Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The riddle of time: What keeps the cosmic clock surging onwards?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The riddle of time: What keeps the cosmic clock surging onwards?

    New Scientist
    October 15, 2005

    The riddle of time;
    What keeps the cosmic clock surging onwards? The answer is written in
    curious elliptical patterns in the sky, says Amanda Gefter

    by Amanda Gefter

    YOU wake up one morning and head into your kitchen, where you get the
    distinct feeling that something strange is going on. A swirl of milk
    separates itself from your coffee, which seems to be growing hotter
    by the minute. Scrambled eggs are unscrambling and leaping out of the
    pan back into their cracked shells, which proceed to reassemble. And
    the warm sunlight that had flooded the room seems to be headed
    straight for the window. Apparently, you conclude, time is flowing in
    reverse.

    You can deduce this because it is obvious that time has an arrow,
    which, this morning aside, always points in the same direction. We
    take the unchanging arrow of time for granted. Yet there is nothing
    in the laws of physics as we know them that says it can't point the
    other way. So the riddle is: where does time's arrow come from?

    Our perception of the direction of time is linked to the fact that
    the world's entropy, or disorder, tends to increase. When you pour
    milk into your coffee, the concoction, at first, is highly ordered,
    with all the milk molecules entering the coffee in a neat stream. But
    as time passes, the milk loses its organisation and mixes randomly
    with the coffee. Keep watching and you will see it become thoroughly
    mixed, but you won't see the milk suddenly regroup. Strange as it may
    seem, it's not that such a scenario is impossible. It's just
    incredibly unlikely.

    That's because there are vastly more ways for the molecules to
    arrange themselves in a random, spread out, high-entropy fashion than
    in the tight formation in which they began. It's a matter of
    probability: as the molecules perpetually rearrange, they almost
    always find themselves in high-entropy arrangements. Of course, if
    they start off in a high-entropy arrangement, we won't notice any
    change. But if entropy is low at the start, it's bound to increase.

    Therein lies the origin of the arrow of time as we perceive it. It
    has two essential ingredients. The first is a low-entropy beginning,
    like the milk starting out in an ordered arrangement. The second is
    mixing: the constant rearrangement of the milk and coffee molecules.
    Mixing is necessary for the system to evolve and rearrange from a
    low-entropy to a higher-entropy state.

    And exactly the same must be true on much grander scales. The
    cosmological arrow of time - the process that started with the big
    bang - requires the universe to have started off with low entropy,
    and the contents of the cosmos to have mixed ever since.

    First evidence

    So can we find these ingredients for time's arrow in our universe?
    Cosmologists already have evidence for the first one. They see that
    the universe had a low-entropy beginning by looking at the
    arrangement of the photons in the cosmic microwave background
    radiation that provides a snapshot of the universe near the beginning
    of time.

    The CMB photons are uniformly spread out, with variations in density
    and temperature detectable at a mere 1 part in 100,000. If the spread
    of the CMB photons is uniform, we can assume that the other contents
    of the nascent universe - such as the atoms - were also spread
    uniformly at that time.

    At first glance, that seems like the very definition of a disordered,
    high-entropy state, but it's not. The universe is governed by
    gravity, which always clumps things together, so a spread-out state
    is incredibly unlikely. Although no one knows exactly why, it seems
    the universe was born in a low-entropy state.

    So what provides the second ingredient? What mixes and rearranges the
    contents of the universe? According to Vahe Gurzadyan, a physicist at
    the Yerevan Physics Institute in Armenia and La Sapienza University
    in Rome, the answer is the shape of space itself.

    In 1992, Gurzadyan and his student Armen Kocharyan were looking at
    what a universe with "negative curvature" would do to the CMB.
    Negative curvature - the exact opposite of the curvature of a sphere
    - means that every point in space would be curved both up and down,
    like the mid-point of a saddle or a Pringle chip. Physicists have
    long considered this to be a possible geometry for the universe.

    The temperature of the CMB varies slightly from point to point in the
    sky, and maps of this variation reveal a multitude of hot and cold
    spots. These maps have enabled cosmologists to infer many things
    about the universe: its age and composition, for example. In their
    theoretical work, Gurzadyan and Kocharyan found that negative
    curvature would stretch the CMB spots into ellipses. That's because
    the CMB photons we observe today have been travelling through the
    universe for nearly 14 billion years. If that journey took them
    through negatively curved space, each little patch of light would
    appear as if it has been through a distorting lens. Five years later,
    Gurzadyan was looking at data from NASA's COBE satellite, one of the
    first to map the CMB, and saw exactly what he and Kocharyan had
    predicted: all the spots appeared elongated (Astronomy and
    Astrophysics , vol 321, p 19).

