How Much Info for Building a Universe?

In summary: Universe.There is a Conservation of Information Law in the Universe.In summary, John Baez partnered with Dan Christensen (U of W. Ontario) on some QG simulations, but it was on a large computer. Renate Loll and Jan Ambjorn did some simulations and one of their 2007 articles had a title like "The Emergence of Space-Time: Quantum Gravity on Your Desktop." If I remember right, the Nobel laureate George Smoot has a 2009 paper where he and coauthor(s) estimate the area of the cosmological event horizon, and estimate the entropy of the universe contained within that spherical horizon.
  • #1
wolram
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How many bits of information are needed to build a universe, I think J Baez ran simulations on an ordinary desk top, sorry i may be wrong, but any way how much information would be needed?
 
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  • #2
wolram said:
How many bits of information are needed to build a universe, I think J Baez ran simulations on an ordinary desk top, sorry i may be wrong, but any way how much information would be needed?

Or asked a different way, what is the information content of the universe? Some wonder if there isn't a conservation of information law in the universe so that complexity is balanced by chaos for the universe as a whole.
 
  • #3
John Baez partnered with Dan Christensen (U of W. Ontario) on some QG simuilations, but it was on a large computer.

Renate Loll and Jan Ambjorn did some simulations and one of their 2007 articles had a title like
"The Emergence of Space-Time: Quantum Gravity on Your Desktop"

If I remember right, the Nobel laureate George Smoot has a 2009 paper where he and coauthor(s) estimate the area of the cosmological event horizon, and estimate the entropy of the universe contained within that spherical horizon. I've vague on that, only a slight memory of the paper. Maybe I can find a link and someone else can read/interpret.

http://arxiv.org/abs/1003.1528
see equation (8) on page 4 and further discussion on page 5 which talks about the number of bits. This might help. I don't want to try to interpret. Too speculative for me.
 
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  • #4
The sort of simulations in CDT are meant not rigourous. They discretize spacetime. The hope is that as the discretization is made finer and finer, the qualitative features won't change, indicating some robust feature of the continuum. At present, CDT's discretization is only on the order of the Planck length, so they are now running simulations which are trying to be quite a bit finer.
 
  • #5
atyy said:
... so they are now running simulations which are trying to be quite a bit finer.

Do you have recent news to that effect?

I know at one point they were trying to force the model to zoom in further, but this encounters serious obstacles, described in their 2009 writeup of their 2008 lectures. There recent papers have been about other stuff, as if that initiative is now on the back burner.

Please share if you have any current indications.
 
  • #6
p62 of http://arxiv.org/abs/0906.3947

"We have also indicated how we may be able to penetrate into the sub-Planckian regime by suitably changing the bare coupling constants. By “sub-Planckian regime” we mean that the lattice spacing a is (much) smaller than the Planck length. While we have not yet analyzed this region in detail, we expect to eventually observe a breakdown of the semi-classical approximation. This will hopefully allow us to make contact with continuum attempts to define a theory of quantum gravity based on quantum field theory."
 
  • #7
atyy said:

Atyy, we both saw that. I was asking if you had any recent indications.
That paper is a writeup of lectures given 3 years ago.
" lectures given at the summer school 'New Paths Towards Quantum Gravity', May 12-16 2008. "

Since they posted the June 2009 writeup, Loll and friends have posted a half dozen other papers about their current research and I haven't seen anything about transplanckian sims.

That's why I asked if you had any recent information to back up what you said about current work:
"so they are now running simulations which are trying to be quite a bit finer"

There were serious obstacles in 2008 (and 2009 when they did the writeup) so did they give up? Did they put it on the back burner and turn their attention on half a dozen other topics. Or are they still actively trying?
I thought you might know. One could always email Loll, I guess.
 
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  • #8
Oh, sorry, my time scale for "recent" was still much larger than the Planck time.
 
  • #9
To give an idea of how big the universe is I made this table.
Each level is 256 times bigger than the one above.
x= -6 is exactly one angstrom.
x= 10 is 36 times bigger than the observable universe.
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/26333​

powersoftwo.png
 
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  • #10
Nobody knows what the information is.
We observe relations between information and we may count it (approximatly).
Our Observable Universe (Hubble radius) is a theoretical provisory, tentative volume which due to Holographic Principle may contain bits of information (relations of information) = (Area of the Hubble sphere) /divided by (4 Planck length squared). Beckenstein bound:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_hole_thermodynamics

Area of the Hubble sphere is our Observable Event Horizon which grows and actually is much larger because we observe as it was before 13 bilions years. Actually its expanssion accelerates. It is a consequence of the Holographic Principle. An article of Smoot, Frampton.
http://arxiv.org/abs/1002.4278

Our Observable Universe is a small part of the real Universe (nobody knows how large it is).
http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/~charley/papers/DavisLineweaver04.pdf

If Holographic Principle is right we can find:
(Surface of the Observable Hubble Event Horizon 10^54 m^2) / (4 Planck Lengt squared 10^-70 m^2) = about 10^124 bits.

This information are tightly packed on the surface of the Event Horizon but inside in the volume there is a filament connecting the objects. We observe object when the light comes from it to us. The photon of light interferes with the vacuum (information in the space) and it costs Planck time dilation for each interference and we measure the time and distance between objects.
 

1. How much information is needed to build a universe?

The amount of information needed to build a universe is infinite. This is because a universe is constantly changing and evolving, and there is no limit to the complexity and diversity of its components.

2. Can we ever know all the information about a universe?

No, it is impossible for us to know all the information about a universe. As mentioned before, a universe is constantly changing and evolving, making it impossible for us to keep up with all the information.

3. Is there a limit to the amount of information a universe can hold?

There is no known limit to the amount of information a universe can hold. The expansion of the universe and the discovery of new elements and phenomena means that the amount of information is constantly increasing.

4. How do scientists gather information about the universe?

Scientists gather information about the universe through various methods such as observations, experiments, and mathematical models. They use tools like telescopes, satellites, and detectors to collect data and analyze it to gain a better understanding of the universe.

5. Can we create our own universe with a specific amount of information?

Currently, it is not possible for us to create our own universe with a specific amount of information. The creation of a universe requires immense amounts of energy and advanced technology that we do not yet possess. However, scientists are constantly researching and exploring the possibilities of creating a new universe in the future.

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