Eternal Universe - What Do You Think?

  • Thread starter Shadowmonk710
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Universe
In summary, the universe seems to be expanding and has been doing so for quite some time. It is still finite, but it can be made to be eternal if we and our descendents can combine competence with commitment.
  • #1
Shadowmonk710
8
0
Hi everyone,

I am just looking for opinions here! I want to know what all you peoples think about the universe we are a part of, is it Eternal or does it have a start and also an END?

Just curious...
 
Space news on Phys.org
  • #2
Hi Shadowmonk710 and welcome to these Forums!

Under the GR paradigm the universe definitely had a global singularity in the past, the Big Bang, which was a singularity for time as well as space.

However as that singularity is approached (in time reversal) there will come a point where QM effects become dominant.

There is no Quantum Gravity theory to date, although Loop Quantum Gravity is a promising candidate, and so we do not know what actually happens when [itex]t \rightarrow 0[/itex] as an alternative to the singularity. However it seems that there may be a 'bounce' from an earlier universe, i.e. an overwhelming repulsion that reverses a previous contraction or 'Big Crunch'.

One unknown is whether this universe will contract again and 'crunch', if it does not it seems peculiar that a previous cycle of oscillating universes should end in such a way and just peter out into an infinite 'nothingness'.

However, as the overall density of the present universe seems to be just above the critical density, the prediction of GR is that our universe may well crunch in about 1011 years time.

Other scenarios are presented by the Ekpyrotic Universe M-brane theory,

or the Quasi-steady state cosmology model, which has been criticised, see Ned Wright's page: Errors in the Steady State and Quasi-SS Models.

or the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self_creation_cosmology for example.

In the pure GR theory the universe has a once-for-all beginning at the Big Bang but in all these other theories, or in the Jordan frame of SCC, the greater universe is eternal.

I hope this helps...

Garth
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #3
Gravity unification closely related to EMS.

An idea I've developed pertaining to this question relates to a law of physics. If energy is neither created or destroyed, than how is universe created or destroyed? May it just evolve as does any life form? Are areas shaped or reformed in remote areas, expanding and contracting? Most occurences in nature do both!
I do however believe there is no such thing as nothing at all. Everything has a state or has properties regardless of if you cannot see a particular entity.
Very good question to ponder!
At least we are in a quiet part of the universe!
 
  • #4
Garth said:
However it seems that there may be a 'bounce' from an earlier universe, i.e. an overwhelming repulsion that reverses a previous contraction or 'Big Crunch'.
In what way does "it" seem so? Or are you simply just speculating?
I thought the "oscillating universe" had big troubles with for example creating the element abundances we observe.

However, as the overall density of the present universe seems to be just above the critical density, the prediction of GR is that our universe may well crunch in about 1011 years time.
The mainstream opinion is that a significant part of the total energy density is made up by a cosmological constant (or something similar with w~-1), and hence predicts an ever expanding universe.
 
Last edited:
  • #5
Garth said:
However, as the overall density of the present universe seems to be just above the critical density, the prediction of GR is that our universe may well crunch in about 1011 years time.

Measurements aren't pointing to a super-critical density at the moment. Even if they were, the generic [itex]\Lambda[/itex]CDM model still predicts CC dominance at late times. It's hard to say anything about the far future of the universe because there could be hidden energy components that are too weak to measure now. Also, since we don't know the dark energy equation of state, we can't say how it will behave down the line. These uncertainties would remain regardless of whether the density were critical or barely supercritical.
 
  • #6
Shadowmonk710 said:
Hi everyone,

I am just looking for opinions here! I want to know what all you peoples think about the universe we are a part of, is it Eternal or does it have a start and also an END?

Science, bye-in-large is saying "finite".

Philosophy and
Religion, bye-in-large are saying "eternal".

I would say it is presently finite, but it can be made to be eternal, if we and our descendents can combine competence with commitment and "make it so".
aguy2
 
  • #7
Hi Shadowmonk710.

Consider that when I look at a star at night the Earth is rotating but I can still see the star continuously. That means that the star is radiating an energy wave of a very wide range of frequencies in all directions. It also means that all stars in all galaxys are doing the same. The energy wave even can be detected by Hubble from galaxys billions of light years away. That light passed all the matter and galaxys between there and here and still got here and the majority continued on it's journey past Earth. Collective, over 13.5 billion years, that is a lot of energy that just went that-a-way, not counting the loss in the future billions of years. If there was a big bang in the past is if possible that the next collapse will not cause another one because of the down-grade of energy content occurring. (I don't think anyone has detected a return of this energy, just a bounce of the amount that ran into matter along the way and got reflected in another direction, etc.)

