't disprove Hell by narcc · · Score: 1

      Basic logic fail!

    13. Re:Can't disprove Hell by narcc · · Score: 1

      Are you a JRef regular? You usually only get this kind of silliness there.

      In reply to "hell is other people" you say "Most of the Universe has no people, hence Universe isn't Hell." That doesn't make any sense.

      Let's give you a hand. If we accept that "hell is other people" then we need to assert that "the universe isn't other people" to conclude "the universe isn't hell". If you instead assert "Most of the Universe has no people" then all that follows is "Most of the universe has no hell".

      Now go and sin no more.

    14. Re:Can't disprove Hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the universe might be mostly empty, but Hell might well be just one other person, if it's just you and him in the capsule.

    15. Re:Can't disprove Hell by Evtim · · Score: 1

      Hell is other people. Seriously....

    16. Re:Can't disprove Hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, failed to logic understand you have.

  2. The whole idea is crazy by Zoolander · · Score: 1

    I don't get it.

    --
    Meep.
    1. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right! The simpler explanation is correct: God did it.

    2. Re: The whole idea is crazy by Zoolander · · Score: 1

      Self-replyer here: can confirm.

      --
      Meep.
    3. Re:The whole idea is crazy by ITRambo · · Score: 1

      It's just a hypothesis. To "get it", consider the universe as being infinite in all directions. Just don't think about it too long.

    4. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's quantum physics.. what do you expect?

    5. Re:The whole idea is crazy by SternisheFan · · Score: 1

      You know, what I've often asked myself is, "What was there before the Big Bang?"

    6. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a cosmos

    7. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      being infinite in one direction is enough to scramble my brains

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    8. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The question is meaningless, concept of big bang does not include a "before". Mind you, nobody can actually see beyond cosmic background radiation, big bang is just the best performing model we have, various quantum gravity approaches might do away with singularities altogether drastically altering concepts like black holes and big bang. But we don't have any quantum gravity theories, none that are really fully formulated and functional at least, best we have is general relativity. And GR results in singularities like big bang and black holes. It might be how the universe actually is or it might be a fault in GR, but until we have an alternate theory that we can test and compare, GR is the best we have.

    9. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Bob_Who · · Score: 1

      You know, what I've often asked myself is, "What was there before the Big Bang?"

      Probably a big: "I love you baby... really I do..."

      Some things never change...

    10. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Bob_Who · · Score: 1

      being infinite in one direction is enough to scramble my brains

      Right, We use the other infinite directions for two slices of bacon and toast.

    11. Re:The whole idea is crazy by quenda · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You know, what I've often asked myself is, "What was there before the Big Bang?"

      Thats a bit like asking what is south of the south pole.

    12. Re:The whole idea is crazy by anchovy_chekov · · Score: 4, Funny

      Two experimentally physicists, with one shouting: "Oh God, shut if off! Shut it off!"

      But seriously, as AC has posted, the question is meaningless if time "started" at the point of the Big Bang. Hard to get your head around maybe. I know my mother has problems with it, but she also poses strange questions like "why aren't apes having human babies now." It's like a hundred years of science has just slipped past her.

    13. Re:The whole idea is crazy by anchovy_chekov · · Score: 1

      Two experimental physicists, with one shouting: "Oh God, shut if off! Shut it off!"

      gah! typo. Who looks silly now?

    14. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Bob_Who · · Score: 1

      It's quantum physics.. what do you expect?

      Trick answer.

      Very funny.

      ah ah ah
      ha ha ha

      Question tricks.

    15. Re:The whole idea is crazy by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      "What was there before the Big Bang?"

      There was a Big Kaboom.

      As in, "Where's the kaboom? There was supposed to be an earth-shattering kaboom!"

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    16. Re:The whole idea is crazy by f3rret · · Score: 1

      You know, what I've often asked myself is, "What was there before the Big Bang?"

      The question does not make any sense, I mean from a purely linguistic point of view it does, but the question itself does not make sense to ask.
      Anything we know, have known and are able to know takes place after the big bang, thus asking what came before it is a question we cannot really answer.

      --
      Admit nothing. Deny Everything. Make Counter-accusations.
    17. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol

    18. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Zorpheus · · Score: 2

      Anything we know, have known and are able to know takes place after the big bang, thus asking what came before it is a question we cannot really answer.

      But there could have been something, right? What was there is just more of a philosophical than a scientific question.

    19. Re:The whole idea is crazy by inasity_rules · · Score: 1

      Well, if there was no time 'before' the big bang, what does 'before' mean?

      --
      I have determined that my sig is indeterminate.
    20. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Livius · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Thats a bit like asking what is south of the south pole.

      Maybe. But the current model could be wrong.

    21. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because we can't answer a question, even in theory, does not make the question meaningless. Our current interpretation of the evidence strongly suggests that the universe is not cyclical, but there could theoretically be an endless series of Big Bang, expansion, contraction, Big Crunch, Big Bang, ... If that's were the case, there would certainly be something "before" the Big Bang, even though the Big Crunch/Big Bang would destroy absolutely all evidence about its nature and we could never know any details about it.

    22. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Zorpheus · · Score: 1

      But how did this agglomeration of energy / mass form? What started time?
      The big bang model is an interpolation backwards in time from our current world. It shows how things must have been, but at the singularity it stops making sense. I think this interpolation is missing something important, something that we don't know about yet.

    23. Re:The whole idea is crazy by inasity_rules · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Certainly I agree with you, there is a lot we don't know. The trouble is, at the moment, in order to speculate on this, we are leaving science and entering philosophy. Science does not have an answer for us here, and maybe never will. We have some math, but nothing that really means anything to us.

      I would say that these questions cannot be objectively answered - there is no way to measure what happened 'before' since there is no frame of reference that would be meaningful to us and allow us to understand what 'happens' outside our little bubble of physics and space/time. How do we measure outside of space and time? What are we measuring for that matter? What does 'before', or 'cause' or 'effect' mean in such a reality?

      As a self professed religious person, I believe there are subjective and unprovable answers. Others disagree and are happier with the questions. In either case it seems wise to not give up on looking.

      --
      I have determined that my sig is indeterminate.
    24. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed it could be wrong.

      This is why scientists are still looking, unlike the religionists who believe they have the answer, the non-answer "God". Which really isn't an answer but merely an excuse not to look.

      yes, the current model could be wrong.

      But "God" isn't any form of answer that can be right. ALL formulations of god create more questions (unless you stop asking) and do not fit reality as we CAN verify it.Therefore God is wrong as an answer.

      Examples: Zeus. Supposed to live on Mt Olympus. Reality: No gods on the top of Mt Olympus.
      YHWH. Created everything but got the dates wrong and had two different and incompatible ways of doing it,and didn't know it created the MAMMAL "bat" and said it was a bird. We can verify bats are not birds, so wrong.

      etc.

    25. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, follow your compass needle and start digging!

    26. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Just because we can't answer a question, even in theory, does not make the question meaningless."

      Yes it does.

      Here's an example using reality we can verify yet giving a question that is meaningless:

      What's the difference between a duck's legs?

      It's a joke for a reason: the question is meaningless.

      Here's a science question whose answer is, as far as anyone is concerned is no answer at all (the answer being "Maybe"):

      Is the solar system stable?

      The answer led to chaos theory where we learned that there is a DIFFERENT question we CAN answer: "How predictable is the future of the solar system (or indeed any chaotic system)?".

      Similarly with "What happened before the big bang?". You can ask a DIFFERENT question, but unless you define "before" differently from anyone else's conception of its definition, it is meaningless.

      E.g. What can have brought about the big bang?

      Doesn't require a "before" definition.

      May be answerable.

      May even be testable. E.g. if it's a collision between branes, then we may see leaking neutrons between our brane and the nearest one. If it's cyclic bang/crunch, then we ought to see some remnant from the earlier universe in the structure on large scales of this universe. And so on.

      Just because you can put a question mark after the sentence doesn't make it a question.

    27. Re:The whole idea is crazy by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      It's assumed there is a singularity at the core of every black hole, and because cosmic censorship won't allow us to observe it, it will probably always remain an assumption based on what the math says. I've heard it said that our our universe is definitely not the inside of a black hole but I have never heard the reasoning for that claim beyond the "maths says it's a singularity". As with a black hole, light cannot escape our visible universe and the inflationary period embedded in the BBT could be interpreted as the initial collapse into a black hole, ie: I like to speculate that it's black holes all the way down (and up, sideways, etc). Matter, space-time, and energy, are at some level different forms of the same thing, squeeze matter hard and it turns to energy, maybe if we squeeze it even harder (as in a black hole) it turns into space-time? As I say, it's speculation and there may be other reasons why a singularity is the default assumption.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    28. Re:The whole idea is crazy by BlackPignouf · · Score: 1

      why aren't apes having human babies now

      That's actually a funny/insightful question :D

    29. Re:The whole idea is crazy by TapeCutter · · Score: 2

      Philosophically we are faced with two explanations, neither of which we can comprehend in a physical sense, ie: infinity or nothing. Personally I find nothing a lot harder to imagine than infinity, even though I clearly did not exist before I was born.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    30. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Digging down from the South pole isn't going south. it's going north,

    31. Re:The whole idea is crazy by RicardoGCE · · Score: 1

      The question isn't meaningless, even if it restricts us to pure speculation.

    32. Re:The whole idea is crazy by jpapon · · Score: 1

      Actually digging down from anywhere is moving orthogonal to the N/S/E/W plane, so it's zero motion, neither north nor south.

      --
      -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
    33. Re:The whole idea is crazy by eeyore · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, but is it crazy enough to be true?

    34. Re:The whole idea is crazy by vbraga · · Score: 4, Informative

      The question is meaningless. In fact, it's meaningless from a physics point of view and also meaningless from a theological point of view. It was asked often and a good answer by Saint Augustine ("What God did before the creating of the Universe?") was (roughly) "The question is meaningless since time is a attribute of the universe and God exists outside of it." The equivalent answer applies to the Big Bang.

      --
      English is not my first language. Corrections and suggestions are welcome.
    35. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Zorpheus · · Score: 1

      I've heard it said that our our universe is definitely not the inside of a black hole but I have never heard the reasoning for that claim beyond the "maths says it's a singularity". As with a black hole, light cannot escape our visible universe and the inflationary period embedded in the BBT could be interpreted as the initial collapse into a black hole, ie: I like to speculate that it's black holes all the way down (and up, sideways, etc).

      Damn, that is what I am also wondering about. Would be really nice to see a good explanation for that.
      I mean there must be some relation between the singularity that a black hole is and the singularity at the big bang. In one case the mass collapses and in the other one it inflates and forms a universe. But what is the difference, or isn't there any, and it is just looking at it from outside and from inside?
      Below the article here is a link to an article about a theory related to that.. The theory is that the universe is at the surface of a 4-dimensional black hole, which would explain these things. Though I still don't know why it isn't just a 3-dimensional black hole.

    36. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 4, Informative

      You know, what I've often asked myself is, "What was there before the Big Bang?"

      Nothing. As accepted, currently, time began with the Big Bang, so there was no before the Big Bang.

    37. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correct, but it's going toward the North Pole, therefore it could be claimed to be going northward. Definitely not South.

    38. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stuff inside the black hole is still falling INTO the black hole. And white holes are very small.

      It's the simplest explanation, but least accurate whilst still being correct. For more, you need to look at tensorial maths and the metric of spacetime. Which is much less available to ordinary sensibilities.

    39. Re:The whole idea is crazy by gstoddart · · Score: 1, Funny

      LOL ... "I can see paradise by the hydrogen glow" ... "Praying for the end of time, so I can end my time with you!!!"

