Expanding Universe vs. Shrinking Matter

In summary: I just can't resist saying it... "boggle the mind".In summary, some have proposed the idea that instead of the universe expanding, everything in it is actually shrinking including atoms and the speed of light. This would mean that our measuring stick, or concept of distance, would also be shrinking along with everything else, making it appear as though the universe is expanding. This idea has been proposed as a simpler alternative to the expanding universe model, but it still raises questions and has no concrete evidence to support it.
  • #1
zadignose
17
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After reading about the expanding universe, and the balloon analogy, I found myself wondering about some things. Like many in these forums, I found it difficult to get my head around the concepts. At first I wondered, if space is expanding, and the distance between galaxies is increasing, then are the galaxies themselves getting larger, as well as rocks, trees, electrons, and quarks? It seemed to me that this cannot be. If everything was getting larger, then our measuring stick, or idea of how far away things are, would also be growing with the universe, and we would perceive no expansion at all. (I have since found, through another description of the balloon analogy, with "pennies attached to the surface of a balloon" that my surmise was correct... the expanding universe theory holds that the galaxies themselves are not enlarging).

Okay, so far so good, but thinking along these lines led to an alternative model. Is this a fair approximation of what is really happening? Has this been discussed thoroughly before? Is there a flaw in the thinking displayed below?:

-Imagine the universe is a static hypersphere, not growing or shrinking.
-Viewed from this "universal" perspective, all matter, all galaxies, everything down to quarks is shrinking.
-At the same time the speed of light, and the speed of all processes is slowing down by the same factor.
-Viewed from the perspective of a person on planet Earth (or any intelligent being made of matter somewhere in the universe), because our measuring stick is shrinking with us, our concept of what a meter is remains constant relative to ourselves, but the galaxies appear to be receding. The speed of light also appears to be constant, and all mechanical processes proceed at a "normal" rate, giving no evidence to the shrinking of matter relative to the universe.

Does this differ in any way from the expanding universe model, other than simply a shift in perspective? Is it mathematically equivalent? Does it simplify things in a way that makes the process more transparent or easier of comprehension? In short, whaddayathink?
 
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  • #2
zadignose said:
After reading about the expanding universe, and the balloon analogy, I found myself wondering about some things. Like many in these forums, I found it difficult to get my head around the concepts. At first I wondered, if space is expanding, and the distance between galaxies is increasing, then are the galaxies themselves getting larger, as well as rocks, trees, electrons, and quarks?

Gravitationally bound systems like galaxies expand only very slightly due to cosmological expansion. The effect is much too small to measure: Cooperstock, http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/9803097v1

With the theoretical caveat given below, things like rocks and trees do not expand. Their sizes are fixed by the sizes of their atoms, and the sizes of atoms are fixed by fundamental constants.

Electrons and quarks are, as far as we know, pointlike particles. Since they have zero size, it doesn't make sense to talk about whether they expand.

You may find this helpful:
http://www.lightandmatter.com/html_books/genrel/ch08/ch08.html#Section8.2
(subsection 8.2.6, Observability of expansion)

Observations can never distinguish between (1) the possibility that the universe is expanding as measured by a fixed meter stick and (2) the possibility that the universe stays the same size while meter sticks are shrinking. These are not different things. They are the same thing described in different words. However, description #1 is much simpler, so it's the one everyone uses. In description #2, fundamental constants would have to be varying in complicated ways in order to cause atoms everywhere to shrink according to a certain rule.
 
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  • #3
bcrowell said:
With the theoretical caveat given below, things like rocks and trees do not expand. Their sizes are fixed by the sizes of their atoms, and the sizes of atoms are fixed by fundamental constants.
Just to clarify this a little, the sizes of atoms are set by the details of the electromagnetic force and how it interacts with electrons, protons, and neutrons.
 
  • #4
zadignose said:
-Imagine the universe is a static hypersphere, not growing or shrinking.
-Viewed from this "universal" perspective, all matter, all galaxies, everything down to quarks is shrinking.
-At the same time the speed of light, and the speed of all processes is slowing down by the same factor.
-Viewed from the perspective of a person on planet Earth (or any intelligent being made of matter somewhere in the universe), because our measuring stick is shrinking with us, our concept of what a meter is remains constant relative to ourselves, but the galaxies appear to be receding. The speed of light also appears to be constant, and all mechanical processes proceed at a "normal" rate, giving no evidence to the shrinking of matter relative to the universe.

Does this differ in any way from the expanding universe model, other than simply a shift in perspective? Is it mathematically equivalent? Does it simplify things in a way that makes the process more transparent or easier of comprehension? In short, whaddayathink?
I am afraid there is no easy answer to this question.
If you change dimension of length then the question is how do you change other related constants.

