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"The multiverse is not a paradigm and it’s not shifting anything."

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OpenID johnduffieldblog said...

Again I agree with you Sabine, and then some. Many-worlds came up elsewhere today, if you don't mind I'll repeat what I said:

See position space and momentum space on wiki and note the reference to the Fourier transform. Then take a look at weak measurement work by Aephraim Steinberg and Jeff Lundeen et als. Note Jeff's semi-technical explanation where he says this:

So what does this mean? We hope that the scientific community can now improve upon the Copenhagen Interpretation, and redefine the wavefunction so that it is no longer just a mathematical tool, but rather something that can be directly measured in the laboratory.

Think of the photon as a waveform in space, analagous to a seismic wave deep in the ground. It goes through both slits and interferes with itself. However when you detect it at one slit you perform a wavefunction-wavefunction interaction that operates akin to an optical Fourier transform. The photon is transformed into a dot at that slit so it goes through that slit only, and there is no interference. When you detect it on the screen you perform another wavefunction-wavefunction interaction that again operates akin to an optical Fourier transform. Hence you get a dot on the screen. No magic, no mystery, and no many-worlds is required.

12:33 PM, September 26, 2013

Blogger Arun said...

Hi Bee,

You wrote "It just means that mathematical consistency of whatever theory it is you’re dealing with is not sufficient to make a particular prediction. The string theory landscape is a multiverse of this type. The only reason people talk about this now is that many of them had been hoping string theory would make some requirements that one needs in the standard model unnecessary. "

If we give string theory all the requirements one needs to put into the Standard Model, can it give us a unique answer? Or are there many answers that differ in between say 100 TeV and the string scale, even though they all agree with the Standard Model at the current level of experimental precision?

If there are many answers, i.e., the Standard Model under-determines the String Model, isn't that a different flavor of multiverse?


2:26 PM, September 26, 2013

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2:34 PM, September 26, 2013

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2:35 PM, September 26, 2013

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2:36 PM, September 26, 2013

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2:39 PM, September 26, 2013

Blogger L. Edgar Otto said...

Sorry, smartphone posting lag:

I said:

Sabine, a very enjoyable reading and analysis... a sensible stance as philosophy too. I too saw the need to reason out the multiverse and manyworlds distinction, obviously. But to me if it is the case of what nature does in some location it always was and will always be the case also. (at least it can be this way intermittently over a span of space and time)... your English is better than mine! You would sell a lot of books, and helpful ones too, if you expanded this to a popularization on physics - but the physics itself is more important. Each of us in a sense is this paradox of a manyworld wishing for some change of mystery to come. I comment to you after just writing a chapter with local color and clarity (will put it in my fb notes about a character Jubal) which I hope let me see right away the clarity and coherence of your essay for the depth it is in an honest assessment. We all know the anthropic principle is a holding one and a cop out.

2:44 PM, September 26, 2013

Blogger uair01 said...

Bonus points for the extreme funniness of the Merkel examples :-)

3:58 PM, September 26, 2013

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5:33 PM, September 26, 2013

Blogger Plato Hagel said...

For some reason "green as Envy," kept coming to mind(not even sure what that was suppose to mean)?:)Merkel's 3rd term? Pretty amazing for a minority government that has to now work with the social left?

Perhaps, such distinction as multiversial may arise now as questions of what is qualitative versus quantitative, by examination? Can you do away with Genus figures and be happy? Can abstraction help to form new ideas?

Maybe we should just do away with the idea of symmetry breaking?:)

Best,

5:35 PM, September 26, 2013

Blogger Neil Bates said...

Bee, clever and entertaining rundown of the issues. I love all that Merkel stuff (BTW folks she is not "conservative" by USA standards!) One point regarding models in general: there is an intuitive pressure that many can't resist, that "realistic" models just have to be true. Hence, e.g. the push to believe that the wavefunction exists and just has to keep on evolving, despite the evidence to the contrary of unpredictable, exclusivising outcomes.

But I think that the universe is not "realistic", not like classical EM or a draftsman's drawing. It just isn't like that no matter how much most scientists (?) want it to be like that. So there really isn't an answer to, what is one entangled particle like before it's measured etc or does the WF "really exist" at first and then "just vanish everywhere else" when we make a measurement. The world is relational and not locally realistic.

As for measurement and collapse, I think that things happen the way they seem to: nuclei decay at specific moments and there are no other cats in other worlds, an atom in a detector just by chance can grab enough energy to make the transition and take the energy out of action for any other atom, etc. Perhaps it's part of the energy-time uncertainty relation? But in any case it is silly to keep forcing classical ideas on things.