In addition to that, it appears that the only thing that generally occurs in our universe is that one galaxy runs into another and makes a larger galaxy. As time goes by we should wind up with some pretty large galaxies. These will probably just become "collector" galaxies, collecting all the other galaxies until there is only one. With one very huge galaxy (with maybe a few little ones avoiding the process), the concentration of stars rotating around the center (like the eye of a hurricane) may reach a critical mass of some type and explode back into a large cloud of matter to start the process all over again. Maybe this is what the big bang actually is. If so then there has probably been billions or even trillions of big bangs.

Sunblock
 
  • #8
Yes thank you EL & SpaceTiger, perhaps I should have emphasised the may in:
However, as the overall density of the present universe seems to be just above the critical density, the prediction of GR is that our universe may well crunch

We do not know what DE will do in the future and the observed density in the mainstream model is so close to the critical density that it is still too close to call, I was just playing devil's advocate anyway!

There always has been an entropy problem with the oscillating universe, which cannot be resolved until a QG theory actually describes what was going on at the BB singularity.

My
there may be a 'bounce' from an earlier universe,
was only reflecting the speculation from string theory such as discussed in the "Beyond the Standard Model" Forum Latent QG and the Quantum Nature of the Big Bang.

Garth
 
  • #9
Garth said:
We do not know what DE will do in the future and the observed density in the mainstream model is so close to the critical density that it is still too close to call, I was just playing devil's advocate anyway!

My point was that it doesn't matter, for this purpose, whether the universe is critical or barely supercritical. Either way, the far future is beyond our current abilities to predict. Yes, the universe could recollapse, but at this point we can't determine one way or the other from the data.
 
  • #10
Eternal , or start and end?

Shadowmonk710 said:
I am just looking for opinions here! I want to know what all you peoples think about the universe we are a part of, is it Eternal or does it have a start and also an END?

I suppose that here the term Universe is meant in its mos general sense (including multivers etc).
- Only when there are possibilities to go from high to low entropy then it will never die and will not have met the nescessity to be created.
- Intuitively I feel that in this Universe there must be processes which will convey from high entropy/ (low specialness) to low entropy (high specialness). Only this stems with the impossibility of nothingness and rules out "a God of the gaps".
So far we only see the entropy in our observable universe increasing and my arguments do not stand on firm physical grounds, but I find it better to accept an autonomous ever (changing) existing reality then helping myself with ununderstandable notions like begin and end and trying to devellop physical models for these which will never be the (never understandable) autonomous reality.
 
  • #11
It ain't easy to think outside the box! It could be this physical universe is like a bubble-one of gazillions-in which case it has a physical beginning but maybe for practical purposes it doesn't matter because it will come to an end due to expansion and the death of all. Then you jump to- flobt- higher dimensional universes-from which this one could owe it's beginning. The question arises because of our lack of ability to understand-our conditioned concepts-the box.
 
  • #12
"There always has been an entropy problem with the oscillating universe, which cannot be resolved until a QG theory actually describes what was going on at the BB singularity."

- the bb singularity, and what about Hawking imaginary time then? doesn't it remove the singularity problem?
 
  • #13
Shadowmonk710 said:
Hi everyone,
I am just looking for opinions here! I want to know what all you peoples think about the universe we are a part of, is it Eternal or does ...?

Garth said:
...
Under the GR paradigm the universe definitely had a global singularity in the past, the Big Bang, which was a singularity for time as well as space.

However as that singularity is approached (in time reversal) there will come a point where QM effects become dominant.

There is no Quantum Gravity theory to date, although Loop Quantum Gravity is a promising candidate, and so we do not know what actually happens when [itex]t \rightarrow 0[/itex] as an alternative to the singularity. However it seems that there may be a 'bounce' from an earlier universe, i.e. an overwhelming repulsion that reverses a previous contraction...

This thread was resurrected from 2006, four years ago.

It asks about Eternal universe models. In fact there are several eternal universe models that are currently being studied---the research area is called "quantum cosmology".

One way to find out about current work is to scan the titles and read some of the abstracts summarizing recent technical papers.
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/spires/find/hep/www?rawcmd=dk+quantum+cosmology+and+date%3E2005&FORMAT=WWW&SEQUENCE=citecount%28d%29
Some research papers listed here may have portions (of the firstpage introduction and lastpage conclusions section) which are accessible and non-technical. Others do not. Almost everything listed here is free for download--just click on "abstract" to see a summary and if you like the summary click on PDF.

