A Man of Honor, Who thinks 3-step ahead
2 Weeks Before Death, Hawking Submitted
a Mind-Melting Paper on Parallel Universes
It's titled "A Smooth Exit from Eternal
Inflation".
Stephen Hawking submitted the final version of
his last scientific paper just two weeks before he died, and it lays the
theoretical groundwork for discovering a parallel universe.
Hawking, who passed away on Wednesday aged 76,
was co-author to a mathematical paper which seeks proof of the
"multiverse" theory, which posits the existence of many universes
other than our own.
The paper, called "A Smooth Exit from Eternal
Inflation", had its latest revisions approved on March 4, ten days before
Hawking's death.
According to The
Sunday Times newspaper, the paper is due to be published by an
unnamed "leading journal" after a review is complete.
ArXiv.org, Cornell University website which
tracks scientific papers before they are published, has a record of the paper including the March 2018 update.
According to The Sunday Times, the
contents of the paper sets out the mathematics necessary for a deep-space probe
to collect evidence which might prove that other universes exist.
The highly theoretical work posits that evidence
of the multiverse should be measurable in background radiation dating to the
beginning of time. This in turn could be measured by a deep-space probe with
the right sensors on-board.
Thomas Hertog, a physics professor who
co-authored the paper with Hawking, said the paper aimed "to transform the
idea of a multiverse into a testable scientific framework."
Hertog, who works at KU Leuven University in
Belgium, told The Sunday Times he met with Hawking in person
to get final approval before submitting the paper.
The newspaper said that if such proof is ever
found it would make the scientists behind it likely candidates for a Nobel
Prize.
However, since Nobel Prizes cannot be awarded posthumously, Hawking would be ineligible to receive it
Stephen Hawking's Final Theory About Our Universe Has
Just Been Published, And It Will Melt Your Brain
His final word on whether multiverses exist.
MICHELLE
STARR
2
MAY 2018
Groundbreaking physicist Stephen
Hawking left us one last shimmering piece of brilliance before he died: his
final paper, detailing his last theory on the origin of the universe, co-authored with Thomas
Hertog from KU Leuven.
The paper, published today in the Journal of High Energy Physics,
puts forward that the Universe is far less complex than current multiverse
theories suggest.
It's based around a concept called
eternal inflation, first introduced in 1979 and published in 1981
After the Big Bang, the Universe
experienced a period of exponential inflation. Then it slowed down, and the
energy converted into matter and radiation.
However, according to the theory of
eternal inflation, some bubbles of space stopped inflating or slowed on a
stopping trajectory, creating a small fractal dead-end of static space.
Meanwhile, in other bubbles of space,
because of quantum effects, inflation never stops - leading to an infinite number
of multiverses.
Everything we see in our observable
Universe, according to this theory, is contained in just one of these bubbles -
in which inflation has stopped, allowing for the formation of stars and
galaxies.
"The usual theory of eternal
inflation predicts that globally our universe is like an infinite fractal, with
a mosaic of different pocket universes, separated by an inflating
ocean," Hawking
explained.
"The local laws of physics and
chemistry can differ from one pocket universe to another, which together would
form a multiverse. But I have never been a fan of the multiverse. If the scale
of different universes in the multiverse is large or infinite the theory can't
be tested."
Even one of the original architects of
the eternal inflation model has disavowed it in recent years.
Paul Steinhardt, physicist at Princeton
University, has gone
on record saying that the theory took the problem it was meant to
solve - to make the Universe, well, universally consistent with our
observations - and just shifted it onto a new model.
Hawking and Hertog are now saying that
the eternal inflation model is wrong. This is because Einstein's theory of
general relativity breaks
down on quantum scales.
"The problem with the usual
account of eternal inflation is that it assumes an existing background universe
that evolves according to Einstein's theory of general relativity and treats
the quantum effects as small fluctuations around this," Hertog explained.
"However, the dynamics of eternal
inflation wipes out the separation between classical and quantum physics. As a
consequence, Einstein's theory breaks down in eternal inflation."
The new theory is based on string
theory, one of the frameworks that attempts to reconcile general
relativity with quantum theory by replacing the point-like particles in
particle physics with tiny, vibrating one-dimensional strings.
In string theory, the holographic
principle proposes that a volume of space can be described on a
lower-dimensional boundary; so the universe is like a hologram, in which
physical reality in 3D spaces can be mathematically reduced to 2D projections
on their surfaces.
The researchers developed a variation
of the holographic principle that projects the time dimension in eternal
inflation, which allowed them to describe the concept without having to rely on
general relativity.
This then allowed them to
mathematically reduce eternal inflation to a timeless state on a spatial
surface at the beginning of the Universe - a hologram of eternal inflation.
"When we trace the evolution of
our universe backwards in time, at some point we arrive at the threshold of
eternal inflation, where our familiar notion of time ceases to have any
meaning," said
Hertog.
In 1983, Hawking and another
researcher, physicist James Hartle, proposed what is known as the 'no
boundary theory' or the 'Hartle-Hawking state'. They proposed that, prior to
the Big Bang, there was space, but no time. So the Universe, when it began,
expanded from a single point, but doesn't have a boundary.
According to the new theory, the early
Universe did have a boundary, and that's allowed Hawking and Hertog to derive
more reliable predictions about the structure of the Universe.
"We predict that our universe, on
the largest scales, is reasonably smooth and globally finite. So it is not a
fractal structure," Hawking
said.
It's a result that doesn't disprove
multiverses, but reduces them to a much smaller range - which means that
multiverse theory may be easier to test in the future, if the work can be
replicated and confirmed by other physicists.
Hertog plans to test it by looking for
gravitational waves that could have been generated by eternal inflation.
These waves are too large to be
detected by LIGO, but future gravitational wave interferometers such as
space-based LISA,
and future studies of the cosmic microwave background, may reveal them.
The team's research has been published
in the Journal
of High Energy Physics, and can be read in full on arXiv.
Good luck.
Published by Aditya Mukherjee


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