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    40. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Before there was anything, there was nothing.

      Before God, there was nothing. Before the Big Bang, there was nothing.

      In nature, the only thing that is truly infinite is nothing; the nothingness that everything exists within.

      The Big Bang is only realistic if the Universe has a finite content. But that begs the question of what contains the Universe? God could, or multiple dimensions, or multiple Universes, but then the question becomes, "What contains that which contains God and the Universe and all these other Universes and dimensions?" It continues on, turtles all the way down, until you come to the only possible answer at the beginning of it all.

      The beginning of "everything", that which contains "everything", can only ever be "nothing".

    41. Re:The whole idea is crazy by meta-monkey · · Score: 2

      No, definitely meaningless. Time itself began with the Big Bang. The instant of the Big Bang is t=0. There is no t = -1. If there could be, then there would be time, which would pass from that point leading up to the moment of the Big Bang. But time began with the Big Bang.

      But, our language and consciousness are so dependent on the concept of time that we lack the language to describe a state of being without it. Which is why we erroneously say things like "before the Big Bang," but it's a meaningless statement, because "before" implies an ordering of time, and time only began with the Big Bang. I had to be careful there to not say "there was no time before the Big Bang," because "was" also implies time. That time ticked along counting down (or up) to the Big Bang, then everything blew up. See there? I just gave a time-ordered sequence of events. But time-ordered sequences of events are only possible after t=0.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    42. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well no. It's more like saying, "I've got a glass full of water, and I know the water came from the tap, but where'd the glass come from, or the tap for that matter?"

    43. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Ihlosi · · Score: 2
      But, our language and consciousness are so dependent on the concept of time that we lack the language to describe a state of being without it.

      Photon. Time is nonexistent.

      Or $TIMELESS_DEITY. Time exists, but has about as much meaning as the time index of a video. It makes more sense to watch everything in proper order, but you're free to watch the thing in reverse if you like.

      But time-ordered sequences of events are only possible after t=0.

      Imagine you're a CPU and your perception of time is in clock cycles. Would you be able to give an ordered sequence of events of all the things that happen before your clock generator starts, e.g. voltage ramp-ups, etc?

    44. Re:The whole idea is crazy by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      The problem is our consciousness and language are so dependent on the concept of time that we lack the language, and therefore ability to conceive of a state of being without time.

      You said "could have been." The GP said "what came before it." "Been" and "before" imply a time-ordered sequence of events, but these are only possible from time t=0 on. There is no time t=-1, "before" the Big Bang, because that necessarily means a clock was ticking down to (or up to) the big kaboom. But clocks only tick from t=0 on.

      So "before the big bang" is a meaningless question. Our brains and language lack the ability to describe a state of being without time. Perhaps it makes sense to the 12th dimensional hyperbeing who coded the kiddie's game that is our universe, and we'll keep plugging away at the questions of existence, but for now...the questions that you're asking aren't meaningful questions. It's like asking what the color blue smells like.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    45. Re:The whole idea is crazy by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      It's meaningless. Time is part of space-time (unsurprisingly given the name). Space-time came into existence via the Big Bang (let's just pretend our theories are right for the moment, as wrong as that obviously is). Before is a reference to time. There is no time without space-time and thus there is no "before the Big Bang".

      It's like asking "what is above the Universe" - which is also meaningless since above (and let's again pretend and say we a have a frame of reference here) is a reference to space. There is no space outside the Universe and hence no "above".

      Now you might want to argue that maybe there is a multiverse and other universes with which have space and time outside of our one. But you can't use "before" across such times, just like you can't use "above" across such spaces.

    46. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      what do you mean black people aren't human?
      #RacismIsFunny

    47. Re:The whole idea is crazy by neoritter · · Score: 3, Informative

      You know a "religionist" came up with the Big Bang Theory right?

    48. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Greyfox · · Score: 1

      So you're saying we need to mount an expedition to the North Pole? Fine, I'll get the dogs...

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    49. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think about time, it really isn't anything more than a concept, like distance. Oh, yes, there is physical space separating things, but distance itself is just a reference to give meaning to the size of that space. Time gives you reference between events such as the difference between reading this now and reading this now. What changed between the first now and the second now?

      The answer to that is "absolutely everything in the entire Universe from end to end". An infinity of growth and decay occurred in that period of a second or less (or more for a slow reader).

      This is really why time travel will always be impossible. Because going back in time means reversing the growth and decay of absolutely everything in the entire Universe from end to end, and even that won't change the fact that all of that growth and decay already happened before. You just made it happen again. Using distance as an example, if you step forward 1 meter you have, of course, traveled 1 meter. If you then step backward 1 meter to the position you were in before, you didn't travel back in space to 0 meters; you just have now traveled 2 meters. You did not travel back in space at all, really. Instead you simply traveled further in a different direction.

      Even local time travel, the idea of sending just a message back in time, requires the entire Universe to move back to the position and state it was in at the time the message is supposed to arrive at. Supposing that local time travel was actually possible, if you just look at how quickly the Earth moves through space, sending a message back even one minute without reversing the position and state of everything will cause that message to appear in empty space back where Earth used to be a minute ago.

    50. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Replace "the Big Bang" with "God", and then maybe you'll understand the question.

    51. Re:The whole idea is crazy by neoritter · · Score: 1

      "What's the difference between a duck's legs?"
      I fail to see how that is a meaningless question. Maybe the duck is injured with one leg broken. So the difference is that one leg is functional while the other is not.

      The question is only meaningless without context. The same as the question by the OP. But we have context for the question, and in this context the question is not meaningless. Maybe you view the answer as pointless, but the question is not meaningless.

    52. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is south of the south pole? : when looking from the equator - the eternity of space below the planet.

      So what was there before the big bang? : when looking from the present - an eternity devoid of space and matter.

      There is an answer to that particular question. The real question is : In an eternal empty void where does a universe sparking dot of substance come from?

      Honestly the longer I live I think the models of the universes age are being distorted as if space is acting like a lens and the redshift observation which is heavily the basis for all of the Big Bang extrapolation is flawed by some as yet unknown factor. Think of how small our sample size is relative to the big picture of time and the universe - just because the faint light of distance objects turns red similar to the doppler effect does not require that that is the only explanation for the shift in wavelength, and if the doppler effect is not the cause how sane and stable the explanation for the universes' existence is compared to a magical dot of infinite density springing forth from an infinite void at a specific date a few billion years prior. CMBR is likely just even older light that that has been pumped out by stars for an eternity and appears like a soup because its spent so long traveling its been churned up losing all semblance of its origin, not from some spectacular event where all matter was born at the same time and that's why its uniform, its uniformity is from that it is likely the tail end of the lights life, you won't see light older because at that point it dissolves back into space (possibly through being scattered by other stronger light).

    53. Re:The whole idea is crazy by hey! · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, let's say the question is premature. Before you can ask it, you have to determine whether the question itself is based on false assumptions. This kind of question is tricky because questions you *can* ask meaningfully have the same syntax as questions which are meaningless.

      For example, you can ask "What is colder than 0 degrees C?", but you can't ask "What is colder than 0 degrees K?". One question is meaningful and the other is not.

      So asking "What happened before the Big Bang?", entails two assumptions, namely (1) the Big Bang happened and (2) the scientific consensus on the Big Bang is fundamentally flawed. If the scientific consensus is correct, then it's like asking, "What's colder than 0 degrees K?" or "What's north of the North Pole?"

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    54. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Teckla · · Score: 1

      To "get it", consider the universe as being infinite in all directions.

      There's nothing to think about. There's no such width, height, or depth as infinite. Infinite isn't a number.

      The universe isn't infinite. It's nonsensical.

    55. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Time itself is part of the universe, so asking what was "before" the creation of spacetime is a meaningless question.

    56. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Teckla · · Score: 1

      No, definitely meaningless. Time itself began with the Big Bang. The instant of the Big Bang is t=0. There is no t = -1.

      It's not meaningless.

      The time we experience may have started with the Big Bang, but there may be a lower level time component to the greater universe. For example, one theory is that two Branes colliding caused the Big Bang we know and love. In order for two Branes to collide, they must exist in their own time, lower level than our time.

    57. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Teckla · · Score: 1

      But seriously, as AC has posted, the question is meaningless if time "started" at the point of the Big Bang.

      That's a mighty big "if". I like watching all the armchair physicists around here assume they know the answer with a religious-like fervor.

      For all we know, the Big Bang had a cause. What caused it may exist in a "lower level" time that we don't knowingly experience. We might just experience our local time.

    58. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Livius · · Score: 1

      I've never heard a model of space-time geometry called 'god' before...

    59. Re:The whole idea is crazy by TheLink · · Score: 1

      If you want philosophical, it could be something we might never know for sure.

      For example, in theory we could create a simulation of a steady state universe with rules that we decide on. And inside that universe, by that universe's rules the "before" could have gone on for an infinity, and there's no way to know that wasn't the case.

      But by our universe's rules we could have started up that simulation 10 seconds ago and taken a week to design it. Or we could even have made copies of it and started up slightly different versions, or even have a few big bang versions. How old would these universes be? Billions of years old? 10 seconds? Depends on your perspective doesn't it?

      And how would those "inside" know what's going on for sure? Unless perhaps somehow told by those "outside".

      --
    60. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Thats a bit like asking what is south of the south pole.

      That just means you're thinking in too few dimensions. They're asking what's *above* the South pole, not what's South of it.

    61. Re:The whole idea is crazy by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      I can conceive of an experiment that would make -100K make sense.

      Suppose you had two one-kilogram lumps of copper. One is kept at room temperature (300K), the other goes into my superduperhyperfreezer. I take it out, and put the two lumps into a very well-insulated container, and wait for the temperatures to equalize, which they do at 100K. In that case, it would make sense to say I cooled my lump to -100K.

      There is speculation that we could find something like matter with negative mass, and we do need it for the Alcubierre warp drive.

      Similarly, we can speculate about what happened before the Big Bang. I don't understand general relativity enough to know what happens to world lines at the Big Bang, but again it's conceivable that we could contact some other intelligence in a parallel universe or something like that, and find that their universe is 20 billion years old, and that time seems to go at the same rate in our two universes. In that case, it would make sense to ask questions about what their universe was like 5 billion years before our Big Bang.

      I don't expect to see negative energy, mass, or corresponding time flows, but I can conceive of situations in which they would turn up, and if I can conceive of meaningful situations then asking questions about them is not meaningless.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    62. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All this hinges on your hyperfreezer being able to exist, and being able to cool something below absolute zero by an additional 100K?

    63. Re: The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well how about this, what if the big bang was not the beginning. What if the big bang was the first star, a superstar(made up of 80% or more of the observable universe) but because of its size did not live long enough to produce any heavy elements. Would the old universe be outside the one we live in?
      @timesuredoesfly

    64. Re:The whole idea is crazy by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      I mean... why is there even a concept of "something" and "nothing"? Why the duality? Why is there anything at all?

    65. Re: The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quantum gravity is a weak term. At the quantum lvl gravity is not worth mentioning, other real forces are much more at play. Gravity is a one way street. And quantum theory exposes wave patterns and they are not a one way street.

    66. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, what I've often asked myself is, "What was there before the Big Bang?"

      Thats a bit like asking what is south of the south pole.

      Well, I get your point but disagree. "South" and "North" are essentially conventions - nothing prevents us from defining the city of London as the new "global south point", with the new "north point" exactly on the other side of the planet, from where the question "What is south of the south pole" will have a very definite answer. The fact that the south pole and north pole coincide with the rotational point of the earth is simply a matter of convenience - it does not have to be that way.