    The observation was exciting but inconclusive because COBE did not
    provide sufficiently fine resolution to measure the shape of the
    spots precisely. Perhaps, Gurzadyan and Kocharyan reasoned, this
    apparent elongation was just an illusion created by the low-quality
    images. But when vastly more detailed CMB maps arrived from NASA's
    Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) in 2003, Gurzadyan and
    colleagues ran the data through their programs, removing all
    irrelevant distortion effects - and there it was (Modern Physics
    Letters A , vol 20, p 813). "All the spots have the same constant
    elongation, independent of temperature and the size of the spots,"
    Gurzadyan says.

    Because spots of all sizes are distorted in exactly the same manner,
    this effect can't be due to something that happened at the time the
    radiation was created. Some of the spots are so big that their
    extremities were already out of causal contact at the time of their
    creation: light from one side could never reach the other. Just as
    there is no way for us to communicate with a region that has slipped
    beyond our causal horizon (New Scientist , 20 October 2001, p 36),
    there is no way a distortion effect at that point in time could have
    produced the symmetry of the ellipse. So it must have happened some
    time later, during the photons' journey through the universe.

    And if that's the case, Gurzadyan says, we have all the ingredients
    we need for the arrow of time. The universe starts out in an
    unlikely, low-entropy arrangement, with all of its contents almost
    perfectly spread out. But as particles travel through the universe,
    their paths follow the curves of space. In a negatively curved space,
    any two particles that start off next to one another quickly diverge,
    which means all the particles dramatically rearrange: the geometry of
    space mixes the cosmos.

    Since most particle arrangements correspond to high entropy, the
    negative curvature inevitably guides matter into higher-entropy
    states. In the case of the universe, that means states with
    gravitational clumping: as entropy increases, things like stars and
    galaxies form and with them heavy elements and, eventually, us.

    Evidence of this process is encoded in the CMB. The elliptical shape
    of the CMB spots reveals that the photons' paths diverged in
    precisely the way Gurzadyan expected for a negatively curved
    universe. If spatial geometry mixed the photons, then it also mixed
    everything else. And low-entropy beginnings plus mixing equals the
    arrow of time.

    Although Gurzadyan has published his ideas and his data in various
    places, the work remains controversial: the traditional view is that
    the universe is flat, not negatively curved. The usual interpretation
    of the WMAP results, which comes not from looking at the shape of the
    temperature spots but instead from what's called the power spectrum,
    is that the universe is flat. And most cosmologists believe this
    flatness supports the cherished theory of inflation, the idea that
    the universe underwent a fleeting moment of faster-than-light
    expansion shortly after its birth.

    The trouble with that objection is that a different aspect of WMAP's
    findings goes against inflation's predictions. When astronomers plot
    the power spectrum of the data, they see a big problem - hints of
    which had also been seen with COBE. The power spectrum compares the
    amount of temperature variation at different scales in the sky. When
    close regions of the sky are being compared, the temperature
    variations of the CMB fit with the predictions of inflation. But on
    very large angular scales the variation conflicts with inflation's
    prediction. The anomaly, for which there is no accepted explanation,
    suggests that there is something strange going on in the large-scale
    geometry of the cosmos, perhaps because it is not flat. "This anomaly
    is very curious," says Roger Penrose, a mathematical physicist at the
    University of Oxford. "It seems to be out of kilter with the
    inflation model, and it could be due to negative curvature."

    Gurzadyan regards the elongation of the hot and cold spots as
    powerful evidence that the universe is negatively curved, and Penrose
    agrees. Negative curvature would distort the CMB far more than a flat
    universe could, Penrose explains, squashing the light in one
    direction and stretching it in another. "If the geometry of space is
    negative, then you expect the ellipses to stretch much more than they
    would in positively curved or flat space," he says. "And this is
    exactly what Gurzadyan sees."

