According to the standard Big Bang model, the
universe was born during a period of inflation
that began about 13.7 billion years ago. Like a
rapidly expanding balloon, it swelled from a size
smaller than an electron to nearly its current
size within a tiny fraction of a second.
Initially, the universe was permeated only by
energy. Some of this energy congealed into
particles, which assembled into light atoms like
hydrogen and helium. These atoms clumped
first into galaxies, then stars, inside whose fiery
furnaces all the other elements were forged.
This is the generally agreed-upon picture of our
universe's origins as depicted by scientists. It is
a powerful model that explains many of the
things scientists see when they look up in the
sky, such as the remarkable smoothness of
space-time on large scales and the even
distribution of galaxies on opposite sides of the
universe.
But there are things about it that make some
scientists uneasy. For starters, the idea that the
universe underwent a period of rapid inflation
early in its history cannot be directly tested, and
it relies on the existence of a mysterious form
of energy in the universe's beginning that has
long disappeared.
"Inflation is an extremely powerful theory, and
yet we still have no idea what caused inflation—
or whether it is even the correct theory,
although it works extremely well," said Eric Agol,
an astrophysicist at the University of
Washington.
For some scientists, inflation is a clunky
addition to the Big Bang model, a necessary
complexity appended to make it fit with
observations. Nor was it the last such addition.
"We've also learned there has to be dark matter
in the universe, and now dark energy ," said Paul
Steinhardt, a theoretical physicist at Princeton
University. "So the way the model works today
is you say, 'OK, you take some Big Bang, you
take some inflation, you tune that to have the
following properties, then you add a certain
amount of dark matter and dark energy.' These
things aren't connected in a coherent theory."
"What's disturbing is when you have a theory
and you make a new observation, you have to
add new components," Steinhardt added. "And
they're not connected … There's no reason to
add them, and no particular reason to add them
in that particular amount, except the
observations. The question is how much you're
explaining and how much you're engineering a
model. And we don’t' know yet."
An ageless universe
In recent years, Steinhardt has been working
with colleague Neil Turok at Cambridge
University on a radical alternative to the
standard Big Bang model.
According to their idea, called the ekpyrotic
universe theory, the universe was born not just
once, but multiple times in endless cycles of
fiery death and rebirth. Enormous sheet-like
"branes," representing different parts of our
universe, collide about once every trillion years,
triggering Big Bang-like explosions that re-inject
matter and energy into the universe.
The pair claims that their ekpyrotic, or "cyclic,"
theory would explain not only inflation, but other
cosmic mysteries as well, including dark matter,
dark energy and why the universe appears to be
expanding at an ever-accelerating clip.
While controversial, the ekpyrotic theory raises
the possibility that the universe is ageless and
self-renewing. It is a prospect perhaps even
more awe-inspiring than a universe with a
definite beginning and end, for it would mean
that the stars in the sky, even the oldest ones,
are like short-lived fireflies in the grand scheme
of things.
"Does the universe resemble any of the physical
models we make of it? I'd like to hope that the
effort society pours into scientific research is
getting us closer to fundamental truths, and not
just a way to make useful tools," said Caltech
astronomer Richard Massey. "But I'm equally
terrified of finding out that everything I know is
wrong, and secretly hope that I don't."
m. Livescience.com
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