Beyond Galileo’s universe
Astronomers grapple with cosmic puzzles both dark and light
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BEYOND GALILEO'S UNIVERSEView Larger Version | The first stars that lit up the cosmos (white areas in this artist's illustration) coalesced inside halos of dark matter (purple), according to the leading model of star formation. Adolf Schaller, STScI

Four hundred years ago, astronomy embraced all that was visible. For Galileo, looking through his primitive telescope, the vistas included jewel-like stars, mountains on the moon, moons orbiting Jupiter and the glow of comet tails.

Today astronomy is often about what cannot be seen. Astronomers have known for decades that stars and galaxies are mere baubles floating on a vast sea of dark matter. More recently, astronomy’s roster of Darth Vaders has expanded to include an even more mysterious force: dark energy, an entity that drives the universe to accelerate its expansion just when gravity’s tug ought to be slowing it down.

On the brighter side, astronomers are beginning to learn more about the complicated processes that formed stars and galaxies, giving the universe its light. The Planck mission (SN: 4/11/09, p. 16) will test the idea that the Big Bang was accompanied by a brief burst of rapid expansion called inflation, which is thought to have created the seeds of matter from which stars and galaxies arose.

On smaller scales, explorations within the solar system, along with the discovery of more than 345 extrasolar planets, pose questions about the possible existence of life beyond Earth. The Kepler mission, launched in March, will provide a head count of Earthlike planets in the nearest reaches of the galaxy. Other new telescopes will examine the composition of these orbs and their potential for life.

Galileo’s successors have pieced together an impressive outline of cosmic history, from the inflationary beginnings of spacetime to the arrival of planets and people. But many details remain to be filled in, and strange new features may be added as astronomers push the limits of current theory and knowledge. New forms of matter, new twists in spacetime and even entire extra universes may emerge from the ongoing efforts to explain and understand the workings of the heavens.

From light to darkness

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DARK MATTER DISTRIBUTIONView Larger Version | An international supercomputing effort to model the evolution of the early universe created this pair of images. The simulations depict how the distribution of the visible galaxies and galaxy clusters (left) mirrors the distribution of dark matter (right). Dark matter, scientists believe, provides the gravitational scaffolding that allows visible particles to coalesce into galaxies.V. Springel et al./Millennium Simulation (BOTH)

To understand the points of light that decorate the sky, it has become necessary to embrace the darkness. The brilliant but irascible astronomer Fritz Zwicky first realized that truth more than 75 years ago, when he found that all the visible matter in the Coma galaxy cluster wasn’t nearly enough to keep the cluster intact. And individual galaxies, like our rapidly rotating Milky Way, would fly apart if the only gravitational glue came from visible matter. Something else, something unseen, must be providing the extra gravitational pull, Zwicky and others reasoned.

Over the past few decades, astronomers have come to the conclusion that only about 15 percent of all the matter in the universe is visible. Researchers have deduced that vast halos of dark matter envelop and extend thousands of light-years beyond a galaxy’s visible outlines.

While most astronomers agree that dark matter exists, nobody knows for sure what it is. But last year, several teams of researchers reported finding hints for the existence of one of the leading candidates for dark matter, known as WIMPs, for weakly interacting massive particles. WIMPs respond only to gravity and the weak nuclear force.

Theory predicts that WIMPs would have been forged by the Big Bang. Moreover, their calculated density in the present-day universe would be just right to account for the observations that require the presence of dark matter. Researchers call this cosmic coincidence “the WIMP miracle.”

Like any proposed dark matter particle, WIMPs can’t be seen. But some WIMPs have an odd property: Whenever two collide, they annihilate each other, producing a spray of ordinary, visible elementary particles such as positrons, electrons and neutrinos, along with gamma rays. Two recent experiments found a greater than expected abundance of positrons and electrons in the Milky Way. Scientists say the surplus particles may have been produced by WIMP annihilations (SN: 9/27/08, p. 8; 2/28/09, p. 16).

Other experiments have now joined the WIMP search. NASA’s orbiting Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope is looking for an excess of gamma rays, a possible product of WIMP annihilation. IceCube, a telescope at the South Pole, is searching for an excess of neutrinos that might indicate WIMPs’ existence. Some experiments are seeking to directly detect these dark matter particles through the energy they would deposit in underground detectors. Finally, studies at the Large Hadron Collider, the world’s most powerful accelerator (scheduled to reopen this fall), could provide new clues about the identity of dark matter (SN: 7/19/08, p. 16).

