Siobhan Roberts, "A cosmic crisis" (2004)
"Globe and Mail" POSTED AT 8:57 AM EDT Saturday, Jul 10, 2004.
A cosmic crisis
Does the universe look like a soccer ball? Or is it flat and infinite
in size? If we don't find out soon, we may never know. SIOBHAN
ROBERTS reports on the latest hypothesis
By SIOBHAN ROBERTS
"Globe and Mail"
POSTED AT 8:57 AM EDT Saturday, Jul 10, 2004
It used to be that, once a decade or so, scientists asked, ''What is
the shape of the universe?'' A hypothesis would arise — for example,
that the universe was flat and infinite — followed by a spurt of
research, and that was enough to last us a while on the space-time
odometer.
Since the early 1990s, however, cosmology is where much of the
exciting science has been happening. "We've been looking for the shape
of the universe like Columbus did the shape of the Earth," says Glenn
Starkman, an astrophysicist currently based at the Conseil Européen
pour la recherche nucléaire (CERN) in Geneva — the home of the
world's largest particle physics laboratory and essentially the centre
of the universe for determining the content of the cosmos when it was
a trillionth of a second old.
But Dr. Starkman, having cut his teeth at the Canadian Institute for
Theoretical Astrophysics at the University of Toronto, is more
concerned with the large-scale properties of the universe. He focuses
his research on the general topology and shape of the cosmos (his
regular gig is as a professor at Case Western Reserve University in
Cleveland).
The "crisis" in cosmology these days, according to Dr. Starkman,
speaking only somewhat with tongue in cheek, is that time is running
out. "If we don't figure out the shape of the universe soon," he says,
"the universe will hide this secret from us forever."
This is because the research depends on data salvaged from the
microwave background, the echoes of the Big Bang that created the
universe in the first place.
And as Dr. Starkman explains, "Today, the place from which the echoes
come to us is moving away from us faster than the speed of light,
which means we can't receive light from that place any more — we
can no longer see or learn about that place, never mind any farther
away.
"We have enough data now to be able to determine the shape of the
universe if the shortest distance around the universe is less than the
distance across the microwave sphere of the Big Bang. But we do not
have enough data if the universe is any bigger," he says, getting a
tad more technical.
Max Tegmark, an astrophysicist and professor at the University of
Pennsylvania, likens it to trying to figure out the shape of the Earth
if you're not able to see beyond the walls of your bedroom. "Nature
has a censorship where we can only see so far," Dr. Tegmark says. "We
can't see anything from farther than 14 billion light-years. This
limits us in what we can see and what data we can gather."
"The only way we'll have enough data," Dr. Starkman says, "is if the
universe stops behaving as it is now. It might stop its accelerated
expansion, but probably not for many billion years, which doesn't help
us much."
Aside from finding a solution to this problem — what to do when we can
no longer receive the data — Dr. Starkman is also involved in testing
the latest prediction for the shape of the universe (based on that
microwave information).
It was put forth by four Parisian cosmologists and one American
"freelance" geometer (the spokesman for the group), Jeff Weeks from
Canton, N.Y. Dr. Weeks, a 1999 recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship,
known as the "genius prize," and his team proposed that the universe is
in the shape of a 12-sided figure called a dodecahedron.
Greek philosopher Plato guessed nearly 2,400 years ago that the
universe was structured like a dodecahedron.
The Greeks had recently discovered that there were only five regular
polyhedra: the cube, octahedron, tetrahedron, icosahedron and
dodecahedron. Plato, who believed that the properties of matter could
best be understood in terms of mathematical symmetries, assigned the
first four solids to the elements earth, air, fire and water,
respectively, and then proclaimed that the dodecahedron was the shape
of the cosmos itself.
Also in ancient Greece, using bare-hands science and the power of
their imaginations, philosophers Leucippus and Democritus had
differing ideas; they envisaged an infinite universe.
Aristotle thought that it was a finite ball, with the Earth at the
centre. His view prevailed and went mostly unchallenged in Western
society for almost 2,000 years, until the invention of the telescope
by Galileo in 1608.
In 1917, when Albert Einstein applied his geometrical theory of
relativity to the questions of cosmology, he recycled a three-sphere
scenario previously posited by German mathematician Bernhard
Riemann.
All hypotheses, dating from ancient times to today, remain
contentious. But technological advances over the past decade have
increased our chances of actually finding an answer to this age-old
question — that is, of course, if we manage it in time.
Currently, there are three models considered contenders: a spherical
universe, a hyperbolic saddle-shaped universe and the standard and
most widely accepted model, a flat universe, expanding infinitely
under the pressure of an ominous and as yet inexplicable "dark
energy."
Things looked hopeful for the dodecahedron hypothesis when its
computer-generated model was compared to reality — that is, the data
from NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe. The WMAP was sent to
map the cosmic echo of the Big Bang and provide information about its
early history and scale.
One particularly useful indicator of universe topology is the
temperature fluctuations of radiation emanating from the originating
bang.
Cosmology 101
There are three main possibilities for the shape of the universe
Sphere
A spherical universe has positive curvature: It is finite in size, but
without boundaries, like a balloon.
In a so-called closed universe, you could, in principle, fly a
spaceship in one direction and eventually get back to where you
started from. A closed universe is also closed in time: It eventually
stops expanding, then contracts in a "Big Crunch." In such a
universe, parallel lines eventually converge (e.g. longitudinal
lines are parallel at the equator, but converge at the poles) and
large triangles have more than 180 degrees.