      As for the Big Bang, it is not entirely clear whether the question of what came "before" the Big Bang is nonsensical. For one, it does not have to be a temporal question - you can rephrase it as "What caused the Big Bang?". It is also not entirely clear that time does not exist outside of the Big Bang - the physicist's definition of time as a dimension by which change in physical matter accrues is but an opinion - admittedly useful within the physical medium the physicist studies, but hardly the final say on the matter.

    67. Re:The whole idea is crazy by quenda · · Score: 1

      Just read that twice and shook my head.
        I suppose thats what I must sound like to a real physicist.

    68. Re:The whole idea is crazy by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      you need to look at tensorial maths and the metric of spacetime

      OP here, I have a math degree, I know what a tensor is and that's why I said "I have never heard the reasoning for that claim beyond the "maths says it's a singularity". Sure maths has a uncanny ability to describe the universe but at the end of the day you need observations to separate the various answers that come from maths.

      Maths told us that space and time are bendable, the universe is expanding, and the possible existence of black holes, none were fully accepted until their respective predictions were observed in nature. As a personal example, when I went to school in the 60's black holes were widely regarded as nothing more than a "mathematical curiosity".

      Stuff inside the black hole is still falling INTO the black hole.

      Again we haven't seen inside black hole, we just assume the math is describing reality and AFAIK it's still math that has to change if it doesn't agree with nature. What if the space inside the black hole expands, faster and faster, like we observe in our own black hole,,,err,,,universe. My speculation here is that the stuff that's falling in is converted to space-time and energy, what matter remains after falling in will never catch up with the stuff that fell in before it. The singularity never forms, the surface area of the BH is constant, it's volume is expanding indefinitely, everything is moving AWAY from everything else

      Having said that, I totally agree, maths degree or not, I don't have the skills to tackle those ideas with math, and at 55 I'm unlikely to "pick it up" either formally or informally.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    69. Re:The whole idea is crazy by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link, nice to know someone else has the same daydreams and questions. :)

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    70. Re:The whole idea is crazy by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      No. All of that hinges on my describing observational evidence for things we think (almost certainly correctly) impossible. My freezer doesn't exist, and I have every reason to think it impossible. If it did, we could make the observations I listed. That means that it is meaningful to ask about -100K, even if the answer is "that's impossible".

      Since I can describe observational evidence that we'd get if something existed, I claim that that thing is conceivable, and that questions about it are scientific and meaningful, if frivolous. The freezer doesn't exist, and I don't think it can exist. Magnetic monopoles may not exist (we sure haven't had any success in finding some), and it's possible they can't exist (any more than my freezer), but we know some of the properties they'd have if they existed. If we find physical laws that explain that monopoles don't exist, and indeed why they can't, does that make all the previous speculation about them meaningless?

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    71. Re:The whole idea is crazy by JimFive · · Score: 2

      Temperature is a measure of molecular motion. 0 K is the point at which molecular motion stops. So, while you can make comprehensible sentences around the idea of -100K you can't make meaningful sentences about a state in which there is less than 0 molecular motion. The only way that you can make sense of the sentence is by ignoring the meaning of terms within the sentence.
      --
      JimFive

      --
      Please stop using the word theory when you mean hypothesis.
    72. Re:The whole idea is crazy by UnresolvedExternal · · Score: 1

      The question is supposed to be: What is the difference between a duck?

      Answer: One of it's legs is both the same.

      It is also meant to be a joke; not a theory on the origins of the universe. It may say something about whether God is a duck or not but I guess that will always be an open question.

      Except for quacks.

    73. Re:The whole idea is crazy by beastofburdon · · Score: 1

      Which is why it should receive a lot more scrutiny than it does.

    74. Re:The whole idea is crazy by beastofburdon · · Score: 1

      Another possibility for redshift has already been found: http://vixra.org/pdf/1105.0010...

      There is also another possible source of the CBGR. Large electrical discharges give off the same radiation claimed to be the CBGR. You should look into the Electric Universe, it makes way more sense than our current model and actually has lab tests to support many of its claims. Some of their ideas are a bit out there, but most of them are not. https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    75. Re:The whole idea is crazy by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      "Why" implies pinpointing a cause, a cause implies a time reference. "Why" is therefore undefined outside time. The question therefore does not necessarily makes sense.

      Back to topic, I prefer the idea of an infinite in time universe. It does not exclude a god: Think f(x)=x for x in R. You have just defined a both ways infinite set of results and you know each f automatically since it's so easy to calculate. So, you, a mortal, made an abstraction who is infinite in two ways. A point in your universe can travel indefinitely yet the abstraction itself had an origin.
      In fact I was arguing these kind of things around here too, so I can't even be accused of readjusting in a "no true scotman" fashion.

      It's way better than the big bang, because the expansion of space itself, dark energy and dark matter are, until proven otherwise, copouts. Useful copouts maybe, but so were epicycles.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    76. Re:The whole idea is crazy by neoritter · · Score: 1

      It should receive the same level of scrutiny befitting any scientist. Georges LeMaitre had PhDs from Cambridge and MIT. Him being a Catholic priest (ie a "religionist") is only relevant because AC and apparently you, think that some how being religious and being a scientist are somehow mutually exclusive. Further what level of scrutiny is appropriate? Einstein was initially skeptical of his findings but was able to be convinced. Hubble came two years later and corroborated LeMaitre's findings (although at the time Hubble was credited with the BB theory). Is there some higher level of scrutiny required beyond what should be a community norm? If Einstein said the Earth was flat, would that require less scrutiny than if LeMaitre said it?

    77. Re:The whole idea is crazy by leonardluen · · Score: 1

      Imagine you're a CPU and your perception of time is in clock cycles. Would you be able to give an ordered sequence of events of all the things that happen before your clock generator starts, e.g. voltage ramp-ups, etc?

      That is a perfect example, and i think it illustrates a few things.

      For the CPU time started on the first tick of its clock, but the tick of that clock is still tied to a time dimension in its parent universe. the term "Before" still makes sense when describing the sequence of events as the power button is pressed and then the electrons race through the wires to cause that first tick of the clock. now the CPU may not have adequate terms to describe this or understand what a power button or electrons are, but it is readily apparent to us as outside observers.

      Being stuck inside the CPU would have a very difficult time figuring out the mechanisms that drive it. however some of our theories of quantum mechanics allow for higher dimensions and for structures to exist outside of our universe. And we even have experiments set up to look for evidence of some of these structures. such as polarization in the cosmic background radiation. if our universe isn't the outermost layer and is a brane in a higher dimensional universe, such as some versions of quantum mechanics suggest, then time may exist in some form outside of our universe. how this time works may not be entirely recognizable to us, but saying "before the big bang" could still have some meaning.

      maybe another example. if i travel to the south pole of the earth i can't go south any further. however i can still travel further away from the north pole by jumping. by jumping i may not be any further south, but i could be considered less north. so what is before the universe? i don't know, lets climb to the bottom and jump and see where we end up.

    78. Re:The whole idea is crazy by leonardluen · · Score: 1

      by standing at the south pole and jumping you would be "less north"..

    79. Re:The whole idea is crazy by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Temperature is a quantified way of expressing heat or cold, and we feel heat or cold in external objects by the feeling on our skin, which may either gain heat or lose heat. By that criterion, my example of -100K is meaningful. If it were possible to construct my freezer, we'd have something that absorbed heat as if it were -100K.

      By scientific investigation, we've determined that this appears to be molecular motion, which is nonexistent at 0K (if we could reach that; in fact, if we knew the momentum of each particle was zero, we'd have no idea where in the universe said particle was). We have no counterexample that shows that molecular motion isn't what we think of as heat, and we've been working at this for a long time, and have a coherent theory, so this is about as close to scientific fact as it gets.

      In my thought experiment, I did something to the copper so it could absorb more heat, presumably adding in some sort of motion-deadening property as yet unknown to physics. Extending the thought experiment, we find that it works just like we'd expect it to intuitively. What would you call something that behaves exactly as if it were cooled below absolute zero?

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    80. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Knowing what existed before the Big Bang is likely the only way to know *why* the Big Bang.

    81. Re:The whole idea is crazy by beastofburdon · · Score: 1

      The problem is that it receives next to no scrutiny at all. Even worse, any time anyone suggests that it may be flawed they are immediately attacked in the scientific circles. There will be articles condemning this one or "debunking" it within days.

      Also yes, I will always doubt the findings of a religious scientist if their discovery seems to mirror their religion like the theory of the big bang does.

    82. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Temperature is a measure of molecular motion.

      This definition, while functional for most things, is rather dated and over a hundred years out of date compared to a statistical mechanics definition of temperature as the inverse of the rate change of entropy with energy. The newer definition is a superset of the kinetic definition, but also applies to a large variety of additional systems, allowing thermodynamics to be applied to them to. And systems with a finite number of states can have negative temperature as a result in a situation where adding energy reduces entropy.

    83. Re:The whole idea is crazy by JimFive · · Score: 1

      Yes, you can make analogies and thought experiments that can give a contextual meaning to the phrase: "Act as if it were -100K". However, that doesn't make the question "How does matter behave at -100K?" a meaningful question, because -100K is not a meaningful symbol outside of a metaphorical context. Which brings us back to the original point that it is not meaningful to ask questions like "What happened before there was time?" You can ask "what was before the Big Bang?" only if you do not accept the idea that the space-time universe was created with the Big Bang, in which case you'll have to argue with the theoretical support for that idea.
      --
      JimFive

      --
      Please stop using the word theory when you mean hypothesis.
    84. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution. Animals are supposed to evolve to avoid extinction. Reality: Animals go extinct en masse.

    85. Re:The whole idea is crazy by neoritter · · Score: 1

      The Big Bang theory is a credible assumption at this point. It's been vetted and in fact part of it is a scientific law (Hubble's Law). If the assumption must be false to prove your new theory you must therefore prove the assumption false. You have this same issue with Einstein's General Relativity and the notion that nothing is faster than the speed of light. Some scientists and one of those super colliders thought they found a particle that had traveled faster than the speed of light. Scientific community got all surprised and after further scrutiny found that the measurement was erroneous or inaccurate.

      As for doubting religious scientists' theories, if you're doubting them because they happen to coincide with their religious belief, then I'm sorry you are wrong. It's not logically valid. If you doubt it because their data or calculations are sparse or inadequate then fine. But that applies to all scientists. A non-religious scientist can use crap data to seemingly prove their point as well, see the vaccines cause autism guy.

      Please excuse the accusation, but it seems to me, that getting all bent out of shape because the scientist was religious is at the very least showing serious bias on your part and potentially to some level bigotry.

    86. Re: The whole idea is crazy by davester666 · · Score: 1

      God: Wrong! [tips over desk with books]. Now, throw away those pages and start again!

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    87. Re:The whole idea is crazy by lucien86 · · Score: 1

      > The question is meaningless, concept of big bang does not include a "before".

      That is making the rather bold assumption that general relativity is correct. When you look as local spaces - at purely STL physics general relativity looks wonderful, but look into its FTL geometry though and the theory falls apart completely. The only theories that really work in the FTL are based on absolute frames - in most absolute frame models time itself doesn't exist except as a point and in that case time does exist before the big bang - but our universe doesn't..

      The irony is that looking back at general relativity it does kind of have a primitive absolute frame - the time dimension itself - though it predicts a fixed fate with a fixed past and future, and a universe that self contradicts and doesn't exist - from the FTL perspective it does also predict that time could exist before the big bang.

      --
      Below the speed of light Special Relativity is one of the most accurate theories in physics - above the speed of light..
    88. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What's north of the North Pole?"