“There’s a very good chance in the next two to three years we might find out what dark matter is,” says theorist Carlos Frenk of the University of Durham in England.

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COSMIC TUG-OF-WARView Larger Version | Early in the universe, the cosmos was compact and the density of dark matter so high that it slowed down the expansion that began with the Big Bang. At such early times, by comparison, dark energy's push was almost inconsequential. But as the universe grew bigger, and the density of dark matter diminished, dark energy's outward push grew stronger than dark matter's inward pull. Dark energy began to dominate about 5 billion years ago. Ever since, the universe has expanded at an accelerating rate. NASA, adapted by J. Korenblat; Galaxies image: NASA, ESA, J.Blakeslee/Johns Hopkins, M. Postman/STSCI, P. Rosati/ESO

Energy of darkness

But even if researchers soon unmask dark matter, a gloomier mystery remains. In 1998, astronomers were astonished to find that the expansion of the universe has been speeding up. Cosmologists call whatever is behind this accelerated expansion dark energy.

At a recent seminar at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Mario Livio did something perfectly ordinary. He threw his car keys up in the air. As expected, the keys rose, slowed down and then fell, landing back in his hand.

Now, said Livio, a theorist at the institute, imagine if the car keys kept accelerating skyward instead of returning to his hand. “That’s how shocking dark energy is,” he exclaimed.

In fact, Einstein’s theory of relativity does allow gravity to exert a cosmic push as well as the more familiar pull. According to relativity, gravity has two sources: the pressure exerted by a substance as well as its mass. Ordinary pressure contributes to gravitational attraction, but dark energy exerts negative pressure, which pushes space apart. If the push is strong enough, the needle on the gravity meter swings from attraction to repulsion.

Dark energy seems to resemble the cosmological constant, a space-filling energy represented by a term that Einstein inserted into his equations to keep the universe balanced between expansion and collapse. The most likely source of this constant would be the energy associated with the vacuum of space.

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ENLIGHTENING PUZZLESView Larger Version | Arp 274 is a trio of galaxies, the two largest of which appear about to merge in this image, with the third much smaller galaxy on the far left. Scientists want to figure out how galaxies and large groups of galaxies, called clusters, evolve. NASA, ESA, M. Livio and the Hubble Heritage Team (STSCI/AURA)

On the subatomic scale, the vacuum seethes with pairs of particles and antiparticles popping in and out of existence. But calculations of the expected vacuum energy predict an amount of dark energy 10120 times larger than observations allow, notes Robert Caldwell of Dartmouth College. So despite thousands of papers written about dark energy, there’s no convincing explanation of what it actually is.

It may even turn out that dark energy isn’t real. Some physicists suggest that the observed cosmic acceleration might be a sign that Einstein’s beloved relativity theory needs revision.

New ways to chart the expansion of the universe may help determine whether dark energy is real and whether it’s truly constant over time. And that will give astronomers new insight into the fate of the universe — whether cosmic expansion will slow down, continue to accelerate at its current rate or speed up even more, ultimately ripping apart the universe and every galaxy within it.

Enlightening puzzles

When it comes to understanding star and galaxy formation, astronomers must straddle the boundary between darkness and light. On the one hand, without dark matter, there would be no stars, galaxies, planets or people, says theorist Avi Loeb of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass. On the other hand, once stars and galaxies begin to coalesce within halos of dark matter, the messy “gastrophysics” involving visible matter such as stellar winds and gas particles become just as important in shaping galaxies and their pattern on the sky.

Dark matter, unlike visible matter, can’t be pushed around by photons, so it was able to collapse earlier than the visible material. Clumps of dark matter eventually pulled in the visible matter. Because it doesn’t interact with photons, the dark matter retained the memory of the original cosmic blueprint — the lumps laid down and amplified during the first tiny fraction of a second after the birth of the universe.

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C'EST LA VIEView Larger Version | In the next decade, the search for Earthlike exoplanets, and thus the search for life, will get a boost from new missions. A superEarth like the one in this artist's conception can be twice the size of Earth, with five to 10 times its mass. David A. Aguilar/Harvard-Smithsonian CFA

According to the dark matter theory, the first stars to coalesce and ignite within dark matter halos were about 100 times heftier than the sun and appeared about 30 million years after the Big Bang. Large collections of those stars became the universe’s first galaxies about 200 million years after the Big Bang, the theory holds.