8:28 PM, September 26, 2013

Blogger Neil Bates said...

johnduffieldblog: I'm sorry but that concept does not remove the mystery. You have an extended WF and the problem is to explain how it can end up of any of *many* possible final positions. Furthermore, part of the weirdness of quantum mechanics is that you can get multiple outcomes (like, muon lifetimes) from an (AFAWK) identical starting point. That is just not deterministic. Any mathematical process is deterministic, so-called random functions actually describe the space of outcomes and do not *produce* varying outcomes by themselves.

8:32 PM, September 26, 2013

Blogger Robert L. Oldershaw said...

Two quick comments on this most interesting blog post.

1. A paradigm is an overarching conceptual framework for an entire field of study. Thus the theory of biological evolution is the paradigm for biology and provides a conceptual framework for the various theories and models of that field. The term paradigm is often used incorrectly to mean any new and unorthodox idea, theory or model, regardless of conceptual basis and scope.

2. I am very glad to see you question Wilczek on his three specious reasons for making a multiverse model mandatory. I was shocked when I read that part of the paper. He is supposed to be a deep thinker and highly qualified physicist, and yet when it comes to fashionable ideas like string theory/SUSY and the multiverse, he and many others seem to lose their scientific compasses.

9:16 PM, September 26, 2013

OpenID johnduffieldblog said...

Well said Robert. I would put it more strongly and say guys like Wilczek are harming physics by peddling woo like that. The public will end up thinking they shouldn't fund physics if that's what physicists come up with.

Neil: sure, it doesn't answer everything, but that concept surely knocks the many-worlds fantasy on the head.

3:27 AM, September 27, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Hi Arun,

Good point, I was somewhat careless on that. No, I don't think it's a different type of multiverse it just means you need observations that you haven't yet been able to make. It's like having the standard model Lagrangian with the mass of the top quark missing. Nobody would call that a multiverse. To begin with, you never know the parameters exactly anyway because there's always measurement uncertainty. So if that was a multiverse, we'd always have a multiverse in the trivial sense that there are infinitely many real numbers in any finite interval, no matter how good the precision. Best,

B.

5:03 AM, September 27, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

John,

I agree with Neil.

5:07 AM, September 27, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Robert,

Yes, I would agree on 1). Re 2) I too found the Wilczek paper disappointing though it's so strangely patched together that I suspect there might have been a deadline pressure having something to do with the outcome. It starts pretty good and is nicely written, but it reads like he run out of steam after a few pages and then instead copied a summary of some other recent work. Best,

B.

5:12 AM, September 27, 2013

Blogger Phillip Helbig said...

For what it's worth, Max Tegmark is careful to define the four levels of multiverses he discusses. (I would use other terminology, but at least he defines clearly what he means and sticks to it.) Also, the multiverses he talks about are not hypotheses, but rather predictions of other theories. Sure, the theories might be wrong, but in principle can be ruled out (not necessarily via arguments involving multiverses).

5:29 AM, September 27, 2013

OpenID johnduffieldblog said...

Philip: let's take a look at Tegmark's multiverses:

1 Beyond our cosmological horizon: GR allows us to envisage an early universe where energy-density/pressure was very high, much as it is down near a black hole where gravitational time dilation is high. So if the universe expands even at some sedate pace, any observers within that universe would assert that the expansion was extremely rapid. Like inflation. Only if the universe was infinite, it couldn't expand. But it does.

2 Universes with different physical constants: this universe has different physical constants. The fine structure constant is a running constant, the coordinate speed of light varies in a gravitational field, invariant mass varies, the cosmological constant isn't constant, and so on.

3 Many Worlds: see comment1 above.

4 Ultimate ensemble: the universe is not made of mathematics.

All this multiverse stuff is to me so great an absurdity that I believe no man who has in philosophical matters a competent faculty of thinking can ever fall into it.

6:20 AM, September 27, 2013

Blogger Phillip Helbig said...

"Only if the universe was infinite, it couldn't expand."

Why not?

8:36 AM, September 27, 2013

Blogger Robert L. Oldershaw said...


Less than 100 years ago scientists discovered that most of what we could observe was contained within one galaxy, and there were at least 100 billion other galaxies at larger distances. The fundamental physics in each of these galaxies appeared to be exactly the same, and that hypothesis has been validated over the subsequent decades.

Is it so unthinkable that the same type of discovery process could be repeated? Perhaps, once again, what we observe is all part of one metagalactic object, and there are countless numbers of these objects, and the fundamental physics is exactly the same in each one.