Another way would be to go for a semi-popular book compiled for non-specialists like this:
http://www.springer.com/astronomy/general+relativity/book/978-3-540-71422-4
Beyond the Big Bang: Competing Scenarios for an Eternal Universe.
Advance draft copies have already been reviewed. The book gathers chapters by experts who are proponents of the different schemes that are currently being considered. It is intended for general audience.

Some of the ideas that used to be considered interesting, say back in the 1980s and 1990s are not pretty much neglected by researchers. There are plenty of models where the U. is eternal. And where the classical singularity (arising when vintage 1915 General Rel is used) is resolved. But the models currently under active study may not be those which come to mind if you learned about the subject from books written a few years back.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #14
Shadowmonk710 said:
I want to know what all you peoples think about the universe we are a part of, is it Eternal or does it have a start and also an END?

You may find this interesting, recorded Feb 2008: by http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burt_Ovrut" " yesterday. Click the Daily Galaxy link in this link and then scroll to watch the TED video. For some reason I tried to find it on the real TED site and could not. Their display is much better.

The meat of the presentation happens here:

6:00 begin​
8:15 Big Bang discussion​
9:00 - 10:00 Endless Universe discussion​

wb84rk.jpg


From the article:
String theorists Neil Turok of Cambridge University and Paul Steinhardt, Albert Einstein Professor in Science and Director of the Princeton Center for Theoretical Science at Princeton believe that the cosmos we live in was actually created by the cyclical trillion-year collision of two universes (which they define as three-dimensional branes plus time) that were attracted toward each other by the leaking of gravity out of one of the universes.

In their view of the universe the complexities of an inflating universe after a Big Bang are replaced by a universe that was already large. flat, and uniform with dark energy as the effect of the other universe constantly leaking gravity into our own and driving its acceleration. According to this theory, the Big Bang was not the beginning of time but the bridge to a past filled with endlessly repeating cycles of evolution, each accompanied by the creation of new matter and the formation of new galaxies, stars, and planets.


Turok and Steinhardt were inspired by a lecture given by Burt Ovrut who imagined two branes, universes like ours, separated by a tiny gap as tiny as 10-32 meters. There would be no communictaion between the two universes except for our parallel sister universe's gravitational pull, which could cross the tiny gap.

Orvut's theory could explain the effect of dark matter where areas of the universe are heavier than they should be given everything that's present. With their theory, the nagging problems surrounding the Big Bang (beginning from what, and caused how?) are replaced by an eternal cosmic cycle where dark energy is no longer a mysterious unknown quantity, but rather the very extra gravitational force that drives the universe to universe (brane-brane) interaction.

Casey Kazan

In essence Orvut suggests we live in an endless Universe... separated by brane collision events...

I don't think the serious mainstream physics community takes it too seriously. But you may enjoy the video.

Rhody...
 
Last edited by a moderator:

1. What is the theory of the Eternal Universe?

The theory of the Eternal Universe proposes that the universe has always existed and will continue to exist for eternity. This is in contrast to the Big Bang theory, which suggests that the universe had a beginning and will eventually end.

2. What evidence supports the idea of an Eternal Universe?

There is currently no direct evidence to support the idea of an Eternal Universe. However, some scientists argue that the laws of physics, such as the law of conservation of energy, suggest that the universe cannot be created or destroyed. Additionally, the observation of cosmic microwave background radiation, which is thought to be leftover radiation from the Big Bang, has shown a more uniform distribution than expected, which some scientists interpret as evidence for an eternal, steady-state universe.

3. How does the concept of an Eternal Universe differ from the Big Bang theory?

The Big Bang theory proposes that the universe began as a singularity and has been expanding and evolving ever since. On the other hand, the Eternal Universe theory suggests that the universe has always existed and will continue to exist without change.

4. What are the main criticisms of the idea of an Eternal Universe?

One of the main criticisms of the Eternal Universe theory is that it goes against the current understanding of the laws of physics and the observed expansion of the universe. In addition, the lack of evidence for an eternal, steady-state universe is a major criticism.

5. How does the concept of an Eternal Universe impact our understanding of the origin of the universe?

If the idea of an Eternal Universe is true, it would mean that the universe has no specific beginning or end, which challenges the traditional understanding of the origin of the universe. It would also raise questions about the role of a creator or a cause for the universe's existence.

Similar threads

  • Cosmology
Replies
11
Views
1K
  • Cosmology
Replies
8
Views
1K
Replies
5
Views
1K
Replies
2
Views
1K
  • Cosmology
Replies
5
Views
1K
Replies
22
Views
3K
Replies
16
Views
2K
  • Cosmology
Replies
11
Views
1K
  • Cosmology
Replies
30
Views
2K
Back
Top