With dark matter’s role firmly in place, “we were told by theorists that we had a pretty good picture of galaxy formation,” says Richard Ellis of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. According to the model, small galaxies would form first and grow larger. Only later, as small dark matter halos coalesced to form bigger halos, would bigger galaxies emerge.

But beginning in the mid-1990s, as telescopes became more powerful, astronomers stumbled upon a puzzle: They discovered massive galaxies that existed when the universe was only half its current age, about 7 billion years after the Big Bang. Soon a slew of new observations revealed that massive galaxies finished forming their stars early, while smaller galaxies began making stars later, seemingly the opposite of what dark matter theory dictated. Even more surprising, astronomers found “big, well-fed galaxies when the universe was just a billion years old,” Ellis notes. “There hasn’t been enough time in the universe for them to have got there by merging,” as the theory had predicted, he says (SN: 4/25/09, p. 5).

Finding young, big galaxies forced astronomers to the realization that although dark matter plays a critical role in galaxy formation, other factors also come into play. For instance, supermassive black holes that develop at the centers of galaxies may generate jets and winds that push gas away or heat it so that it cannot coalesce and form stars. Because smaller galaxies have less gravity, these jets and winds may be more effective in temporarily halting or delaying the onset of star formation in smaller systems.

It’s also possible, says Ellis, that dark matter theory needs some revision, although not a major overhaul. For instance, if massive dark matter halos grow faster than theorists have calculated, it could explain the production of massive galaxies early in the universe.

The discovery of these massive galaxies has spurred researchers to search for starlit bodies even farther back in time. A new infrared spectrograph scheduled to be installed at the Keck Observatory on Hawaii’s Mauna Kea next year, along with a powerful new infrared camera that astronauts are set to install on the Hubble Space Telescope, “will enable us to systematically start charting the universe” when it was less than 800 million years old, Ellis says.

Astronomers have begun to pinpoint the era when spiral galaxies like the Milky Way began taking on their distinctive appearance. Observers have caught glimpses of some of the first galaxies with rotating disks — the earmark of a spiral galaxy — that began taking shape when the cosmos was between 2 billion and 3 billion years old.

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SEEKING STRANGENESSView Larger Version | A wormhole, as depicted by an artist in this illustration, would form a portal into a remote region of space or perhaps even into another universe. Denver Museum of Nature & Science

Using bigger telescopes to study such galaxies in detail “would allow us to start to really understand what state young galaxies are in and how we can link them to galaxies today,” says Ellis.

C’est la vie

Where there are galaxies, there are planets — some perhaps with life. For seekers of life beyond Earth, the solar system harbors an abundance of possibilities. There’s Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, a frigid world shrouded in an organic haze with pools of liquid methane on its surface. In 2005, astronomers discovered that a much tinier Saturnian moon, Enceladus, spews geysers of water vapor from its south pole and have since found hints that the moon’s interior may contain a reservoir of salty water. The fractured surface of Jupiter’s icy moon Europa suggests that it may have an underground ocean that occasionally wells up, heated by the internal flexing that the gravitational tug-of-war between the moon’s siblings and Jupiter generates. And then of course, there’s Mars, the desiccated reddish world crisscrossed by channels that might once, at least briefly, have carried water.

“Mars clearly has got to be the top place” to look for life, “and that’s exactly what NASA is [focusing] on,” says Alan Boss of the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, D.C. One new wrinkle, he notes, is the seasonal detection of methane on the planet (SN: 2/14/09, p. 10).

Although plenty of nonbiological processes produce methane, the gas could be a signature of the decay of biological material. “NASA’s mantra should not be just ‘follow the water’ but ‘follow the water and follow the methane,’” says Boss. “We would really like to find the locations of the methane; it really focuses the search.”

But Phil Christensen, a Mars researcher at Arizona State University in Tempe, says it isn’t clear that the Red Planet was ever warm and wet long enough for life to gain a foothold. Some evidence suggests that the era of flowing water lasted for only hundreds to thousands of years — and was confined to a few specific places on Mars. Finding out whether that era lasted long enough to support life could speak volumes about the conditions required to support life elsewhere, says Christensen.

Another planetary scientist, Jonathan Lunine of the University of Arizona in Tucson, thinks that Saturn’s moon Titan may offer a more promising venue for life. Pools of liquid methane on Titan, Lunine says, may play the same role that liquid water does on Earth.

