Uncovering the Origins of the Universe: Insights from the Big Bang Singularity

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In summary: Quantizing GR might be considered a "fringe" activity in some sense (meaning it has not succeeded yet) but it is a mainstream activity with a long history, if you know the history of QG. It is what people have been trying to do for a long time.LQG is one of the few approaches that have achieved any kind of success in this direction. One of the main reasons to quantize GR is to get rid of the singularity at time zero. This is considered very desirable by most people who are interested in the subject---in fact it was a major motive for Wheeler to work on QG.Quantum Gravity is an established field of mainstream physics but it is very hard to make progress in. So
  • #1
MathematicalPhysicist
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just an idea...

i thought about something today the information of the universe has been also in the singularity of the big bang from this we can deduct that we know what was in the singularity.
what do you think?
 
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  • #2
Well, i think that you could say that everything that was in the singularity just before the Big Bang must also be somewhere in the Universe today.
 
  • #3


Originally posted by loop quantum gravity
i thought about something today the information of the universe has been also in the singularity of the big bang from this we can deduct that we know what was in the singularity.
what do you think?

does the "singularity" describe a real state of the universe or is it merely a glitch in the Friedmann equations (General Relativity) model?
since your nickname is "LQG" then I think you might know
that quantizing spacetime geometry overrides the glitch.

"Absence of Singularity in Loop Quantum Cosmology"

Bojowald 2001
http://www.arxiv.org/gr-qc/0102069

The unquantized GR model breaks down at the time that has been arbitrarily designated as time zero---because it predicts infinite curvature. I believe there are other divergences and physically meaningless predictions, like infinite density, making the model unworkable at "time zero".

But quantizing GR using LQG makes the curvature (now a quantum operator) remain bounded and bridges over the breakdown in the unquantized model. In the quantized model the timeline runs smoothly back without infinities of curvature or density appearing.

So it seems that "big bang" is not a good word for the beginning of the current expansion phase of the universe. Also it does not seem appropriate to call it a "singularity" since mathematically it was not a singularity (except in the unquantized model). To call conditions at time zero a big bang or a singularity seems to involve a prejudgment or bias in favor of the 1916 unquantized version of General Relativity.

But whatever people choose to call it this does not change the qualitative picture of a moment of extremely high temperature and extremely high concentration of energy (which may have resulted from a prior contraction phase and which initated the current expansion). So what you say about logical deduction ought to be at least partly right:

It should be possible to deduce some things about conditions back then by observing conditions now----or by modeling conditions then to arrive at predictions about the present which could be checked against observation. So I basically agree with you.
 
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  • #4
To call conditions at time zero a big bang or a singularity seems to involve a prejudgment or bias in favor of the 1916 unquantized version of General Relativity.

Maybe I missed a meeting, but I don't believe there's an accepted quantum interpretation of gravity in existence. So your post makes little sense, unless your promoting a fringe theory (and there's nothing wrong with that - Cosmology is in effect the science of mysteries - just pointing the difference between mainstream and otherwise) :).

As to all the information of the universe being held within the original "singularity" - yes, certainly. However, an interesting consequence of Black Hole behaviour is the apparent destruction - else leakage - of information from the universe. This is something that Information Theory abhors and makes people nervous. Something to be addressed at some point (assuming we're not evoking White Holes here). :)
 
  • #5


Originally posted by marcus
does the "singularity" describe a real state of the universe or is it merely a glitch in the Friedmann equations (General Relativity) model?
since your nickname is "LQG" then I think you might know
that quantizing spacetime geometry overrides the glitch.

"Absence of Singularity in Loop Quantum Cosmology"

Bojowald 2001
http://www.arxiv.org/gr-qc/0102069

The unquantized GR model breaks down at the time that has been arbitrarily designated as time zero---because it predicts infinite curvature. I believe there are other divergences and physically meaningless predictions, like infinite density, making the model unworkable at "time zero".