    Nonetheless, most cosmologists are still not ready to abandon the
    flat universe or inflation. Although no one has actually shown or
    even suggested that there is anything wrong with Gurzadyan's
    elliptical spots, they are hesitant to accept its implications. "At
    the moment, I don't feel that we have any compelling evidence against
    space being flat," says Max Tegmark, a cosmologist at the
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Princeton University's Lyman
    Page, a member of the WMAP team, is similarly reluctant. "Though I'm
    a strong believer in alternative analyses of data, it is too early to
    put much stock into the interpretation of Gurzadyan's result," Page
    says.

    Penrose, however, is excited by the result, and says there is much
    more to be gained from the CMB than physicists so far seem to
    realise. "There's vastly more information in the data than people
    look at normally. So far we've seen an infinitesimal amount, and
    people tend to look at the same things that everyone else is looking
    at. Gurzadyan is only using a tiny bit, but it's a different tiny
    bit. I think the analysis has to be taken very seriously."

    Elliptical time

    Of course, directly linking the ellipses to the flow of time is even
    more controversial, but we don't have any other satisfactory
    explanation. The flow of time we observe is certainly not compulsory:
    it is perfectly possible for the time-symmetry of relativity, quantum
    theory and our other descriptions of the universe to produce a
    universe where time doesn't flow - or even one where time flows in
    the opposite direction to the one we experience. In 1999 Lawrence
    Schulman of Clarkson University in Potsdam, New York, showed that in
    principle regions of the universe where time flows in the normal
    direction can coexist with regions where it flows backwards (New
    Scientist , 6 February 2000, p 26).

    But in our universe a negative curvature would stop this by imposing
    a global condition for the increase of disorder. This may even be
    what allows life to exist in the universe, Gurzadyan suggests: a new
    kind of anthropic principle .

    Of course, if the saddle-shaped universe provides us with a mechanism
    for the increasing cosmic disorder, it still doesn't explain the
    arrow's ultimate origin: it doesn't explain the first ingredient, why
    the universe began with low-entropy conditions. "Of course you need
    mixing," explains University of Chicago physicist Sean Carroll, "but
    that's the easy part. The hard part is getting the initial entropy to
    be low."

    That remains a mystery, perhaps only to be resolved by the "theory of
    everything" that physicists are avidly searching for. And we do have
    hints that this final theory might address the problem. For example,
    Rafael Sorkin of Syracuse University in New York state has proposed
    "causal set theory", which attempts to unite quantum theory and
    relativity. It supposes that the fabric of the universe grows as
    effects follow causal events - giving a sense of time's flow (New
    Scientist , 4 October 2003, p 36). Although Sorkin and his colleagues
    admit it is not yet a complete theory of quantum gravity, it does at
    least install a one-way arrow of time and a low-entropy beginning.

    Of course, all these attempts to understand the irrepressible passage
    of time assume that time's arrow is a "real" phenomenon to do with
    the physical universe - and that is not entirely certain. Some think
    it might arise from the strange metaphysics of the quantum world;
    others see it as a purely psychological phenomenon, an artefact of
    our consciousness.

    But Gurzadyan is now convinced that the passage of time is a
    cosmological process. The hands on the cosmic clock are driven round
    by the chaotic movements of photons through the negatively curved
    universe, he says. Though that may be a little beyond what most
    cosmologists are willing to accept for now, the idea must be worth
    exploring: the search for answers to the flow of time goes to the
    heart of physics, Penrose believes. "The problem of the arrow of time
    is absolutely fundamental," he says. "It's telling us something very
    deep about the universe."

    Life and time

    Amanda Gefter

    Vahe Gurzadyan's idea has a startling implication: if the geometry of
    space were different, there would be no "arrow" of time. Could life
    exist in a universe without an arrow? If not, would that help explain
    why the geometry of our universe is as we observe? Gurzadyan has
    dubbed this idea the "curvature anthropic principle".

    The standard anthropic principle says that certain aspects of the
    universe - like the values of physical constants - are the way they
    are because otherwise we wouldn't be here to wonder about them. For
    instance, if the mass of the electron were different, the universe
    would be unable to support human life, so we shouldn't be surprised
    by its value, given our very existence. Some scientists consider this
    common sense, while others see it as a sorry stand-in for a real
    explanation. The curvature anthropic principle applies this logic to
    the shape of space: without this negative curvature, we wouldn't have
    evolved as we did, Gurzadyan suggests.
Working...
X