“If I have to identify a place where one might find, right on the surface, a self-organizing chemical system, even if it’s not life as we know it, I would say go and look at the hydrocarbon seas of Titan,” says Lunine. “The most dangerous thing we can do is to define life so narrowly that the only place we’re going to find it is Earth.”

Beyond the solar system, researchers have now found more than 345 planets. While most of these extrasolar orbs are blisteringly hot, hugging their parent stars tightly, some lie in the habitable zone, where water would be cool enough to be liquid. NASA’s Kepler mission will soon begin its hunt for Earth-sized planets around 100,000 sunlike stars.

“I’m a wild-eyed optimist that the Kepler mission is going to find hundreds and hundreds of Earths,” says Boss. The mission, however, can reveal only the size of the planet and how far away it lies from its star, not its mass, chemical composition or whether life exists there.

To measure the mass of such a planet will require a space-based mission that can monitor stars for telltale wobbles induced by the planet’s tiny gravitational tug. Such space technology is already available, and a mission could be launched in only a few years, if funding were available. Then, another space mission could examine the starlight filtering through the atmosphere of some of these Earthlike planets to look for possible signatures of biological activity, such as carbon dioxide and ozone, or oxygen in combination with methane. Though not a biomarker in itself, water would also be required for a planet to support life — as least as it is known on Earth, notes Lisa Kaltenegger of Harvard-Smithsonian.

A mission capable of detecting these chemical fingerprints in a planet’s atmosphere wouldn’t be ready for launch for another decade. Such a mission might also manage to take a blurry picture of an Earthlike planet by using advanced techniques to blot out the blinding light from the parent star.

An exoplanet task force that included Boss and Lunine recently noted, however, that there could be a shortcut to looking for habitable exoplanets. Instead of looking for Earth-mass planets orbiting sunlike stars, scientists could focus on superEarths —planets five to 10 times as massive as Earth — orbiting lightweight, cooler stars called M dwarfs. Because M dwarfs aren’t as hot as sunlike stars, the habitable zone lies relatively closer to these low-mass stars. That makes a habitable planet easier to detect. And it’s more likely that such a close-in planet will pass in front of its star as seen from Earth, allowing the starlight to filter through the distant planet’s atmosphere and reveal whether the composition might be compatible with life. The James Webb Space Telescope, scheduled for launch in 2013, could examine superEarths, determining which might be the best candidates for the search for extraterrestrial life.

Seeking strangeness

The universe has no dearth of oddball objects. But the JWST and a slew of other powerful telescopes now in the planning stages are likely to reveal even more exotic beasts that the cosmos has kept under wraps.

Astronomers have long known about neutron stars, the ultracompact cinders left behind by supernovas. These cinders are so dense that they squeeze electrons and protons into giant balls of neutrons. And for more than two centuries researchers have theorized about black holes, which capture all matter and light that enter them.

But even stranger stuff may exist. For instance, particularly massive neutron stars may squeeze neutrons so tightly that they break down into quarks. By measuring the size and radius of neutron stars, researchers are attempting to find evidence for such “strange stars” or “quark stars.”

Another novel space oddity would be a wormhole — a black hole’s distant cousin. In 1935, Einstein and Nathan Rosen realized that general relativity allows such tunnels, which would directly connect two vastly distant regions of spacetime, or even locales in different universes.

Theorists once believed that these proposed portals could exist only for a fraction of a second. But calculations suggest that “exotic matter” — material endowed with a special property called negative energy — could prop a wormhole open much longer.

“There are mathematical solutions, but whether or not they correspond to something in reality remains to be seen,” says cosmologist Michael Turner of the University of Chicago.

Perhaps the strangest notion about the cosmos is that the observed universe is only one among many other universes, each residing in a pocket disconnected from the others.

Inflation — the early epoch of rapid expansion — could allow for an infinity of separate bubble universes. And string theory, which envisions each elementary particle as a string rather than a point, also suggests the existence of a vast ensemble of different universes, each with its own physical laws.

The notion of such a multiverse is the ultimate in the revolution begun by Copernicus nearly five centuries ago, Turner says. Not only is Earth not the center of the solar system or the galaxy, but our universe may be just one of many.

