Thursday, April 26, 2012

Endless Universe Chapter Three

Two Tales of One Universe

It was the best of the times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredibility, it was the season of Light, it ws the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.
-          Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities

For cosmologists, this is the best of times. Since the beginning of the 1990s, progress in the field has been phenomenal. One successful experiment after another has been performed that has enhanced our knowledge of the universe, making it possible to test competing views of its history. As a result, many ideas have fallen by the wayside.

In 1996, at an international meeting held at Princeton to discuss the long-term future of cosmology, many different models were still in play. Three years later, only the inflationary model, with the addition of dark energy, remained viable.

When the WMAP image appeared four years later, in 2003, cosmologists worldwide breathed a collective sigh of relief that the new findings were consistent with the sole surviving model. Astrophysicist John Bahcall, giving the concluding remarks at the WMAP press conference, accurately expressed the prevailing attitude: “The most revolutionary result obtained [from the WMAP image] is that there are no revolutionary results. WMAP has confirmed with exquisite precision the crazy and unlikely scenario that astronomers and physicists cooked up based upon the incomplete evidence.”

Bahcall described the inflationary model as “Crazy and un-likely” because the current version is a patch work quilt sewn together from disparate ideas added over the previous two decades, plus the assumption of a particular, odd mixture of ordinary matter, dark matter, and dark energy. “Incredibly, everybody got it essentially right”, he said, expressing a widely held view that since the inflationary model was the last surviving model, it must be correct.

At the time of WMAP announcement, the cyclic model was still new and unfamiliar. Bahcall and other Astrophysicists were used to comparing models that incorporated small variations on the basic inflationary model, differing in only one or two details. But the cyclic model is entirely different. It turns cosmic history upside down and introduces numerous novel and surprising elements at once. Some new elements come from fundamental physics, some from general relativity, and some from cosmology.


 As the cyclic model has developed and its principles have become better known, astrophysicists and physicists have begun to pay close attention. But in 2003 neither Bahcall nor most other astrophysicists were aware that the WMAP’s exquisite confirmation of the inflationary predictions was simultaneously an equally exquisite confirmation of the cyclic picture.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Endless Universe Chapter Two

"You can't make a man unsee what he has seen"
                --Bertolt Bercht, The Life of Galileo

        The history of the universe can be compared to a play in which the actors- matter and radiation, stars and galaxies - dance across the cosmic stage according to a script set by the laws of physics. The challenge for the cosmologist is to figure out the story line after arriving at the show 14 billion years too late, long past the crucial opening scenes.

        Observations of nearby galaxies and stars provide an accurate picture of the present scene. By gathering light emitted long ago from more distant objects and applying the physical principles learned and tested on Earth, astronomers have been able to reconstruct more and more of what happened in the past. The epoch [ Act Two] which began just one-second after the big bang and continues to the present day, is the period of cosmic history that is best understood. During this nearly 14-billion-year span, the universe expanded more than a billion times in size, and the hot primordial gas that filled the infant universe cooled to less than a billionth of its initial temperature, condensing into structures of increasing mass and complexity, the first planets, stars, galaxies, galaxy clusters and super clusters.

        One might imagine that, armed with this detailed knowledge of Act two, scientists could straightforwardly determine what happened before or what will happen next. The big surprise is that this is not the case. The inflationary and cyclic models both incorporate Act Two, but they sandwich it between completely different first and third acts. In the case of cyclic model, Act Three is not even the final act: the plot eventually leads to a new Act One, in which the story begins all over again. To appreciate how two radically different views of the history of the universe can both be consistent with the plethora of observations available today, one must first understand what is known and what is not known about the Act two.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Endless Universe

There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened!
                 --Douglas Adams, The Restaurant at the End of Universe.

        Theories of the universe have abounded throughout human history, but the last fifty years have been exceptional. A single theory, the hot Big Bang picture, has dominated scientific and public discourse and has even become part of the standard curriculum for school children. Its central tenet, the idea that the Universe emerged from a very hot, dense state 14 billion years ago and has been expanding and cooling ever since, has been firmly established through many independent measurements. But nearly every other feature of the theory has had to be modified. One ingredient after another -"dark matter", "inflation", "dark energy"- has been added and separately adjusted to fit the observations, and each of these adjustments has critically altered our conception of the history of Universe. Even so, the picture remains far from complete.

        The Big Bang is conjectured to be the beginning of Space and Time, but there is no clue as to how or why the Big Bang occurred. Nor is there a firm prediction about the future of the Universe. Most cosmologists do not consider these flaws to be worrisome. They think that the theory will ultimately be simplified and made more complete. And perhaps they are right, Douglas Adam's joke not withstanding.

        There is a new theory of the Universe according to which our cosmic history consists of repeating cycles of evolution. Each cycle Begins with a Bang, but the bang is not the beginning of space and time. Rather, it is an event with a "Before" and an "After" that can be described by the laws of physics. Each cycle influences the next. The events that occurred before the last bang shaped the large-scale structure of the universe observed today, and the events that are occurring today will determine the structure of the universe in the cycle to come. Perhaps space and time sprang into being many cycles ago, but it is also possible that they are literally "endless".

Saturday, August 15, 2009

UNICODE

Welcome to this blog.
First and foremost i wish to make it loud and clear that i do not claim any kind of ownersship or liabilty to the correctness or any other issues related to the information presented to you here .
Though i accept that PLAGIARISM is bad, I cannot help it since 'm a student still and my sources of information are books and the Web.So let me be excused for violation of copy rights(If any arise).

Did you ever get an email from your friends with the subject line "??>>.../##!``~~**__*(&-" ?
Use the View/Encoding menu and try a bunch of different encodings until the picture comes in clearer.
If you have a string, in memory, in a file, or in an e-mail message, you have to know what encoding it is in or you cannot interpret it or display it correctly or even figure out where it ends.
when you use the internet to transfer documents electronically as e-mail messages,e-mail attachments or Web pages, or if you start reading documents from any othercountry, particularly from a country with a different language(alphabet), the limitations of encoding systems like ASCII,EBCDIC become apparent. The data always runs the risk of being corroupted --some of the letters might not show up! Or you usually get a little question mark or a box . There are similar problems when moving documents between operating systems such as DOS, Windows, Mac OS and UNIX.