      The sky is what is north of the north pole.
      Once you reach the north pole, the sky directly above it becomes the only true north.

    89. Re: The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -100K is reverse motion of the molecular movement and is experienced briefly during time travel in worm holes (if you are doing it right), but it certainly isn't survivable until you you get to -300K, when you complete your jump to the opposite side of the multiverse. -600K is precisely the same temperature as 300K and brings you back to your point of origin, from the backside of the worm hole. The problem is, all of your molecules are inverted and reassembled in the opposite fashion than what you started with.

    90. Re: The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is North of that?

    91. Re: The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The dates were created by men. We certainly don't have it exactly, precisely "right" and that's why we continue to make revisions over time and we will again.

      For example, this concept of man made or man affected climate change. Is man causing freezing, or is man causing heating of the planet? We've revised this theory more than once over the last 50 years. Or are we affecting the climate as much as that dead bug on my car windshield is affecting the direction and speed of my automobile traveling North on the Interstate at 72 MPH at a temperature of 300K and a wind speed of 76 MPH?

    92. Re: The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Humans will begin to have ape babies soon. Real soon.

    93. Re: The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think there is no reason to argue here. This is all caused by a difference in perceived public opinion and actual scientific process, methodology, and results. So, who is to blame here? Clearly, scientists should be more clear about what they are doing (and how they are doing it) to the general public. This whole problem is a result of the fact that scientists rely on news articles to convey their results. Their should be a disclaimer on each and every news article: This article may not accurately reflect the true or complete work of scientists, due to the complexity of the research. If you want to understand more, you will have to study the topic at a credible institution of higher learning.

    94. Re:The whole idea is crazy by mph_burb · · Score: 1

      For the question of speed of light comparison the difference between two velocities and time points such as in average acceleration can be faster than the constant c. http://www.science20.com/scien... This article may show why. However the problem of velocity may be looked at in different ways such as invoking independent time (correction). The relativistic time parameter of correction, different from 2L/v, can be time dependent and more near the the circumference question close to the describing the earth tc ~ (2pir)/v.

      --
      mph
    95. Re: The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question didn't refer to any one specific duck. In that case, I would say the answer is, in general, a reflection operation. That said, there are many examples of actually meaningless questions that are far better. Such as questions with undefined words, or questions that assume a logical contradiction. For example, I am an Ultrafinitist and I consider "infinity" to be an undefined and meaningless term. However, I still prefer this static universe model over the Big Bang model simply because it seems to explain more with less.

    96. Re:The whole idea is crazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All you are doing is asking how many angels can sit on the head of a pin.

  3. I guess we were wrong? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm deeply disturbed by this equation.

  4. Already some quantum corrections in models by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    quantum corrections can be thought of as a cosmological constant term (without the need for dark energy)

    Dark energy was already attributed to quantum corrections in most cosmological models, thought to be connected to a self-energy from fields in otherwise empty space.

  5. Allright... by davethomask · · Score: 1

    cool

  6. Attractive proposition by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Equations and theories that not only explain current observations but bundle up and deal with things our other theories say we should observe that we don't are attractive from a neatness standpoint. I'm skeptical when they make exotic and complex predictions which we haven't seen any evidence of yet, but when they tie up all the loose ends without creating more I usually take that as a sign there's something fundamentally right about that path. Only time and accumulated evidence will add certainty to it, but I like the ideas in this one.

    And as far as a universe with no beginning or end is concerned, what's the problem? I was dealing with infinite open shapes (lines, planes) in grade school, unending closed shapes are trivial (a circle, a sphere), and if you assume our universe is a 4-dimensional "slice" of an n-dimensional space it's not that hard to construct an arrangement where you can travel forever in any "direction" (since the time axis counts as a direction here) inside our universe without either encountering an edge or returning to your starting point. The math's brain-bending when you start, but it's like differential equations: migraine-inducing and you hate it with the burning fire of a thousand suns right up until they describe the General Method, at which point you blink and go "Oh. That's easy. Why didn't you mention this in the FIRST PLACE?!

    1. Re:Attractive proposition by steelfood · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And as far as a universe with no beginning or end is concerned, what's the problem?

      In a word: entropy.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    2. Re:Attractive proposition by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      I've always been inclined to dismiss the existence of infinities outside of mathematics, but it's starting to look like the universe might be infinite in extent, and probably is infinite in the forward direction of time, so I'm starting to entertain the possibilities.

      Though the idea of a universe infinite in extent arising from a point or a very small space is kind of hard to wrap your head around.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:Attractive proposition by thegarbz · · Score: 2

      And as far as a universe with no beginning or end is concerned, what's the problem?

      In a word: entropy.

      I'm sure there's a quantum correction for that.

    4. Re:Attractive proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Explaining (away) what we have already observed is fairly easy, ask any creationist. Theories have value on their ability to predict what we have not yet observed, then we can go and try to observe this new phenomena and if its there the theory is pretty good and if its not there we can conclude, nope this is not how reality actually is. Mind you every good theory is likely to open up lots of new questions, you could call it our expanding horizon of ignorance. Don't hold your breath for The Final Truth theory, its unlikely to ever happen.

    5. Re:Attractive proposition by anchovy_chekov · · Score: 0

      In a word: entropy.

      Good call! Don't see red shift explained either.

    6. Re:Attractive proposition by Guy+From+V · · Score: 1

      I'd mod this up if I could, since entropy is how we measure time...relative to anything, classically or on the quantum level...this hypothesis seems to not meet any requirements to be valid for either system or logic.

    7. Re:Attractive proposition by f3rret · · Score: 1

      And as far as a universe with no beginning or end is concerned, what's the problem?

      In a word: entropy.

      As I understand it, this new equitation only deals with the nature of the universe, not any of the stuff in the universe. So, yeah entropy will always increase inside the universe and the universe will eventually become uniform and the same temperature and density in all directions.
      But, the universe itself is infinite and will stay so.

      --
      Admit nothing. Deny Everything. Make Counter-accusations.
    8. Re:Attractive proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      here here! Hence, why this is all trivial nonsense (and I'll enflame a lot of people saying that) because this is yet more proof that science is not very scientific at all, and doesn't follow it's own rules. If it did, then all these years later, you'd think that the Electric Universe theory would be taught as fact, and we can lay all sorts of exotic garbage behind, as it's not needed.
      Yes, I've no problem with the universe not being measurable, but then, we're still in the dark about measurements anyway, as it's been proven that "red shift" has a lot more to do with the youthfullness of a star as opposed to it's motion (or lack of) through the universe. Once you take that away, you lose the evidence of the big-bang, You lose black hole theory too if you do the math correctly. (can't put a zero in the equation). Which leaves us scratching our heads about gravitational effects we observe. But the answer is 'ruddy obvious! There's a force 4 billion, billion, billion, billion times stronger in the universe, than gravity: it's called electromagnetism, and we've started imaging magnetic fields in space recently. But when you consider our sun's magnetic influence reaches many AU's (Astronomical Units) across our solar system, you begin to see that comets are electrical in nature, as is everything else. (so really summarize).
      in all then, this news isn't new to me, and I'm glad we're seeing new thinking that's taking us back towards to path of reality, and not the crazy universe we claim to have in nowadays cosmology.

    9. Re:Attractive proposition by michelcolman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In a word: entropy.

      Good call! Don't see red shift explained either.

      In this model, the universe is still expanding, it's not static at all. So redshift is just explained the normal way, in fact the Hubble constant is mentioned in the actual paper.

      The paper is far above my level of understanding but, as far as I understood, when you play time backward but take quantum trajectories (whatever those are) into account, the universe doesn't come together in a single point but in some other state, much more dense than today but not a singularity. So the universe is still expanding from a very dense earlier state, but there's no longer an actual singularity in the beginning. At a point in the past where people used to naïvely think the density had to become infinite, quantum trajectories actually keep it from reaching a singularity.

    10. Re:Attractive proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Usually it takes other scientists to find the new loose ends. While I welcome a more encompassing hypothesis, I'll be more enthusiastic after a year or two of reviews.

    11. Re: Attractive proposition by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Loop quantum cosmology also has a non-singular link between the end of a shrinking universe and the beginning of an expanding one. So does string theory, for that matter.

    12. Re:Attractive proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      as it's been proven that "red shift" has a lot more to do with the youthfullness of a star as opposed to it's motion (or lack of) through the universe

      That must be an interesting proof to account for red shift in signals that come from things other than stars...

      Once you take that away, you lose the evidence of the big-bang, You lose black hole theory too if you do the math correctly. (can't put a zero in the equation).

      The solutions for black holes in GR don't involve "putting a zero in the equation" and are also the same solutions you get for gravity around something like the Earth, which has been and continues to be tested to match. Unless you're repeating the same garbage that I've seen before from EU types that the black hole solution involves setting the mass to zero some how, which is just flat out wrong (zero mass would get you back the standard relativity Riemann metric).

      : it's called electromagnetism, and we've started imaging magnetic fields in space recently.

      If by recently you mean decades ago, as detecting magnetic and electric fields through spectroscopy is a common technique...

      you begin to see that comets are electrical in nature

      It seems hard to talk to EU types about comments, considering a large majority of them insist there is no water on a comet and it has never been detected, and then deny the existence of plentiful spectroscopic data that has existed for decades under some false claim you can't tell the difference between OH radical and water (pure BS).

      I'm glad we're seeing new thinking that's taking us back towards to path of reality,

      Maybe you should read more closely then, considering it still involves red shift being due to expansion, not "youthfulness of stars"

      because this is yet more proof that science is not very scientific at all, and doesn't follow it's own rules

      Regardless of how well science does or does not follow its own rules, countering with theories that flat out refuse to acknowledge data and doesn't follow those rules either isn't fixing any problems.

    13. Re:Attractive proposition by tehcyder · · Score: 4, Funny

      I see your Electric Universe theory, and raise you a Time Cube.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    14. Re:Attractive proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If there's no beginning, and the universe has been here infinitely long, why aren't we already at this steady-state condition?

    15. Re:Attractive proposition by Baldorcete · · Score: 1

      You forget what we allready observe, but have no theory that explains it. (eg: perihelion precession of Mercury's orbit, Newtons gravity theory, and general relativity)

    16. Re:Attractive proposition by StripedCow · · Score: 2

      But entropy could go asymptotically to zero as time goes to minus infinity.
      So I still do not see the problem.

      --
      If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
    17. Re: Attractive proposition by SlowMovingTarget · · Score: 1

      Which makes this approach seem similar to that heavy breathing about black holes not existing due to quantum corrections. It's headline hyperbole. So mathematical singularities may not exist, and there is very likely a minimum length in the universe.

      This paper seems to exchange one infinity (density) for another (time in the past). If there was no initial bang and no crunch to come what was the universe doing for that infinity in the past before it expanded?

    18. Re:Attractive proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have never heard of "Electric Universe theory" until now. Although, that Time Cube sounds like a fancy thing. Would it by chance be a Paradox Correcting Time Cube? http://futurama.wikia.com/wiki...

    19. Re:Attractive proposition by imAck · · Score: 1

      And as far as a universe with no beginning or end is concerned, what's the problem? I was dealing with infinite open shapes (lines, planes) in grade school, unending closed shapes are trivial (a circle, a sphere), and if you assume our universe is a 4-dimensional "slice" of an n-dimensional space it's not that hard to construct an arrangement where you can travel forever in any "direction"

      Sort of like a world in Minecraft, well, at least in the XZ coordinates.

      --

      It's hard to tell the cool to chill, my favorite hotel room has a view to an ill.