For example you suggest that speed of light changes as well. But we can keep it constant and change dimension of time instead. That way geometry of space-time acquires some scaling factor in respect to matter but remains the same otherwise.
Nice thing about this way of changing dimensions is that t=0 of BigBang moves to t=-infinity.

Anyways I think that locally there might be no difference (but maybe there is - you might get excess energy that you would have to get rid of). Then globally there would be no difference if the rate of change is exactly the same everywhere. If the change is not the same throughout the universe we can talk about some indirect effects.
 
  • #5
Eddinton first mused over the idea - in one of his publications he states: "The theory of the expanding universe is also the theory of the shrinking atom"

This would seem to be doubtful from the standpoiont of what we know about electrically and gravitationally bound systems. If matter were shrinking a precise balancing of the shrink factor would be required for each atomic composite in order to remain undetectable. Things are much easier if space is expanding
 
  • #6
yogi said:
Eddinton first mused over the idea - in one of his publications he states: "The theory of the expanding universe is also the theory of the shrinking atom"

This would seem to be doubtful from the standpoiont of what we know about electrically and gravitationally bound systems. If matter were shrinking a precise balancing of the shrink factor would be required for each atomic composite in order to remain undetectable. Things are much easier if space is expanding
Well, it's not "doubtful". It's simply another way of looking at the equations. It's not as beautiful a way of looking at the equations, but it should definitely work, as long as you carry everything through properly.
 
  • #7
Chalnoth said:
Well, it's not "doubtful". It's simply another way of looking at the equations. It's not as beautiful a way of looking at the equations, but it should definitely work, as long as you carry everything through properly.

How would you determine that an electron would shrink proportionally with a proton - or that a composite that involves both electric and gravitational binding with various interspacing between the elements would shrink uniformly? This requires a lot of supposition to get to a point that we cannot detect whether the universe is expanding or whether quantum entities are shrinking
 
  • #8
Given the expansion of space, would a sufficiently large geodesic dome be ripped apart? How big would it have to be before any stress is noticeable due to expansion?

Same concept as the balloon analogy but using rings rather than dimes. Does matter impact the expansion with effects other than gravity? Is the expansion fluid, e.g. does it happen at the same rate through space or does it vary locally?
 
  • #9
-Job- said:
Given the expansion of space, would a sufficiently large geodesic dome be ripped apart? How big would it have to be before any stress is noticeable due to expansion?

Some background on why small structures like atoms and solar systems don't expand:
http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/cosmology_faq.html#SS

The reference to the paper by Cooperstock inside the link gives more details. Basically in an object of size r, you get a fictitious force acting on an element of mass m that goes like [itex]m(\ddot{a}/a)r[/itex], where a is the FRW scale factor, and [itex]\ddot{a}/a\sim H_o^2[/itex]. For an atom, the force has no cumulative effect, since the atom is a quantum-mechanical state with a well-defined ground state. For a solar system, there is a cumulative effect, but [itex] H_o^2[/itex] is so small that the effect is many orders of magnitude too small to measure. If you could make your geodesic dome big enough, i.e., it would be of cosmological dimensions, then certainly it would be torn apart, because the large r would result in a large force. In an extreme case, you could imagine a closed FRW cosmology in which the dome has the same circumference as the universe itself, and it would definitely be destroyed.
 
  • #10
yogi said:
How would you determine that an electron would shrink proportionally with a proton - or that a composite that involves both electric and gravitational binding with various interspacing between the elements would shrink uniformly? This requires a lot of supposition to get to a point that we cannot detect whether the universe is expanding or whether quantum entities are shrinking
As far as we know, electrons are truly point-like particles. So they wouldn't be shrinking. Rather, it's the electromagnetic force which would be changing through time. It would be sort of a gravitational effect on the electromagnetic interaction. There would have to be a similar effect on the strong nuclear force so that atomic nuclei shrink as well, and on the weak force for symmetry reasons.

The real trick would be insuring that these things change in such a way that atomic spectra and nuclear decay rates are left unchanged.
 
  • #11
Chalnoth said:
As far as we know, electrons are truly point-like particles. So they wouldn't be shrinking. Rather, it's the electromagnetic force which would be changing through time. It would be sort of a gravitational effect on the electromagnetic interaction. There would have to be a similar effect on the strong nuclear force so that atomic nuclei shrink as well, and on the weak force for symmetry reasons.

The real trick would be insuring that these things change in such a way that atomic spectra and nuclear decay rates are left unchanged.

That was sort of my point - although I expressed it with less precision - also I might comment that the electron is only a point in theory.
 