But quantizing GR using LQG makes the curvature (now a quantum operator) remain bounded and bridges over the breakdown in the unquantized model. In the quantized model the timeline runs smoothly back without infinities of curvature or density appearing.

So it seems that "big bang" is not a good word for the beginning of the current expansion phase of the universe. Also it does not seem appropriate to call it a "singularity" since mathematically it was not a singularity (except in the unquantized model). To call conditions at time zero a big bang or a singularity seems to involve a prejudgment or bias in favor of the 1916 unquantized version of General Relativity.

But whatever people choose to call it this does not change the qualitative picture of a moment of extremely high temperature and extremely high concentration of energy (which may have resulted from a prior contraction phase and which initated the current expansion). So what you say about logical deduction ought to be at least partly right:

It should be possible to deduce some things about conditions back then by observing conditions now----or by modeling conditions then to arrive at predictions about the present which could be checked against observation. So I basically agree with you.
i hope ill have time to read the article you gave.
 
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  • #6
a question: does the singularity of the big bang resembles the ones of black holes? if so does it posses the same information as the other singularities (i know that it might imply that from a black hole there might be created a big bang, a new universe)?
 
  • #7
Originally posted by I, Brian
Maybe I missed a meeting, but I don't believe there's an accepted quantum interpretation of gravity in existence. So your post makes little sense, unless your promoting a fringe theory (and there's nothing wrong with that - Cosmology is in effect the science of mysteries - just pointing the difference between mainstream and otherwise) :).

Quantizing general relativity is a long-standing project in mainstream physics going back to work by Dirac in the 1940s and John Archibald Wheeler in the 1960s (his book Geometrodynamics was published in 1962). If memory serves he was at the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study---not exactly a "fringe" institution.

The most significant advance since the Wheeler-DeWitt equations is IMHO the new variables for GR developed by Abhay Ashtekar (1986). Around 1993, in order to get Ashtekar to join the Physics Department, Penn State set up the Center for Gravitational Physics and Geometry (CGPG) and offered him the directorship.
This does not look especially "fringe" to me.

Have a look at Ashtekar's article of Feb 2002
http://www.arxiv.org/math-ph/0202008
"Quantum Geometry in Action..."

It gives an overview and is not especially technical. There are a bunch of more recent papers about the removal of the time zero singularity by quantizing General Relativity---by Ashtekar and others. This is definitely mainstream and the issue of not encouraging bias or prejudice is a sensitive one BECAUSE the work is quite recent and not yet widely understood or established.

What you say about a quantum spacetime model not being "generally accepted" is certainly right----there is a shift in progress and that needs to be taken account of----but your suggestion that the work of Ashtekar and others is "fringe" is in my view rather wide of the mark.

Bojowald is another of the group at Penn State CGPG---I gave a link to a 2001 article by him in the previous post. Bojowald and Ashtekar co-authored a more recent paper about the removal of the time zero singularity by quantizing the GR model.

http://www.arxiv.org/gr-qc/0304074

It also has a useful non-technical overview of current work in quantum cosmology/general relativity and is dated June 2003,
if you happen to be interested.
 
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  • #8
Finge probably sounded like an unfortunate use of the term. However, there's nothing necessarily demeaning about being on the "fringe" of mainstream scientific theories. Or perhaps I've trying to save grace by avoiding addressing the populer use of the term. :)

As for the article in question - I'll leave that for peer review. :)

There are certainly a lot of interesting theories out there that seek to reconcile the various aspects of GR and QT. Until any single generally accepted theoretical framework arises from that, then there really is no basis for claiming that gravity has been successfully quantised.
 
  • #9
Originally posted by I, Brian
Finge probably sounded like an unfortunate use of the term.

Not unfortunate, just inaccurate when applied to the current effort to quantize general relativity.

Originally posted by I, Brian
However, there's nothing necessarily demeaning about being on the "fringe" of mainstream scientific theories. Or perhaps I've trying to save grace by avoiding addressing the populer use of the term. :)

I don't imagine that, as you apply it, the word is at all pejorative. I don't presume to understand your use of words, however inappropriate. Quantizing general relativity is a long-standing mainstream focus of research going back to Dirac and Wheeler---major people have thought it important and contributed to its progress over the years: Ashtekar most recently.