Four hundred years from now, says Turner, inflation may be remembered as the theory that drastically changed people’s view of the cosmos. “It may be infinitely bigger than we imagined,” he says. Much bigger than Galileo could have realized when he first peered at the sky through a crude set of magnifying lenses in 1609.


Found in: Astronomy and Atom & Cosmos
Comments 13
  • If the universe is asymetrical in that it is lumpy it would seem likely to me that it is also asymetirical in that it is spinning. Spinning fluids tend to expand if not confined. So I wonder if anyone as considered if dark energy may be related to spin. Of course in our normal experience expansion spreads out energy causing the spin and hence the expansion to decelerate. But in the case of the universe, rotating space may be dragging time along with it yielding different effects. I'm just speculating but I thought it might be a useful analogy to explore.
    David Foss David Foss
    May. 9, 2009 at 2:47pm
  • I would think Jupiter (the planet not the moons) is likely to have the largest biomass in the Solar system. The earth has a biosphere about 10 miles thick. Mars potentially a few feet. Titan potentially maybe a mile. Jupiter's potential biosphere is tens of thousands of miles thick. And the diversity or the environments ought to greatly surpass those here on earth. Verifying this possibility is quite a challenge unless the various storms on the planet are dredging up life forms from deep in the atmosphere that can be sampled at the cloud tops.
    David Foss David Foss
    May. 9, 2009 at 2:57pm
  • Excellent article. Dark energy is a force exerted from outside of the physical universe. Just to call this energy some kind of 'reverse gravity' explains nothing. Dark energy is uniform throughout the vast cosmos, another little miracle. Dark matter is observed indirectly, and is necessary to explain the laws of motion governing galaxies. Query, are WIMPS the ejecta from black holes?
    JohnUmana JohnUmana
    May. 11, 2009 at 2:02pm
  • There is a type in the approximate middle of the article. The term 10120 should be 10 to the exponent 120
    Carla Gladstone Carla Gladstone
    May. 11, 2009 at 11:54pm
  • On Energy, Mass, Gravity, Galaxies Clusters, AND Life
    A Commonsensible Recapitulation


    The onset of big-bang's inflation started gravity, followed by formation of galactic clusters that behave "classically" as Newtonian bodies while continuously reconverting their shares of pre-inflation masses back to energy, and of endless intertwined evolutions WITHIN the clusters in attempts to resist this reconversion.


    A. "Heavyweight galaxies in the young universe", at

    http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/42419/title/Heavyweight_galaxies_in_the_young_universe
    New observations of full-grown galaxies in the young universe may force astrophysicists to revise their leading theory of galaxy formation, at least as it applies to regions where galaxies congregate into clusters.


    B. Some brief notes in "Light On Dark Matter?", at

    http://www.physforum.com/index.php?showtopic=22994&st=0&#entry373127

    - "Galaxy Clusters Evolved By Dispersion, Not By Conglomeration"
    - Introduction of E=Total[m(1 + D)]
    - "Dark Energy And Matter And The Emperor's New Clothes"
    - "Evolutionary Cosmology: Ordained Or Random"
    - "“Movie” Of Microwave Pulse Transitioning From Quantum To Classical Physics"
    - "Broken Symmetry" Is Physics' Term Of Biology's "Evolution"
    - "A Glimpse Of Forces-Matter-Life Unified Theory"


    C. Commonsensible conception of gravity

    1. According to the standard model, which describes all the forces in nature except gravity, all elementary particles were born massless. Interactions with the proposed Higgs field would slow down some of the particles and endow them with mass. Finding the Higgs — or proving it does not exist — has therefore become one of the most important quests in particle physics.

    However, for a commonsensible primitive mind with a commonsensible universe represented by
    E=Total[m(1 + D)], this conceptual equation describes gravity. It does not explain gravity. It describes it. It applies to the whole universe and to every and all specific cases, regardless of size.

    2. Thus gravity is simply another face of the total cosmic energy. Thus gravity is THE cosmic parent of phenomena such as black holes and life. It is the display of THE all-pervasive-embracive strained space texture, laid down by the expanding galactic clusters, also noticed within the galactic clusters in the energy backlashes into various constructs of temporary constrained energy packages.


    3. "Extrapolation of the expansion of the universe backwards in time to the early hot dense "Big Bang" phase, using general relativity, yields an infinite density and temperature at a finite time in the past. At age 10^-35 seconds the Universe begins with a cataclysm that generates space and time, as well as all the matter and energy the Universe will ever hold."