    20. Re: Attractive proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think 'infinity' means what you think it means (not that I can wrap my head around the implications of that anyway). Ain't 'alf been some clever bastards, eh?

    21. Re:Attractive proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is just common sense. Matter doesn't spring into existence from nothing. Searching for a beginning of something eternal is well....stupid.

    22. Re:Attractive proposition by smaddox · · Score: 1

      Yes, I've no problem with the universe not being measurable, but then, we're still in the dark about measurements anyway, as it's been proven that "red shift" has a lot more to do with the youthfullness of a star as opposed to it's motion (or lack of) through the universe.

      Uhh, no... it hasn't... The redshift is determined by the shift of spectral signatures such as the double sodium line. Only relativistic effects can cause such a shift.

    23. Re:Attractive proposition by f3rret · · Score: 1

      If there's no beginning, and the universe has been here infinitely long, why aren't we already at this steady-state condition?

      I'm not sure the equations imply that there is no beginning, just that there is no end.

      Otherwise...I don't have a good answer for you.

      --
      Admit nothing. Deny Everything. Make Counter-accusations.
    24. Re: Attractive proposition by Baldorcete · · Score: 1

      Expanding following an asintotic function?

    25. Re:Attractive proposition by Baldorcete · · Score: 1

      Imagine entropy follows an asintotic function in the state of the universe "before" inflation. You could go back in time infinitely and find an infinitesimal but non zero entropy, while finding finite entropy at the present. Something like S=f(t)=1/((t^2)+1). The same for the volume ocupied by the observable universe at present time.

    26. Re:Attractive proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No ice found by Rosetta. Another nail in the coffin bra. Sorry but electro universe is just beginning.. Aherm ..except it never began and it will never end.

    27. Re:Attractive proposition by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      Imagine a homicide detective discovers a dead man with a knife in his back.

      What is so wrong about the view that the carcass was always there with a knife in its back?

      I can see David Hume giving someone a big high-five over that conclusion.

      Yeah, and if I found a valentines day card in my mail box. It was always there!

      See! SCIENCE!

    28. Re:Attractive proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No ice found by Rosetta

      No ice? You mean like how the ROSINA instrument found water to be the dominant component of outgassing, well in excess of hydrogen from the solar wind (i.e. not just oxygen combining with the solar wind). Or how the MIRO spectrometer measured the spectra to enough resolution to distinguish water with oxygen 16 from water with oxygen 18? And how it measured the temperature to be well below freezing?

      it will never end.

      I can at least agree here...

  7. But... by maugle · · Score: 5, Interesting

    OK, these guys are probably far smarter than I'll ever be, but... the universe clearly isn't staying at a finite size, and playing the universe's expansion in reverse would imply that it started at a single point. How do they account for this? I even went as far as to read the article, but it wasn't mentioned.

    Are they saying that the universe fluctuates between a not-quite-a-singularity tiny point of density and a not-quite-eternally-infinite empty void, or that it simply was a not-quite-a-singularity tiny point of density for an infinite time before it expanded?

    1. Re:But... by ihtoit · · Score: 1

      not sure but the bigger question would be how stoned would I have to be to even consider the ramifications of what you're suggesting?

      --
      Political debates have me rolling my eyes so much I think I got optical whiplash. I should sue. - Foamy The Squirrel
    2. Re:But... by MichaelMacDonald · · Score: 2

      They've also found ways to measure the ages of stars, etc, and you would expect some excessively old objects out there if the universe were infinitely old. Maybe. This is why we have ideas, hypotheses, theories, and natural laws. Things need to be thought up, tested, and proven. Over and over. It's annoying when people think of hypothesis as scientific fact. That's just not how science works.

    3. Re:But... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      OK, these guys are probably far smarter than I'll ever be, but... the universe clearly isn't staying at a finite size, and playing the universe's expansion in reverse would imply that it started at a single point. How do they account for this? I even went as far as to read the article, but it wasn't mentioned.

      Actually, if you assume that expansion plays backwards with no change in rate you pass through a point and then into negative size. Probably we should not assume that expansion can be extrapolated backwards past some point, which could as easily be a non-singularity as a singularity.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    4. Re:But... by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      yeah so it first spent an infinite amount of time being 'small' but not 'big bang start of all' small?

      if they're saying that the universe grows and the contracts again to a point(big bang) and grows ad infinitum then yeah why not..

      but how does the whole thing fit into the models we have for matter to come into existence(I mean different atoms) and so forth?

      and what's this "MAY" take into account.. it either does or doesn't.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Things moving in a space don't describe the size of the space they're contained in unless they interact with a boundary. You can't make the claim that the universe is growing or shrinking. All you can say is that some objects are moving away from each other. This could either be space expanding (the popular theory involving dark energy which is just the pet name they gave the missing force they can't explain), or space is not expanding and another force acting on the mass that hasn't been accounted for. In either case, it involves a mystery element nobody understands yet.

    6. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stick to Doritos and call of duty. Clearly it's the greatest calling you can aspire to.

    7. Re:But... by Lord+Crc · · Score: 1

      OK, these guys are probably far smarter than I'll ever be, but... the universe clearly isn't staying at a finite size, and playing the universe's expansion in reverse would imply that it started at a single point. How do they account for this?

      Various Quantum Gravity theories predict different things here. Some, like Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG), predict that over extremely short distances gravity is repulsive. Applied to cosmology (Loop Quantum Cosmology, LQC) this leads to a prediction of a "bounce", where a contracting phase flips into an expansion phase.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L...
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B...

    8. Re:But... by PhilHibbs · · Score: 1

      ...and playing the universe's expansion in reverse would imply that it started at a single point. How do they account for this?

      They're saying that under this theory, playing it backwards does not imply that it starts at a single point. I could point to someone blowing up a balloon, and say "it must have started from an infinitely dense singularity". I'd be completely wrong.

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

      Everything is expanding in all directions. There is no "Single point of origin". The direction of expansion, from our observation, is relative to our position in the universe and our motion through it.
       
      IMHO this explaination is actually easier to grok than the Singularity. How can the universe be expanding in all directions if it started from a point?

    10. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Hm.

      the universe clearly isn't staying at a finite size

      That's not clear at all. It may well be finite, albeit extremely large. Thing is, even something unfathomably large compared to infinity is still basically nothing, relatively speaking.

      For example, the universe may be a googolplex light years across, or even Graham's Number's light years across, and it would still not be infinite.

      We puny humans would be unable to tell the difference, of course, since we have no way of measuring (or even detecting, in the first place) something as large as the examples above.

      In short: It's not clear at all whether the universe is actually finite or infinite.

      (NB: It appears to be not staying at a fixed size on the scales that we are able to observe, but that's something completely different from it being finite or infinite in its entirety.)

    11. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also how does it explain the microwave background.

    12. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Watching a human heart beat, you might be tempted to say "it's expanding, it must have been expanding forever, therefore, by extension, it started as a single point", especially if you have made all of your observations in the space of a few milliseconds during expansion. If, on the other chance, you started observing during contraction, you might extrapolate that it will collapse into a single point.

      In some sense, you are both right (started as a single cell, will decompose to dust that most likely ends up in a singularity at some point), and also grossly oversimplifying the nature of the system due to your incredibly short span of observation.

    13. Re:But... by emh203 · · Score: 1

      The expansion hypothesis is not yet fully accepted. There are other models that explain redshift without expansion that make all the same predictions about CMBR, etc. Even ones that don't require magic "dark energy". http://arxiv.org/abs/1107.2485 http://www.nature.com/news/cos...

    14. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not a finite size in our observable dimensions. But it's all relative.

    15. Re:But... by SlowMovingTarget · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that we're living amid a second generation of stars. Early-universe stars were very large, very bright, and have all died already, giving birth to the current generation of cooler, longer living stars we see in our night sky. Granted, I'm basing that off of reading the Xeelee sequence, so who knows.

    16. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However if you trace its history back far enough the heart you're observing *did* start as a single point.

    17. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The universe is just Doritos and CoD all the way down. Check mate atheists.

    18. Re: But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called a cell, not a point!

    19. Re:But... by pauljlucas · · Score: 1

      ... space is not expanding and another force acting on the mass that hasn't been accounted for.

      But then how would it be the case that we observe everything moving away from us at the same rate in all directions?

      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    20. Re:But... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      You wound't be wrong if the big bang were true.

    21. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just not how science works.

      Unless you're pushing the human caused climate change angle.

    22. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Third.

    23. Re:But... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      If it oscillates like that -- what triggers the contraction? Is it elastic (explain why?) or does it reach a boundary (of what? and what's on the other side??) If neither is true -- where does it get the energy to rush back in the other direction? and why reverse? Why not go in some random direction? (in which case it would never become a point, but I think if this had ever happened, we'd see what amount to cosmic compression fractures.)

      I suspect the truth is we've read too much into what amounts to local movement (the part of the universe we can see, which if it's infinite, is a very small slice) and that coupled with man's desire to pigeonhole everything has produced theories like the Big Bang.

      'Course, could be we're just debris being flushed down some megacosmic toilet.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    24. Re:But... by computererds · · Score: 1

      The maximum age of a star is defined by the physics of the reaction. It was so be small enough to burn slow and cool, but big enough to sustain.

      There are however, stars with a *known* age older than the 13.8 billion year estimate for a big bang universe. The one I know off the top of my head is: Wikipedia, HD_140283

    25. Re:But... by computererds · · Score: 1

      Ok, just read the link I actually gave. Apparently the age has been adjusted from the ~16 Billion since I first read of it. Disregard...

    26. Re:But... by aliquis · · Score: 1

      I was under impression Skynet has taken over and .. .. Of course with branching universes there's nothing weird with us not having seen the T-800.

      As for the nukes ..

    27. Re:But... by aliquis · · Score: 1

      I think I've seen other solutions to that.

      Maybe it was going into a black hole which was one of them?

      I don't remember.

      Do the mass have to be evenly distributed everywhere just because space itself has no boundaries?

      My natural assumptions (I feel) would had been everything just was (no creation, not of space and not of planets and possibly not of life) and that space just continued on / was this giant space of unlimited size.

  8. About the structure of the universe... by DigitAl56K · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's interesting, but I'm curious as to whether the model shows a universe developing with the features we observe. The density of the universe is one thing, the general structure of it is another. There seems to have been a lot of thinking around how the universe was shaped by the big bang including all sorts of models and simulations. It'll be interesting to understand if this new model also fits.

  9. Yes, because cosmic red shift is all in our head by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    First, modern cosmological theory doesn't predict a Big Crunch either... because of this little thing called, the universal expansion is accelerating...

    It wasn't general relativity or special relativity that suggested a beginning to the universe, that was everyone seeing red shifts from everything in the universe (and the further away they were, the further they were going away)

    It also multiplies entities unnecessarily by introducing a graviton, that unlike the Higgs Boson is supposed to mediate mass...

    Everything about this just fails to be interesting in any particularly interesting way...

    Also "The universe may have existed forever..." yeah, that's what "time didn't exist before the universe" means...

  10. That would mean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    this really is the song that doesn't end. It just goes on and on my friend. Some people started singing it not knowing what it was, and they'll continue singing it forever just because some scientists proved the universe is infinite.

    Good luck!

    captcha: tyranny
    that made me giggle.

  11. only one way you're getting me into this debate by ihtoit · · Score: 5, Funny

    and that involves a certain plant, a yard of gummed-edge pressed wood pulp and a bucket of munchies.

    --
    Political debates have me rolling my eyes so much I think I got optical whiplash. I should sue. - Foamy The Squirrel
    1. Re:only one way you're getting me into this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and that involves a certain plant, a yard of gummed-edge pressed wood pulp and a bucket of munchies.