Flat
You can imagine this kind of universe by cutting out a piece of
balloon material and stretching it with your hands. The surface of the
material is flat, not curved, but you can expand and contract it by
tugging on either end. A flat universe is infinite in size, and
has no boundaries. In such a universe, parallel lines are always
parallel and triangles always have 180 degrees. A flat
universe expands forever, but the expansion rate approaches zero.
Saddle
Such a universe has negative curvature: It is infinite and
unbounded. In a so-called open universe, parallel lines
eventually diverge, and triangles have less than 180 degrees. An
open universe expands forever, with the expansion rate never
approaching zero.
Staff
In an article in Nature magazine, Dr. Weeks and the other members of
his team — Jean-Pierre Luminet of the Paris Observatory, Roland
Lehoucq of the Paris Observatory and CEA/Saclay (Atomic Energy
Research Centre), Alain Riazuelo of CEA/Saclay and Jean-Philippe Uzan
of the University of Paris — explained these fluctuations by comparing
them with the sound waves of musical harmonics.
"A musical note is the sum of a fundamental, a second harmonic, a
third harmonic, and so on," the group's article said. "The relative
strengths of the harmonics — the note's spectrum — determines the tone
quality, distinguishing, say, a sustained middle C played on a flute
from the same note played on a clarinet.
"Analogously, the temperature map on the microwave sky is the sum of
spherical harmonics. The relative strength of the harmonics — the
power spectrum — is a signature of the physics and geometry of the
universe."
When the WMAP data arrived in February, 2003, it confirmed the popular
infinite-flat model of the universe, but only in part. All the small
and medium-sized temperature waves were present as predicted, but the
model's broad wavelengths, which would have to exist in such a large
and infinite universe, were much weaker than expected.
One explanation, Dr. Weeks says, is that space simply isn't that big
and thus could never produce such strong large waves in the first
place. "A violin is never going to play the low notes of a cello
because a violin's strings aren't long enough to support such a long
sound wave," he says. "It's the same with the universe. Its waves
cannot be larger than space itself."
However, the behaviour Dr. Weeks predicted for a dodecahedral universe
matched all the WMAP data. The model, nonetheless, is still in limbo.
It is being subjected, by Dr. Starkman and an international medley of
cosmologists, to a "circles-in-the-sky test (the rest of the team is
Neil Cornish, an Australian currently at Montana State but who did his
PhD at the University of Toronto, David Spergel at Princeton
University and Eiichiro Komatsu at the University of Texas at
Austin).
If the dodecahedron model is correct, a computer-coded search should
be able to detect six pairs of matching circles across the cosmic
horizon — echoes from the Big Bang vibrating against the 12 faces of
the dodecahedron universe.
"As much as I love the dodecahedron model," Dr. Tegmark says, "I'm not
putting my money on it. Don't get me wrong, I don't have a bias
against the dodecahedron. It's a beautiful idea, it's the cutest
Platonic solid — the cube and the octahedron are a little more
pedestrian.
"The most amazing thing of all is that we humans can address these
questions in a scientific way; that these philosophical questions —
like, Is space infinite? -- have become scientific questions."
Though, the end result of these philosophical questions that now have
scientific answers — the so-what? factor — is still philosophical.
That is, the answers mainly just serve to satisfy the age-old and
innate human curiosity, our egocentric pondering about our local place
in universal scheme of existence. There is always the chance, of
course, that the scientific answers will lead to more scientific
questions, and then potentially more answers, but these subsequent
questions and answers are in areas of science that are essentially
unfathomable before we find the initial answers.
Unfortunately, the scientific data does not seem to be there
supporting the dodecahedron, and thus, it has not yet been accepted as
an answer. So far, for example, Dr. Starkman and the team have found
no circles (they calculate that the universe can be no smaller than 78
billion light-years across, while the dodecahedron idea means the
universe measures just 60 billion light-years).
"And it's not just that we haven't found any circles yet," Dr.
Starkman says. "It's that we've looked, and shown that the circles
that should be there — if the universe is a dodecahedron of the size
that Weeks and company said it was — are definitively not there. And
they are not hiding behind the galaxy."
But Dr. Weeks and his team are holding out hope. They speculate that
one explanation for the missing circles is galactic contamination —
dust and hot electrons getting in the way of the WMAP data.
His team is also exploring other options, such as the possibility of a
universe that is finite in some directions and infinite in others. "We
don't want to ignore other possibilities," Dr. Weeks says. "But
personally, I'm not quite ready to declare the circles missing."
One last-ditch possibility, according to a more recent discovery that
Dr. Starkman is involved with (with another international cluster
of cosmologists), is that there is something odd going on, perhaps
a miscalculation, with the WMAP microwave data and its analysis.
The anomaly was that those weaker-than-expected broad-scale
fluctuations on the microwave sky align with themselves in strange
ways, and — still more outrageously — they seem to align with the
ecliptic plane, or the plane of the solar system. This just shouldn't
be. What goes on in deep space and the distant past should not be
affected by the path the planets follow around the sun.
"It's a mystery," Dr. Starkman says. "There seems to be something, I
hesitate to say wrong, but very odd about what's been measured, which
if it is a reflection of the universe, is inconsistent with our
present understanding."
He stumbled upon this anomaly when he was trying to figure out a way
to determine the shape of the universe if it is too big for circles to
be seen.
Which seems to indicate that while the shape of the universe may or
may not be finite and dodecahedral, the search for the shape of the
universe is most definitely circuitous, the astrophysicist chasing our
cosmic tail to infinity.
Siobhan Roberts is a freelance writer based in Toronto.
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