  • #12
yogi said:
That was sort of my point - although I expressed it with less precision - also I might comment that the electron is only a point in theory.
We've been looking for smaller substructure of the electron for some time now, without finding any deviation from it being truly point-like. So it's not just a point in theory, but is extremely point-like experimentally. Whether or not this changes further down is difficult to say.
 
  • #13
Chalnoth said:
We've been looking for smaller substructure of the electron for some time now, without finding any deviation from it being truly point-like. So it's not just a point in theory, but is extremely point-like experimentally. Whether or not this changes further down is difficult to say.

Even if, for example, string theory turns out to be right, and electrons aren't pointlike, this doesn't alter any of the logic of the discussion. By simultaneously retuning all of the parameters of any model, you can always make every possible meterstick scale in a way that mimics the effect of cosmological expansion. It doesn't matter whether the model is the Bohr model or string theory.
 
  • #14
Or rather than an expanding universe or shrinking matter, what're y'alls thoughts about "http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bd-QqKmVyfU"" or "accelerated particle expansion." At 1:16 is where this concept is mentioned and looses me; this seems counter-intuitive to observations. It seems "shrinking matter" would be more plausible but then again, I'm no genius.
 
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  • #15
If I may I would like to add a question: Many large scale objects in the universe are red shifted. But we also have plenty of proof of blue-shifted objects. The Andromeda-Galaxy is one famous example.

But let us reach "farther" out: recently I have read some interesting facts about the recently discovered "Great Attractor", this enormously dense filament which apparently is attracting all the clusters and super clusters in its vicinity. On a somewhat smaller scale, I equally have read that our local group is getting attracted to the Virgo cluster in about 65 million LJ distance. The "prevision" is that our local group would "fall" into the virgo cluster in about 10 billion years.

So now what I do not understand: shouldn´t the virgo cluster as well as the Great Attractor be blue-shifted? Logically, if in a far future we are going to "melt" with them, that implies that the attraction is "stronger" than the "expansion". Expressed in laymen´s terms: we are closing up with them at a speed (I think 400 km/s if I haven´t read wrong). So, consequently, this would mean a blue shift. Yet I searched a lot in the literature and didn´t find a reference of the blue-shifting. Can someone clarify this?

Thanks and greetings,

Andreas
 
  • #16
I think the theory of universal shrinkage has huge merit.

Rather than getting stuck on the rudmenary 'mechanics' of what wolud have to take place to particles etc for this theory to work, you need to down to the very base of all particles I guess we might be talking about super string theory.

If indeed the base of the entire universe is super string, imagine that this string is being syphoned out of our universe (into another universe?) at a constant rate. But the result of this loss of string is not fewer particles but rather weaker/smaller/slower particles, and this is happening everywhere at once because the universe is 'entagled' with the string.

One thing of beauty about this theory is it shows how the universe appears to not only be expanding but also that pecieved expansion is accelerating. Because the loss of string is constant, the universe would indeed appear to accelerate as the string diminishes.

By the way I am not saying super string is the answer. I just offer it as a vehicle to explain a process that could be taking place.
 
  • #17
Does a shrinking universe technically contradict anything we see in an expanding universe? Does it make sense to ask what the universe is "expanding into"?

I feel like a shrinking universe doesn't get around this issue either -- what would everything else be "shrinking into"? Does matter just disappear? Do point particles remain unchanged by shrinking/expanding?

It seems like with expanding space, we don't have to mess with the size of particles but we have to deal with space boundary issues. In a shrinking space, we have to mess with the size of particles but we no longer have to deal with boundary issues.

Which one has better evidence in its favor? (I am not asking which one is simply more convenient)

Does it solve the problem of infinite regress?
 
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  • #18
Hmm, if the universe is expanding we can run the clock backwards and deduce that it originated from a point. If the universe is shrinking, would that mean it originated from a giant blob? What's the theory on how that got there, if there is one?
 
  • #19
SeventhSigma said:
Does a shrinking universe technically contradict anything we see in an expanding universe? Does it make sense to ask what the universe is "expanding into"?

I feel like a shrinking universe doesn't get around this issue either -- what would everything else be "shrinking into"? Does matter just disappear? Do point particles remain unchanged by shrinking/expanding?

It seems like with expanding space, we don't have to mess with the size of particles but we have to deal with space boundary issues. In a shrinking space, we have to mess with the size of particles but we no longer have to deal with boundary issues.

Which one has better evidence in its favor? (I am not asking which one is simply more convenient)

Does it solve the problem of infinite regress?
By a shrinking universe, do you mean a universe where there is no expansion, but atoms are getting smaller? In that case, there's nothing to distinguish a "shrinking universe" from an expanding one: they're the exact same universe, just defined from a different perspective.
 