      Well that's ironic, because that also happens to be the exact same way these sorts of conversations even get started.

  12. So they are back to steady state? by aristotle-dude · · Score: 0

    Ok, now the scientists are just fucking with everyone. They are angry that people are not saying that the Genesis account of creation matches the big bang and the end of the universe in revelation matches the big crunch so they want to go back to the old model.

    --
    Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    1. Re:So they are back to steady state? by aristotle-dude · · Score: 1

      " people are not saying that the Genesis" That should read "people are now saying".

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    2. Re:So they are back to steady state? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      1) Some creationists claim that the big bang proves scripture is true.

      2) Some creationists claim that the bag bang cannot be true, because it contradicts scripture.

      3) You're the first person I've ever heard to claim that the big crunch matches scripture, and frankly I don't see where you pulled that from.

      Conclusion: Scripture means whatever you want it to mean.

      Also, do you know of any scientist other than Hoyle who tried to dismiss the big bang as religion? Hoyle, who was still pushing his steady state theory a generation after everyone else recognized that the evidence pointed to a big bang, and coined the term 'big bang' to denigrate the competition to his own precious theory?

      Finally, I'm not sure how this qualifies as "going back to the old model", since there's still a big bang. It just doesn't start with a singularity in this proposed model. Scientists have asked about "before the big bang" for decades. In fact, they now seem to associating 'the big bang' with the beginning of the inflationary era, if I understand what I read correctly.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:So they are back to steady state? by Thanshin · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Do you take decisions based on what random children would think about them? Can you imagine yourself having thoughts on the line of "Should I buy a new home? Oh, maybe I shouldn't. My neighbor's six year old kid thinks this one is the bestest."

      If you don't, why do you think scientist care about whether the first chapter of a book speaks about the Big Bang?

      Just as you don't take decisions based on winnie the pooh, smarter people than you, don't take theirs based on your fantasies and belief system.

    4. Re:So they are back to steady state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's important to emphasize that this is, in fact, not a steady state model. The article may appear to give that impression, but if you read the original paper, it's clear that their proposed correction only has an impact at very early times; the expansion of the universe as currently understood is largely unaffected. In other words, the only change is that as you run time in reverse, as you approach the t=0 represented by the big bang, the size of universe asymptotes to zero rather that converges to zero, thus giving a formally infinite age of the universe. However, at some relatively short time after t=0, the universe looks the same as if there was a big bang.

      Additionally, the big crunch is considered only one potential end of the universe, and, last time I checked, is increasingly inconsistent with the available data even with without the hypothesized effects of the present model.

      Finally, it's very important to emphasize that this is a *hypothesis* put forward by a *two* physicists, and not anything like a consensus view of the community.

      I cannot, unfortunately, comment much on the detailed technical merits (or lack thereof) of the paper, inasmuch as I am not that kind of physicist.

    5. Re:So they are back to steady state? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      3) You're the first person I've ever heard to claim that the big crunch matches scripture, and frankly I don't see where you pulled that from.

      Clearly it is Ragnarogk, the end of days and doom of the gods!

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    6. Re:So they are back to steady state? by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      Clearly it is Ragnarogk, the end of days and doom of the gods!

      Too late, it's already come & gone.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
  13. Toldja! by Tablizer · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...it's turtles, all the way down.

    1. Re:Toldja! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it is only one very old turtle flying in space, with a disc world on it's back.

    2. Re:Toldja! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fairly certain that was a turtle with 4 elephants on it's back. The elephants carry the disc.

    3. Re:Toldja! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there a flat surface the bottom-most turtles stand on?

  14. Of course... by gulikoza · · Score: 1

    ..the Universe had no beginning. Before the Universe was created (has created itself?) there was no time and after it ends, there won't be any time either. If it collapses into a super-mega singularity, time will stop forever inside and since there is no outside point of reference, will seem to be stuck like that forever, even when it ends :-)

    (disclaimer: watched too much Star Trek at young age and Big Bang Theory now, no formal physics degree ;-) )

    1. Re:Of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In short, the universe arose from nothing and will return to nothing?

      If so, Carnot, Newton, Kelvin, et al were really stupid, huh?

  15. How about energy conservation? by jandersen · · Score: 3, Interesting

    One of the many, big, unanswered questions concerning the origin of the universe is - where did the energy come from? Conservation of energy - the assumption that energy cannot be either destroyed or created - is a fundamental axiom in physics, which goes against the idea that there was a point in time before which the universe didn't exist, but after, it did. Unless, of course, one can conceive of a negative energy of equal size having been created at that same moment.

    A naive consideration would say that if a mass, M, is created, then there must have an 'anti-mass', -M, as well; using Newton's equations, we would expect M and -M to repulse each other, while M would attract M and -M would attract -M (yes, doesn't make sense at stated, but follow my thought here, OK?) And, if one were to ramble on along those lines anyway, it seems tempting to look at the equations for how electric charges interact and think of electric charge as a kind of imaginary (as in complex numbers) mass. No doubt better people than I have already spotted this and worked out why it doesn't make sense, but I haven't seen their work yet.

    1. Re:How about energy conservation? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 2

      Naively, doesn't conservation of energy also suggest that particles can't pop into existence out of nothing? But they do.

      TL:DR; physics is bonkers.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    2. Re:How about energy conservation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Conservation of energy arises from the laws of physics being time-reversible. If everything can be played backwards (even if thermodynamics and entropy makes this unlikely) then there is an invarient that can be constructed. We call this invarient energy.

      I believe it was Emmy Noerther who did the work in this area.

      tldr; There is no reason to expect conservation of energy in irreversible changes.

    3. Re:How about energy conservation? by YA_Python_dev · · Score: 1

      [...] the idea that there was a point in time before which the universe didn't exist [...]

      Time is part of the universe, so there wasn't and there will never be a point in time when the universe doesn't exist. On the other hand, there could be other universes, possibly with their own times.

      --
      There's a hidden treasure in Python 3.x: __prepare__()
    4. Re:How about energy conservation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read your Sean Carroll or watch him on youtube.

      In brief, conservation applies in the universe but not for the universe.

      Also there may be fields with negative energy.

    5. Re:How about energy conservation? by PhilHibbs · · Score: 1

      Naively, doesn't conservation of energy also suggest that particles can't pop into existence out of nothing? But they do.

      Do they? Hawking Radiation has never been observed or proven. It's a theory. And in any case, the black hole would lose the same amount of energy as was in the radiation.

    6. Re:How about energy conservation? by TrollstonButterbeans · · Score: 1

      What happens to the photons that get their wavelengths lengthened by dark energy space expansion under the Big Bang model?

      A photon with gamma ray wavelength and the power to ionize atoms gets stretched by all possible observation points into a microwave that can do no such thing.

      Where did that energy go?

      It is different than red-shift (a directional observation bias) in that the energy simply is gone.

      --
      Priest: "Universe from nothing, no laws of physics, sped up time"+ huge discrepancies. Creationism? No. Big Bang Theory
    7. Re:How about energy conservation? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      A photon with gamma ray wavelength and the power to ionize atoms gets stretched by all possible observation points into a microwave that can do no such thing.

      If by "observation points" you mean "reference frames," then won't there always be a reference frame where it has gamma ray (or any other) wavelength?

      Where did that energy go?

      Nowhere, I think. It's like running fast enough to snatch a bullet out of the air without hurting yourself. Relative to you, the bullet has very little kinetic energy.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    8. Re:How about energy conservation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hawking radiation conserves energy just fine, converting the mass of the black hole into different particles. It is no different than a photon that turns into an electron-positron pair, which also conserves energy just fine.

    9. Re:How about energy conservation? by MightyDrunken · · Score: 3, Interesting

      While others have stated that though conversation of energy is one of the main axioms of physics it does not necessarily apply to the creation of the Universe, only what is within it. However many physicist believe that the net energy of the Universe is zero as the potential energy of gravity is negative, balancing out the positive energy in the Universe.

    10. Re:How about energy conservation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gravitational potential is negative energy.

      Rest mass is positive energy.

      Total can be zero.

      Ergo, no problem.

    11. Re:How about energy conservation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's a hypothesis, not a theory.

    12. Re:How about energy conservation? by oreaq · · Score: 1

      Conservation of energy - the assumption that energy cannot be either destroyed or created - is a fundamental axiom in physics, which goes against the idea that there was a point in time before which the universe didn't exist, but after, it did

      Emi Noether showed in the first half of the last century that conservation of energy is equivalent to time invariance ("shift symmetry of time"). At the beginning of time, i. e. the beginning of the universe, there was no time invariance; time was just being "created". Hence no conservation of energy.

    13. Re:How about energy conservation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't measurement energy and time with complete accuracy. Those particles pop out of nothing for very short periods of time.

    14. Re:How about energy conservation? by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      Don't they pop into existence out of non-particle energy?

    15. Re:How about energy conservation? by volpe · · Score: 1

      In "A Universe from Nothing", Lawrence Krauss posits that the negative energy associated with gravity can exactly cancel the positive energy of the rest mass of all the particles plus their kinetic energy.

  16. Need Falsifiable Observable Predictions by ad454 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    All of these type of models about the universe have elegant math behind them.

    But until they can any observable predictions which can be measured and possibly falsifiable, then we are really dealing with pure math and philosophy and not physics.

    One can construct countless mathematical models which fit known observations, but very few make new falsifiable observable predictions.

    This is my gripe with something like String/M-Theory, which has not made any legitimate predictions, and fails at stuff like monopoles which not been observed.

    1. Re:Need Falsifiable Observable Predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nonsense.
      I've clearly showed with math AND actual observation and testable prediction that the Universe consists of the Earthly real and 8 Celestial Spheres.
      Yes, yes, that other guy found some errors in my earlier work with 7 Celestial Spheres, but thanks to him I have now developed the true model with 8 Celestial Spheres!

    2. Re:Need Falsifiable Observable Predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily.
      If a theory is more complicated than the current best model, then it needs to make new falsifiable observable predictions.
      But if a theory is simpler or more elegant than the current best model, then it only needs to fit known observations.

    3. Re:Need Falsifiable Observable Predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > pure math and philosophy and not physics.

      In other words, Republicanism. They hate science so they're into things that can't be proven like string theory. It's mental defect that makes quantum physics attractive to their kind.

    4. Re:Need Falsifiable Observable Predictions by Rashdot · · Score: 1

      If they're talking about a pulsating universe, there may be a way to verify some of it. I'm looking at this from a layman's perspective. If a big crunch happened before our current universe's big bang, could it be possible that this big bang happened before all of the material from the previous universe had been drawn into the singularity? Because simply put, why would the singularity wait for everything to fall into it? What if 'our' big bang annihilated that still inward falling matter while rapidly expanding? Would it be possible that we can see evidence of this in WMAP CMB images?

      I know that the idea is that the entire universe including its dimensions is supposed to be expanding or eventually possibly contracting, so everything stays inside it and there can be nothing falling into this self contained universe. My idea needs time and space to exist outside our universe, so I'm probably just rambling.

      --
      This is not the sig you're looking for.
  17. Summary of the actual paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Suppose the Universe is filled by a Bose-Einstein condensate of gravitons with mass, and that the amplitude of the condensate's wavefunction spans the entire universe.

    Turns out that when you derive the FRW equations from this, doing so inserts a cosmological-constant lookalike into the equation for a''

    So plug the size of the Universe into the Yukawa equation and a graviton mass of 10^-32eV pops out. Plug this into the assumption that the wavefunction is a Gaussian the size of the universe (which makes d'Alembertian proportional to the wavefunction and gives you that nice constant) and you get a cosmological constant that's plausibly near to what we observe.