Originally posted by I, Brian

As for the article in question - I'll leave that for peer review. :)

If you are interested in peer-reviewed publications the main journal relevant to quantizing general relativity is "Classical and Quantum Gravity". However the article in question (by Bojowald)
was published in "Physical Review Letters" vol 86, pp 5227-5230 (2001). Since then a number of papers about the removal of the classical singularity at time zero have appeared by a half dozen or so other researchers as well as those I've mentioned, some as co-authors. The past couple of years have seen a lot of work on this in several parts of the world. I interpret this as a significant peer response. :wink:

Originally posted by I, Brian
Until any single generally accepted theoretical framework arises from that, then there really is no basis for claiming that gravity has been successfully quantised.

I am not sure who you are telling this to or why you are saying it. There would not be so much work on it going on if general relativity had already been satisfactorily and finally quantized. The fact is that there are very interesting open questions and topics for research in the field!

No one has declared the research finished as yet, and since things are in flux, I would urge we not use biased language suggesting that there is a singularity at time zero except as an artifact of the classical model.

The classical EQUATIONS (already more than 80 years old) fail at time zero and do not go back farther. But I see no reason to suppose that nature itself fails at time zero and does not go back before that. Particularly since the models under development do evolve smoothly back to before the classical time zero.
It would seem that the burden is on you to supply evidence if you presume that the timeline ends in a kind of precipice at time zero.
 
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  • #10
Originally posted by loop quantum gravity
i hope ill have time to read the article you gave

Thanks for even thinking of it. Time for reading is always at a premium, so I've been trying to decide what article about this is the quickest to read and accessible to the most people. Instead of the one by Bojowald that I first mentioned I'd recommend a well-written general audience article by Abhay Ashtekar:

http://www.arxiv.org/math-ph/0202008
"Quantum Geometry in Action, Big Bang and Black Holes"

In some of the other articles one can get bogged down in formulas, but this one states the main developments in a real direct way and gives a some helpful mental pictures.
 
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  • #11
The next post, by ranyart, makes me think what I posted here was too wordy, so I will scrap all but the essential part.

A. Ringwald of DESY is one of the people predicting a cosmic NEUTRINO background of 1.9 kelvin. Neutrinos from the sun and supernovas and other high energy sources have been detected, but these low energy ones have not been detected yet.
The suspected neutrinos are relics from the first second of expansion and they have lost most of their original energy (around 1 MeV) due to the expansion of space. Ringwald estimates the energies are now around 10-4 eV.
He calculates that there are some 56 of these ancient neutrinos in each cubic centimeter of space.

I don't know who originally broached this "cosmic neutrino background" subject---only that Ringwald has a clear readable
article about it (the first link I gave didn't work, this one may work better)

"How to Detect the Cosmic Neutrino Background"



http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/0301157


If these neutrinos could be detected it would strongly corroborate to the expansion picture of the universe. Another long-shot prediction (analogous to the CMB) confirmed. As
something I read recently about this said, it would open another window for observing the big bang.
 
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  • #12
Originally posted by marcus
LQG I've been thinking about the Big-bang story which has such a deep attraction for so many of us---I guess it should be called the "expansion model" of the cosmos.

Dicke actually favored a contraction-followed-by-expansion model of the universe and was puzzled by the fact that older stars tend to lack heavier elements: Why did it seem that expansion had begin with a universe full of mostly hydrogen and helium---heavier elements being acquired only gradually as they were cooked in stars? Why wouldn't we have inherited heavy elements from the stars in an earlier contracting phase? Dicke was interested in establishing that the early universe had been so hot that it would have destroyed heavy elements by breaking them down to their constituent particles.