  • #20
Chalnoth said:
By a shrinking universe, do you mean a universe where there is no expansion, but atoms are getting smaller? In that case, there's nothing to distinguish a "shrinking universe" from an expanding one: they're the exact same universe, just defined from a different perspective.

Dark matter, dark energy are things that have been proposed to support an expansion model. but I don't believe these are required to explain a shinking matter model. if you consider the shrinkage occurs as a result of lost 'base energy' (for lack of a better term) at a constant rate universaly.
 
  • #21
jdt73 said:
Dark matter, dark energy are things that have been proposed to support an expansion model. but I don't believe these are required to explain a shinking matter model.
Um, they are. As I said, they are the exact same model, just with your terms defined differently.

And by the way, the primary evidence for dark matter has very little to do with the expansion of the universe. The primary evidence for that is the formation of various sorts of structure in the universe, especially the very early universe.
 
  • #22
dilletante said:
Hmm, if the universe is expanding we can run the clock backwards and deduce that it originated from a point. If the universe is shrinking, would that mean it originated from a giant blob? What's the theory on how that got there, if there is one?

The big blob, the big bang, call it what you will.
It would all look exactly the same when observed from within the event.

A singularity explodes intoa dense cloud of matter so thick that light cannot travel through it until it futher dissipates (universe expands or matter shrinks) and condenses forming stars.
 
  • #23
A shrinking universe can only occur if the Planck length is shrinking, meaning the Planck constant is changing, but for whom? All measuring devices would also be shrinking. I think if the 4-vector is invariant during the 3-space shrinkage some interesting things occur. For one, xyz shrinks and therefore t (time), or the passage of time, speeds up. The speeding up of time may explain the acceleration aspect of the expansion. The real question is whether the xyz shrinkage is truly real for empty space, but given in quantum mechanics that space is never empty, this is probable. How would one detect such shrinkage ? It would have to come out of the relativistic doppler effect over cosmological distances. An interesting calculation. Anyone see it done anywhere ?

One further point. String theory currently postulates multiple spatial dimensions. The 6 dimensions are theorized to be compactified in spacetime. At the Big Bang, before the Planck time, all dimensions were unfurled, presumably because of the extreme energy densities. Now, some billions of years after the Big Bang, the energy density reduction is continuing. This may imply the remaining 3-space is currently undergoing the process of "curling up" as well.

Plancktification of Space-Time
===============================
The accelerating expansion may be the process by which 3-space is approaching the quantum level; a more precise way of saying this is that the Planck length itself is decreasing, even though we don't see it happening, because it is only observable "outside the universe", in higher (unknown) dimensions. Just as the speed of light is constant without regard to the whole spectrum of inertial frames, so the Planck length will always appear to be the same to everyone and everything in our universe; the same would be true for all of the known laws of physics. This is analagous to Einstein's inertial frames, in which time does not appear to change within an inertial frame, just between different inertial frames. In essence, the universe is not expanding so much as 3-space itself is shrinking, in which every point in 3-space is shrinking away from every other point in 3-space, and that over great distances this is seen as the accelerating expansion of our universe.
 
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  • #24
If someone comes up with a reasonably recent paper by a real cosmologist that takes this "shrinking matter" idea seriously, feel free to start a new thread. Otherwise this topic is too speculative for serious discussion or promotion here.

Readers who are not familiar with our rules about speculative topics should click the "Rules" link at the top of any page here, and note particularly the section Overly Speculative Posts.
 

1. What is the expanding universe theory?

The expanding universe theory, also known as the Big Bang theory, states that the universe began as a singularity and has been expanding ever since. This expansion is supported by observations of the redshift of light from distant galaxies.

2. How does the expanding universe theory differ from the theory of shrinking matter?

The theory of shrinking matter, also known as the Steady-State theory, proposes that the universe has always existed in a steady state and that new matter is constantly being created to fill in the gaps left by the expansion of the universe. This theory is not supported by current observations and has been largely rejected by the scientific community.

3. What evidence supports the expanding universe theory?

One of the key pieces of evidence for the expanding universe theory is the observation of the cosmic microwave background radiation, which is leftover radiation from the Big Bang. Additionally, the redshift of light from distant galaxies and the observed distribution of elements in the universe also support this theory.

4. Can the expanding universe theory and the theory of shrinking matter both be true?

No, these two theories are mutually exclusive and cannot both be true. The expanding universe theory is currently the most widely accepted and supported explanation for the origin and evolution of the universe.

5. How does the expanding universe theory impact our understanding of the universe?

The expanding universe theory has greatly shaped our understanding of the universe and its origins. It has helped us to understand the expansion and evolution of galaxies, the distribution of matter and energy in the universe, and the potential fate of the universe. It also provides a framework for further scientific study and exploration.

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