    Inserting the universe-condensate also creates a second correction term which prevents the FRW scale factor from blowing up or collapsing either in the past or the future, which makes that nasty big bang singularity go away.

    ----------

    It's worth noting that they invoke Bohmian quantum mechanics, which will immediately sketch out a lot of quantum folks...

    What bugs me is that the massive graviton blows up the mass hierarchy problem. It's hard enough to come up with a non-contrived way to have particles whose measured mass ranges from 1eV to 170GeV, but to extend it by 30 orders of magnitude on the light side is just mean.

    1. Re:Summary of the actual paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If gravitons have non-zero rest energy, then gravity can't have infinite range...if it's 10^-32 eV, then gravity doesn't extend farther than about 10^48 meters...ok...possible... LOL

      Bohmian mechanics is probably what prevents a singularity, as particle trajectories can't cross (quantum potential becomes infinite as trajectories converge)...

    2. Re:Summary of the actual paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Erm. do you mean a graviton mass of 10^+42 eV pops out?

      100 GeV equals 10^11 Gev, times 30 orders of magnitude means 10^41 GeV.

    3. Re:Summary of the actual paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you tried reversing the polarity?

    4. Re:Summary of the actual paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup.

  18. Boundary conditions... by geogob · · Score: 2

    too bad we can't verify them. Especially since the thrown most of the assumed ones out of their model. It's nevertheless an interesting approach in describing the universe if you take the time to read about it. Who knows, maybe the existing models were over-constrained and it might not be bad to give them a fresh look.

    The truth probably lays somewhere in between.

    1. Re:Boundary conditions... by t_ban · · Score: 1

      The truth probably lays somewhere in between

      Eggs? Bricks? Or what exactly does truth lay in that "between" place?

      --
      First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win. -Gandhi
  19. Re:Yes, because cosmic red shift is all in our hea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It wasn't general relativity or special relativity that suggested a beginning to the universe, that was everyone seeing red shifts from everything in the universe

    All right, if red shift is not a relativistic effect, what is it? I learned that it was relativistic, but that was a long long time ago. Einstein was still alive when I started looking at this stuff.

  20. First for quantum by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    This has to be the first time any kind of science involving the word quantum has made more sense than an alternative.

  21. Equation by geantvert · · Score: 5, Funny

    A few years ago, a colleague proposed the idea that North-European population are tall because of an adaptation to the colder climate.
    He could prove his theory but only for a perfectly spherical viking.

  22. Time by bug1 · · Score: 1

    Time is how we measure change, its a property of an object, not an object itself.

    For time to have a begining would mean a situation when nothing changed. Which suggests zero energy. So for time to have a beggining is to suggest energy can be created created.

    orsomethinglikethat

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

      bug1: I liked reading up on your "Time" post. :}

  23. Great! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find it funny that people consider ME arrogant when I respond to something like this with:

    "This can only be considered true when this equation or implications of it matches experimental results , and both are peer reviewed."

    When I hear the "A" word, the Princess Bride quote "You keep using that word, I don't think it means what you think it means" usually spontaneously manifests like magic.

    It does make me ashamed to live in America, because when anything new is discovered , Logical fallacies like "Science still can't explain the truths in the bible" or
    "Science is just another religion" or "Scientists have been wrong before, so they are probably wrong about this too." Pathetic. How is it that America has managed to put men on the moon, be one of the major military powers in the world and still most of them can't get their head around the scientific method and the fact that religion being a way for the monarchies and dictators to keep the unwashed masses from overthrowing them while they don't operate by the same rules? They have just as much internet and access to education as I do and yet they just keep thumping their bible and thinking they know everything.

    1. Re:Great! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it funny that people consider ME arrogant when I respond to something like this with:

      "This can only be considered true when this equation or implications of it matches experimental results , and both are peer reviewed."

      When I hear the "A" word, the Princess Bride quote "You keep using that word, I don't think it means what you think it means" usually spontaneously manifests like magic.

      It does make me ashamed to live in America, because when anything new is discovered , Logical fallacies like "Science still can't explain the truths in the bible" or
      "Science is just another religion" or "Scientists have been wrong before, so they are probably wrong about this too." Pathetic. How is it that America has managed to put men on the moon, be one of the major military powers in the world and still most of them can't get their head around the scientific method and the fact that religion being a way for the monarchies and dictators to keep the unwashed masses from overthrowing them while they don't operate by the same rules? They have just as much internet and access to education as I do and yet they just keep thumping their bible and thinking they know everything.

      MOD PARENT UP!

      This still doesn't explain why the universe appears to be expanding in all directions which was a major argument for the big bang in the first place.. if there was no big bang, why is it that the further away from Earth we look with telescopes, the more red-shifted the light is?

    2. Re:Great! by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      if there was no big bang, why is it that the further away from Earth we look with telescopes, the more red-shifted the light is?

      It gets tired on the long journey.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    3. Re:Great! by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      Tired light used to be considered a possible explanation for cosmological redshift, photons losing energy (which means their frequency is lowered) on a long trip through space, but afaik this was inconsistent with certain observations. But who knows it might actually fit into this new theory.

  24. False by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is always a First post.
    God's word was the First post.

    1. Re:False by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      Some day we'll be able to travel a huge distance, actually exiting the part of the universe that's filled with matter, look down on the entire thing, and see that all those galaxies together form just two, huge words: "first post". Slowly blinking between red and yellow, which explains the red shift.

  25. Finally ... by MxMatrix · · Score: 1

    TBB theory is based on the dogma of human kind it self, humans have difficulty in accepting eternity so they elaborately invent theory's that incorporate a begin and an ending. Yes our lives are limited time. But existence can only be if it is eternal.

    Think Q.

    --
    Bach says it all.
  26. Re:Yes, because cosmic red shift is all in our hea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's Doppler shift.

  27. Wrong conclusion by prefec2 · · Score: 1

    If the unisverse is not expanding (which it is presently) in general then that allows not to conclude that the age of the universe is infinite. It only shows that you cannot determine the age of the universe on the basis of inflation. However, you still could determine the age by entropy. The higher the entropy the older the universe. And if I look at my work desk, the universe is pretty damn old.

  28. Great! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and the fact that religion being a way for the monarchies and dictators to keep the unwashed masses from overthrowing them while they don't operate by the same rules?

    Oh, so /that/'s what religion is for. I'm not religious, but if it provides an effective mechanism against constant violent societal upheaval, I'll take it.

  29. So, why do we still have stars and stuff? by YoungManKlaus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Obvious question, if the universe is infinitely old why do we still have hydrogen left for fusion?

    1. Re:So, why do we still have stars and stuff? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obvious question, if the universe is infinitely old why do we still have hydrogen left for fusion?

      Infinitely old doesn't mean that the conditions for fusion are infinitely old.

    2. Re:So, why do we still have stars and stuff? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe because it's the first element to "pop" into existence from a pure vacuum?

    3. Re:So, why do we still have stars and stuff? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One explanation is this phase of the Universe is 14 billion years old. And at that point there was a "big bang" of sorts. And before that, the conditions of the universe's energy and/or matter were different, but combined in a way that resulted in a "big bang." Which created new Hydrogen. And perhaps the conditions for that explosion are far beyond our comprehension or imagination. And the aeons to come are equally unpredictable. But we are here now because given an infinite number of scenarios and time, our consciousness is guaranteed.

    4. Re:So, why do we still have stars and stuff? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're not proposing a static universe. There still would have been inflation and reheating for energy to be pumped into the matter content of the universe.

    5. Re:So, why do we still have stars and stuff? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Create =new= hydrogen, or just blast the existing elements down to naked particles, which then coalesce as hydrogen...??

      And who's to say *our* Bang is the only one??

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  30. Boundary conditions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The truth probably lays somewhere in between.

    So you're saying that the truth is somewhere between finite and infinite?

  31. Re:Yes, because cosmic red shift is all in our hea by michelcolman · · Score: 1

    The doppler effect doesn't need relativity, but relativity does enhance the effect (adding time dilation to the classical doppler effect).

  32. Shepard tone by Snard · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In music, there is something called a Shepard tone, which is a series of skillfully combined harmonics that, when listened to as a loop, appears to be constantly ascending.

    Perhaps the "expanding universe" is something like that.

    --
    - Mike
    1. Re:Shepard tone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was exactly the image that came into my mind when I read about this idea.

    2. Re:Shepard tone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More like the Risset or Shepard-Risset, which I wrote an implementation of some years ago. It's continuous, rather than a series of individual notes, so you can't play it on a piano, but a synthesiser can produce it easily enough.

      And yeah, the illusion is utterly convincing, you know it can't be going up forever, but it seems as though it does.

    3. Re:Shepard tone by volpe · · Score: 1

      It's been a long time since I've seen a reference to Shepard tones. I used this, along with another (novel) auditory illusion, as the basis of an auralization technique to complement visualization of computational fluid dynamics data, which became my dissertation research.

  33. Forever ? by Mr+Europe · · Score: 1

    "The universe may have existed forever,",

    Forever, yes, but how for is that ? I thought the time started ar big bang.

  34. Sounds very Indian and Hindu... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
    One of the basic tenets of Hiunduism is that the universe has no beginning and it has no end. Lots of Indian/Bengali names being mentioned in the research. The fine article has no math and it talks philosophically. And this concept is not all that new. I remember reading a book (may be about the neutrino) by Asimov that talks about "cyclic" universe that oscillates between expansion and contraction, or something that goes from big-bang to big-crunch, or big-bang to death due to infinite expansion etc. He talked about whether we can tell based on our observations, whether we came from big-bang or are we hurtling towards it.

    Till we see more math and more acceptance by people who can understand that math, we just pat this theory on its head, pinch the cheeks and say "cute!" and move on.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  35. big bang black hole by mestar · · Score: 1

    If all universe was smaller than, well, very small, how come it didn't form a black hole in the first seconds?

    And then if nothing exits the black hole, how did universe manage to do it?

  36. Half Life by JimSadler · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I suppose that radioactive materials were put here by Satan to trick us. After all, with a perpetual universe we would have reached the half life of nuclear materials over and over again and we would have no radioactive materials at all. Oops!

  37. So much for Thermo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So I guess, if this works out, we can just throw away the laws of thermodynamics? Obviously if entropy is always increasing, and the universe is of infinite age, then certainly there would be no organization today, right?

    1. Re:So much for Thermo by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      So I guess, if this works out, we can just throw away the laws of thermodynamics? Obviously if entropy is always increasing, and the universe is of infinite age, then certainly there would be no organization today, right?

      If the universe always existed, then we don't know that entropy is always increasing. Maybe the universe always existed, but there is some mechanism that causes entropy to cycle between increasing and decreasing? Who knows? OTOH, this is just a hypothesis and has yet to be accepted.

    2. Re:So much for Thermo by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      If the universe always existed, then we don't know that entropy is always increasing. Maybe the universe always existed, but there is some mechanism that causes entropy to cycle between increasing and decreasing?

      Considering that entropy might decrease leads to some fairly strange scenarios, e.g.:

      • Time travel. Not in the usual sense, but the state of the universe becoming identical (with exceptions) to an earlier state. For anyone but an outside observer (another spooky concept) or someone who is, in fact, different in both points in time, the effect would look like time travel.
      • There could be multiple "incarnation" of one and the same person at various points in time, maybe billions or even trillions of years apart. In fact, there might be a version of you that remembers reading this paragraph, at a time where slashdot did not or will not exist. Mind-boggling? Yep.
      • On the other hand, there would be nothing that has a lasting effect, as negative delta-S allows complete reversal of any process.
    3. Re:So much for Thermo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the timescale would probably be larger than you suggest, but yes, this makes perfect sense, and would also resemble a description of non-locality.