    At D=0, E was = m and both E and m were, together, all the energy and matter the Universe will ever hold. Since the onset of the cataclysm, E remains constant and m diminishes as D increases.
    The increase of D is the inflation, followed by expansion, of what became the galactic clusters.

    At 10^-35 seconds, D in E=Total[m(1 + D)] was already a fraction of a second above zero. This is when gravity started. This is what started gravity. At this instance starts the space texture, starts the straining of the space texture, and starts the "space texture memory", gravity, that may eventually overcome expansion and initiate re-impansion back to singularity.


    D. Commonsensible conception of the forces other than gravity

    The forces other than gravity are, commonsensibly, forces involved in conjunction with evolution within the galactic clusters:

    http://royalsociety.org/downloaddoc.asp?id=4770

    The farthest we go in reductionism in Everything, including in Life, we shall still end up with wholism, until we arrive at energy. Energy is the base element of everything and of all in the universe. At the beginning was the energy singularity, at the end will be near zero mass and an infinite dispersion of the beginning energy, and in-between, the universe undergoes continuous evolution consisting of myriad energy-to-energy and energy-to-mass-to-energy transformations.

    The universe, and everything in it, are continuously evolving, and all the evolutions are intertwined.


    E. PS to "On Cosmic Energy And Mass Evolutions"

    As mass is just another face of energy it is commonsensible to regard not only life, but mass in general, as a format of temporarily constrained energy.

    It therefore ensues that whereas the expanding cosmic constructs, the galaxies clusters, are - overall - continuously converting "their" original pre-inflation mass back to energy, the overall evolution WITHIN them, within the clusters, is in the opposite direction, temporarily constrained
    energy packages such as black holes and biospheres and other energy-storing mass-formats are precariuosly forming and "doing best" to survive as long as "possible"...


    F. From "Strings Link the Ultracold with the Superhot"

    http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/42632/title/Strings_Link_the_Ultracold_with_the_Superhot

    "Perfect liquids suggest theory’s math mirrors something real.

    When the universe was very young, and still superhot from the aftermath of the Big Bang, plasma should have been the only state of matter around. And that’s what scientists at Brookhaven expected to see when they smashed gold ions together at 99.99 percent of the speed of light using a machine called RHIC (for Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider). RHIC physicists thought the ion collisions would melt the gold’s protons and neutrons into a hot plasma of quarks and gluons at a temperature of a trillion kelvins, replicating conditions similar to those a microsecond after the birth of the universe. But instead of a gaslike plasma, the physicists reported in 2005, RHIC served up a hot quark soup, behaving more like a liquid than a plasma or gas."


    G. The expectation of Brookhaven scientists was a bit unrealistic

    The "aftermath of the Big Bang" lasted much less than 10^-35 seconds. This is evidenced by the fact that "Gravity Is THE Manifestation Of The Onset Of Cosmic Inflation Cataclysm":

    http://www.the-scientist.com/community/posts/list/184.page#1950
    and
    http://www.the-scientist.com/community/posts/list/184.page#1982

    With all respect due to the scientists at Brookhaven it is unrealistic to expect that they can recreate the state of pre big-bang energy-mass singularity. Commonsense is still the best scientific approach.


    H. PS To "Gravity Limits Link Ultracold And Superhot": Our Inability To Create Singularity

    a. From "Strings Link the Ultracold with the Superhot"

    A new truth always has to contend with many difficulties,” the German physicist Max Planck said decades ago. “If it were not so, it would have been discovered much sooner.”

    b. IMO gravity is attempted reversal of inflation

    To me, a simple uninformed one, E=mc^2 is a derived formula, whereas E=Total[m(1 + D)] is a commonsensical descriptive concept.

    I intuitively regard both the ultracold and superhot liquids as being in a confined space and "striving but unable" to overcome D, to render D=0.

    I also intuitively regard our accelerated collisions smashups as attempted "reverse inflations" in the sense that Newton's law of universal gravitation seems to me as "reverse inflation".