Finding the CMB gave credibility to the expansion model of the universe because of the serendipity. Einstein hadnt wanted expansion but his equations predicted it (or contraction) anyway. Hubble didnt know that about Einstein's model when he found the galaxies were receding. Gamow et al extrapolated back to a hot time and predicted remnant microwaves, which Penzias and Wilson then observed not knowing about the prediction!

We are now confronted by the possibility of another dramatic corroboration of the expanding space model. The solar system seems to be swimming through a sea of CMB photons. Our speed relative to the CMB (and thus to the expansion process) is supposed to be 370 km/second in the direction of Leo. ANOTHER background, so far undetectable, has been predicted. Just as in 1948 Alpher and Hermann predicted the CMB with temperature 5 kelvin, so now people (for example A. Ringwald of DESY) predict a NEUTRINO background of 1.9 kelvin.
These neutrinos are relics from the first second of expansion and they have lost most of their original energy due to the expansion of space. Ringwald predicts energies (originally around 1 MeV, roughly speaking) are now around 10-4 eV.
He predicts that there are some 56 of these ancient neutrinos in each cubic centimeter of space.

If these neutrinos could be detected it would be a welcome corroboration to the expansion picture of the universe. Another long-shot prediction confirmed.

I don't know who originally broached this "cosmic neutrino background" subject---only that Ringwald has a good clear
article about it
http://www.arxiv.org/hep-th/0301157

Among other things he has a diagram of a possible device to detect the neutrino background. It uses the fact that the Earth together with the rest of the solar system is presumably plowing through this alleged sea of neutrinos at a speed of 370 km/second. This motion relative to the universal rest frame was learned from the microwave background, and perhaps (as Ringwald suggests) the fact can help experimentalists to detect the corresponding neutrino background.

There seems to be a conflict with the info you are providing, the link for Ringwald is by some other person?

There are also other links you could provide, showing at least the Ekpryotic/Cycle model, as this predicts a 'bounce' that is perceived to be pre-inflation for some models ie Guth/Linde. Although there has been good recent papers by both Linde and Guth, there appears to be a consensus of opinion that the Fluctuations of Temperature ie,from Hot to Cold and Cold To hot are quite important to present day detections.

http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/hep-th/pdf/0307/0307170.pdf

What this relates to is there are models in which the Universe can evolve from a Cold Big-Crunch, just as likely as the evolution form a Hot Big-Bang, infact the consensus is there would be very two colliding Universes, one that is collapsing or de-flating, connected to another Universe that is Expanding.

Assigning the correct temperature with expansion models and with Contracting models is where different models start/end from.

The CMB is presumed to be the intersection (Brane) of collapse and Expansion, thus our current Universe may be at the 'pre-crunch' phase, having evolved from a Hot Big-Bang phase.

This is of course reliant on the matter density and Vacuum density, if matter is contracting(density increase)then non-matter density(Vacuum)would be increasing(Negative Matter density de-creasing)

Below is another recent paper fro you to read, presuming you do actually read the links you post?

http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0306109
 
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1. What is the Big Bang Singularity?

The Big Bang Singularity is the moment in time when the entire universe was compressed into an infinitely small point. This singularity is believed to have been the starting point of the universe's expansion.

2. How do scientists study the origins of the universe?

Scientists study the origins of the universe through various methods, including analyzing cosmic microwave background radiation, observing the distribution of galaxies, and conducting experiments with particle accelerators.

3. What insights have been gained from studying the Big Bang Singularity?

Studying the Big Bang Singularity has provided insights into the early moments of the universe, such as the formation of the first particles and the expansion of space. It has also helped to support the theory of the Big Bang as the origin of the universe.

4. Is the Big Bang Singularity the only theory for the origins of the universe?

No, there are other theories for the origins of the universe, such as the Steady State theory and the Inflationary theory. However, the Big Bang Singularity is currently the most widely accepted and supported theory by the scientific community.

5. How does the study of the Big Bang Singularity contribute to our understanding of the universe?

The study of the Big Bang Singularity provides valuable insights into the formation and evolution of the universe. It helps scientists to better understand the fundamental laws of physics and the processes that have shaped our universe into what it is today.

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