  38. This isn't hell, then. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since life doesn't last forever, it isn't hell.

  39. I think I speak for all of us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    when i say quantum schmantum.

  40. Actually, I wanted to aske the same question,but.. by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
    Obviously if entropy is always increasing, and the universe is of infinite age, then certainly there would be no organization today, right?

    I wanted to ask the same question, but then I remembered asymptotic functions. Going back in time, entropy would decrease, but the rate this decrease could become smaller smaller as one regards points that are farther back in time.

    However, this would imply that for most of the previous eternity, the universe wasn't doing all that much.

    tl;dr: The second law requires delta-S to be positive, but it can be arbitrarily small.

  41. Re:Yes, because cosmic red shift is all in our hea by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2

    General relativity does require a beginning to the universe. Einstein realized that a universe dominated by an attractive force had to be either shrinking or expanding. He didn't think that was realistic, so he added the cosmological constant to balance the attraction of gravity and get a static universe. That was in 1907-1915. People started doing galactic redshift surveys (with a handful of close galaxies) around 1912, but it wasn't until the late 1920s that it started to be accepted that the universe was indeed expanding.

    It turns out that even with a cosmological constant, GR doesn't admit a static universe.

  42. Re:Yes, because cosmic red shift is all in our hea by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
    Also "The universe may have existed forever..." yeah, that's what "time didn't exist before the universe" means...

    And if time is mentioned, it's always interesting to ask "in what frame of reference"?

    If there are any photons left over from shortly after the big bang, they would state that the universe just began seconds ago.

  43. What does Forever even mean? by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

    When time is not a constant and may not have always existed?

    --
    Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
  44. Isn't this... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    Isn't this just a rehashing of the steady state theory of the universe?

  45. Margin of Error by pastafazou · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, the margin of error on their new model is True or False.

  46. Not the first model without a big bang by RaccoonBandit · · Score: 1

    It's not the first model that doesn't have a big bang. It's not even the first that uses de Broglie-Bohm theory. For example, there are the bouncing cosmologies (where the universe shrinks down to almost zero but not quite --essentially stopped by quantum effects-- and then starts to re-expand) proposed by Pinto-Neto, Peter, et al. ( http://arxiv.org/abs/1406.2790 for a review and references therein, e.g. http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/02...).

    Now while this paper is old news in that it was posted on arxiv almost a year ago, well done to the slashdot editors for waiting for it to be peer-reviewed (independently of how messed up you think the peer-review process is) and not taking every new model that gets posted on arxiv as some new profound discovery that must be true (slashdot would never do that, honest).

  47. Like if it wasn't ONLY LOGICAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course the universe had no beginning, just think about it. If it had beginning, it would have to be the product of some event, which itself would have to have its own beginning and cause for it, and so on and so on. You always have to have something in order to get something.

    It is practically impossible to have "nothing" at any point, because that would mean we should have nothing today, but we do, therefore the only logical assumption to make is that.

  48. At least credit the source by justthinkit · · Score: 1

    Hawking (or earlier).

    --
    I come here for the love
    1. Re:At least credit the source by quenda · · Score: 2

      At least credit the source Hawking (or earlier).

      But for every equation or citation in my post, I lose half my audience.

  49. Infinity is much worse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the universe were infinitely old, then an infinite amount of time must have passed to get to this point. But infinite time by definition never ends, therefore we cannot he here.

    We are here now, so it cannot be infinitely long ago that time started.

  50. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  51. Re:Yes, because cosmic red shift is all in our hea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    News flash: The universe started just a few minutes ago. All those memories you have from years ago are bogus, they were just implanted into your brain within the last seconds.

  52. But it obviously happened. by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

    Or so all other evidence indicates. That said, is there any reason why what we call the "big bang" represents nothing more than an unmeasurable atemporal interval between otherwise quite mundane spatio-temporal domains? That would satisfy the condition of "eternal existence" and leave room for the big bang.

    In other words, big bang, followed by big crunch some xx billion years later. Rinse, lather and repeat.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  53. when your result shows infinity... by SchroedingersCat · · Score: 1

    ... this is when you know that your model does not work

  54. Re:Yes, because cosmic red shift is all in our hea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dammit, we sent Mr. Einstein explicit instructions.

    We will have to hit Ctrl Alt Delete Universe

    Hopefully on reboot Slashdot will get it. You are our hope for our own universe,

  55. Rubbish... by mschaffer · · Score: 1

    This is all rubbish. It makes no sense to ask when the universe "started" or came into being. Time is an artifact inside of the universe---not the other way around.

  56. Re:Actually, I wanted to aske the same question,bu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Entropy has a problem hasn't it? I mean it doesn't have a cause, it's just an effect, and the universe seems to get more organised over time rather than less. I mean we just started off with a few gravity waves and a bunch of schemozle, didn't we? Now look, us!

  57. Love it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The steady state universe, so now what is our excuse for destroying our planet since we can't say it was due to be swallowed by the singularity.

  58. Eternity is a long time by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1
    The idea that the Universe is infinitely old or has an infinite future is not a good one. Eternity is a very long time. Let's pretend that the universe we are in will last a Graham's Number of years. We will call Graham's Number "G". So the universe lasts for G years (note this is Way way way longer than even the most generous physics would presently allow, but this is for a point, here....) And let's say physical universes only happen G^G intervals, on average. Now, let's say that our universe is a typical universe and its conditions can be replicated every G^G^G years. Even at that enormous time distance, it's still chump change compared to Eternity. Therefore if there is eternity, I have typed this note an infinite number of times in the past and will type it again an infinite number times in the future.

    Clearly, that's a stupid idea. So, the notion of eternity is not a good one, as it leads to fucked up contradictions and bizarrities. For example, if the universe is infinite, and it does repeat periodically, then the repetition itself is periodic and is itself a repetition. So, if we have infinite time, time ceases to exist.

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
  59. Einstein had some doubt about an infinite universe by phrackthat · · Score: 2

    Einstein - Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.

  60. G-d by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, now something can simply exist from nothing that has no beginning and no end. Hmmm, this science is starting to sound vaguely religious. A G-d that is eternal with no beginning and no ending. Now it's scientifically possible. Interesting! ;-)

  61. I'd like to clear some things up, here ... by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

    ... but I just don't know where to begin.

  62. Re:Yes, because cosmic red shift is all in our hea by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

    A shame you posted this as AC because you're the only person on the entire page who mentions the Higgs field, which was proven by the LHC this creating the current Standardized Theory. It seems to me that if you to invent a graviton, then like the Higgs boson it would have to appear simultaneously in the entire known universe 10 -12 seconds after the big bang, same as the Higgs field, so why haven't we found it yet?

    Probably because the graviton doesn't exist. Gravity is a function of mass, that warps space, just as Einstein thought. Perhaps someone who does this sort of thing for a living could weigh in. I just find it extremely interesting.

    --
    Murphy was an optimist
  63. Aliens... Perfect Morality? God? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Disregarding all the maths... and ignoring the concerns about Entrophy, and all existing evidence of the universe expanding... The one key question that comes to my mind is a relatively simple one

    If the universe is has indeed existed essentially forever (and forever is a bloody long time) how do they explain the apparent absence of any significant evidence pointing towards the presence of extra-terrestrial, advanced life forms. Where are all the dyson sphere's and Jupiter-sized mining colonies? Or are you going to pull the 'advanced technology is essentially magic' card and go all Jupiter Ascending on us? Is Earth a permanent no-go zone?

    On the other hand, if the universe is essentially infinitely old, alien civilizations outside of Earth could have evolved over this long time-span to an effectively perfect Moral code, and could also have developed technology that would likely either allow them to escape reality, or become gods, or both.

    So maybe all your bible stories are actually true, but it was just a sufficiently advanced alien, playing God.

    Either way, falsifiable evidence is the only way forward. Creationists surely are going to hate/deny this infinitely old universe concept.

  64. Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation? by Rudisaurus · · Score: 1

    How does the cosmic background radiation -- Penzias/Wilson's discovery -- fit in with this new cosmological theory? I thought that was supposed to be significant supporting evidence for the Big Bang? Neither TFA nor TOFP says anything about it (although there is some speculation in the commentary which follows TFN).

    --
    licet differant, aequabitur
  65. "forever" by raorajesh · · Score: 1

    Universe existed "forever" - a solution to a set of equation systems conclude... Yeah okay. Why should I be impressed? Just because something that uses this universes' conception of "time" (controversially I would think) in the results to conclude "forever"? Well good luck with this "forever". I can almost hear other "forevers" laughing. Such articles just make me sulk.

  66. Where did the computational matrix come from? by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    As I see it, given the universe is probably a simulation (Edward Fredkin talks about this, among others), the issue is not where energy comes from, where the computational matrix came from. This assumes that is indeed a valid question, since philosophically the nature of consciousness may just assume computation or somehow be one with it.

    To understand my point, consider if you were to make a simulation of the Milky Way Galaxy colliding with Andromeda, like in this cool video:
    "GTC2012 Kepler GPU Demo: When Galaxies Collide "
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
    "In this video, Nvidia's Jen-Hsun Huang and Stephen Jones demonstrate the power of the new Kepler GPU. This astronomy simulation shows that the Milky Way galaxy will collide with the Andromeda galaxy in 4-5 Billion years from now."

    When writing the code, you would realize that the total amount of energy you put in the simulation is essentially arbitrary. You can set the kinetic energy of motion of all the individual simulated bits to whatever you wanted (up to the limits of how you store the numbers by flipping bits in silicon). The potential energy of gravitation or electromagnetism you create in the simulation is likewise essentially arbitrary, based on how you place the initial components and how you set gravitational constants and electromagnetic constants. Granted, there are consequences to how you set all those parameters, but that is a different design constraint based on aesthetics or purpose.

    So, from my viewpoint, it is quite possible that "energy" and "matter" are probably essentially arbitrary. Someone with control over low-level aspects of the simulation (maybe even humans, someday) could magic matter and energy into existence as easily as a banking computer could magic trillions of dollars into existence by flipping a few bits on a hard drive or computer memory or fiber optic messages somewhere. Granted, there are social consequences to such currency creations, and likely would also be some social consequences somewhere as well to magicking matter and energy. :-)

    But, that still leaves the question of where the computational matrix came from. Or, as is mentioned here, what implements the virtual turtles all the way down. :-)
    http://science.slashdot.org/co...
    https://mail.python.org/piperm...

    Still, as another Slashdot story or poster months or years ago said, there is a some finite probability infinity will create itself from absolute nothingness, given the lack of constraints in complete nothingness. So, that could explain it all in that sense. :-)

    Granted, my comments and musings on all this is perhaps just like a bacterium trying to make sense of what is happening while it is on the wing of a jetliner -- or no doubt the situation is even stranger. So, just some thoughts and possibilities. And of course, as other posters have said, or Iain Banks in "Excession", this is an "Out-of-context problem" which can not be that well addressed by typical scientific paradigms or rules of inquiry, since we are talking about things beyond the tiny circle of light cast by the comparatively feeble flickering of human mind and society, relative to a vast infinity of infinities and so on.

    Still, we don't fully understand the human mind or consciousness either, so who really knows what it is possible to understand or not understand. We don't even know how long "humans" in a sense "live", with life after life as a possibility (like if "life is but a dream" or a game or learning experience we will wake up from and go onto other experiences), and so on.

    Again, these all quickly become religious and philosophical questions -- but that does not mean they are not important or interesting. Although it does mean they are not that open to conve

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.