    Dov Henis
    (Comments From The 22nd Century)
    Life's Manifest
    http://www.the-scientist.com/community/posts/list/112.page#578
    EVOLUTION Beyond Darwin 200
    http://www.physforum.com/index.php?showtopic=14988&st=405&#entry396201
    http://www.the-scientist.com/community/posts/list/100/122.page#1407
    Dov Henis Dov Henis
    May. 15, 2009 at 3:15pm
  • Brief recapitulation of my May 15 2009 post:

    On The Origin Of Origins

    Dark Matter-Energy And “Higgs”?
    Energy-Mass Superposition
    The Fractal Oneness Of The Universe
    All Earth Life Creates and Maintains Genes


    A. On Energy, Mass, Gravity, Galaxies Clusters AND Life, A Commonsensible Recapitulation
    http://www.the-scientist.com/community/posts/list/184.page#2125
    The universe is the archetype of quantum within classical physics, which is the fractal oneness of the universe.

    Astronomically there are two physics. A classical physics behaviour of and between galactic clusters, and a quantum physics behaviour WITHIN the galactic clusters.

    The onset of big-bang's inflation, the cataclysmic resolution of the Original Superposition, started gravity, with formation - BY DISPERSION - of galactic clusters that behave as classical Newtonian bodies and continuously reconvert their original pre-inflation masses back to energy, thus fueling the galactic clusters expansion, and with endless quantum-within-classical intertwined evolutions WITHIN the clusters in attempt to delay-resist this reconversion.


    B. Updated Life's Manifest May 2009
    http://www.physforum.com/index.php?showtopic=14988&st=480&#entry412704
    http://www.the-scientist.com/community/posts/list/140/122.page#2321

    All Earth life creates and maintains Genes. Genes, genomes, cellular organisms - All create and maintain genes.

    For Nature, Earth's biosphere is one of the many ways of temporarily constraining an amount of ENERGY within a galaxy within a galactic cluster, for thus avoiding, as long as possible, spending this particularly constrained amount as part of the fuel that maintains the clusters expansion.

    Genes are THE Earth's organisms and ALL other organisms are their temporary take-offs.

    For Nature genes are genes are genes. None are more or less important than the others. Genes and their take-offs, all Earth organisms, are temporary energy packages and the more of them there are the more enhanced is the biosphere, Earth's life, Earth's temporary storage of constrained energy. This is the origin, the archetype, of selected modes of survival.

    The early genes came into being by solar energy and lived a very long period solely on direct solar energy. Metabolic energy, the indirect exploitation of solar energy, evolved at a much later phase in the evolution of Earth's biosphere.

    However, essentially it is indeed so. All Earth life, all organisms, create and maintain the genes. Genes, genomes, cellular organisms - all create and maintain genes.


    Dov Henis
    (Comments from 22nd century)
    http://profiles.yahoo.com/blog/2SF3CJJM5OU6T27OC4MFQSDYEU
    Dov Henis Dov Henis
    Aug. 5, 2009 at 2:44pm
  • Does this prove that the big bang theory is the correct theory of how the universe was created? I know it is the most widely accepted theory but if this information is proven to be true does it mean that the big bang theory is the correct theory?
    Nate Fix Nate Fix
    Sep. 5, 2009 at 3:22pm
  • This is a very interesting article! One thing, does this mean that the bang theory is true and that is how the earth was created?
    Brittany Beaudette Brittany Beaudette
    Sep. 7, 2009 at 12:18pm
  • At the risk of sounding geeky, does the whole Darth vader thing tie into Star wars? Dark forces and that kind of stuff, or is it just to make it seem that way? And if it does that is SO AWESOME!!
    Brittney Boe Brittney Boe
    Sep. 7, 2009 at 9:44pm
  • I really liked this article. I though it was pretty informative for not really knowing a whole lot about Astronomy. A question i have was related to this article.. What gives a star its color? I am interested in learning about why they're there.
    Alexandra Peterson Alexandra Peterson
    Sep. 7, 2009 at 11:02pm
  • Why is it that some of the highest scientist that find the theories for the universe's creation--don't believe its acually what happend? (they believe God created it all)
    S Holt S Holt
    Sep. 8, 2009 at 12:28am
  • The thought of life on other planets fascinates me. I believe that we are not the only living things out there. There is proof all around us that say we are not the only ones that could have lived. How many planets have they found evidence of life?
    cassie anderson cassie anderson
    Sep. 8, 2009 at 10:21am
  • I did find this interesting, because I don't know much about Astronomy; so it further educated me on the topic. But I disagree with much of this, because i don't believe in the Big Bang theory.
    Rachael Hitchcock Rachael Hitchcock
    Sep. 13, 2009 at 9:35pm
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