You ask: Where would this hierarchy end? I answer: Why would you assume that there must be an "end"?

11:40 AM, September 27, 2013

Blogger Zephir said...

For me the multiverse is a political phenomenon of decadent and religious physics of current era. It's a consequence of the fact, that the theorists adhere on (the postulates of) their beloved theories so much, they're willing to attribute any deviation from them to ultramundanne effects, i.e. the multiverse instead of to possible violation of these theories.

So for example instead of looking for falsification of Big Bang model they're looking for additional multiverses, which are fulfilling the Big Bang model.

11:55 AM, September 27, 2013

Blogger Zephir said...

/*..Are there aspects of observable reality, i.e. the universe, that can be explained by multiversality, but not otherwise..*/

You can always explain multiversality with more general model. Existing theories are just four - ten dimensional: the physicists still didn't started to think about actual dimensionality of our Universe, which is apparently much higher. In AWT the universe is infinitely-dimensional and such a model indeed doesn't require to introduce multiverse at all.

But the contemporary physicists apparently think, that the Universe is low-dimensional in the same way, like their formal reductionist theories - after then they're indeed face the excessive degree of freedom during fitting of their theories into reality. But it's just because they have no more general theory developed yet (and the dense aether model is not good enough for them).

12:06 PM, September 27, 2013

Blogger Joshuaite said...

>"Only if the universe was infinite, it couldn't expand."

>>"Why not?"

Because an infinite object is by definition unquantifiable.

If an object can expand then it is obviously quantifiable and thus not infinite.

1:36 PM, September 27, 2013

Blogger janvones said...

And there shall in that time be rumours of things going astray, and there will be a great confusion as to where things really are, and nobody will really know where lieth those little things with the sort of raffia work base, that has an attachment…at this time, a friend shall lose his friends’s hammer and the young shall not know where lieth the things possessed by their fathers that their fathers put there only just the night before around eight o’clock...

3:40 PM, September 27, 2013

Blogger Zephir said...

/* ..If an object can expand then it is obviously quantifiable and thus not infinite .. */

It's true, that the steady-state infinite universe model disfavors the expansion, but because our visibility scope in it is limited, the the observable portion of Universe can still exhibit some transform as a whole. IMO we don't observe such an transform, as all phenomena (red shift, dark energy and CMBR anisotropy) can be explained with geometry of light scattering in it.

4:46 PM, September 27, 2013

Blogger JimV said...

I also think an infinite universe can expand. Someone, I think it was Cantor, or perhaps Hilbert, showed that there are infinite sets of different sizes (some are bigger than others).

More basically than that, I can conceive of an infinite universe containing all its matter in a regular lattice with a spacing of x dimensional units between adjacent particles. (A toy model.) Now let x increase with time (all the particles move farther apart). That is how we define expansion in our universe, is it not?

Also, there is the example of Cantor's Hotel. It has as many rooms as there are positive integers, but even when it is full it can accept new guests. To make room, all the quests move into even-numbered rooms. The guests in room 1 move into room 2, those in room 2 move into room 4, room n moves into room 2n, and so on, leaving all the odd-numbered rooms free for occupancy.

I think infinite sets can be infinitely weird and normal intuition does not apply.

8:57 PM, September 27, 2013

OpenID johnduffieldblog said...

Philip: an infinite universe can't expand because the pressure is counterbalanced at all locations.

See Phil Plait's blog. He said dark energy acts like pressure. This is often described as negative pressure, but that's only because gravity pulls. The cosmological constant is "the energy density of space", and it's positive. Space has a positive volume, and energy = pressure x volume. So the pressure is positive too.

6:43 AM, September 28, 2013

Blogger Uncle Al said...

Early theoretical chemistry calculated organic molecules' enthalpies of formation within a hartree or so. A chemical bond is 3 ev maximum. Look up a hartree. For less than a textbook's price, HyperChem Lite calculates bond lengths and angles within 2% of crystal structures. Enthalpies of formation snug measurement. Five minutes of "crude" mm+ iteration does it.

Physics' 40 years refining string and quantum gravitations; standard model anomalies, violations, and breakings; dark matter; and showing GR is not complete, offer NOTHING empirical. Physics is 1) stuck in a local minimum, or 2) has a defective founding postulate. There is no escape by doing more of the same. mm+ has a molecular symmetry defect. The vendor confirms that failure, but nobody else has complained. Naughty me.

I propose five classes of geometric tests of spacetime geometry targetting assumed exact vacuum mirror symmetry toward matter. Physics boldly rejects the concept: "It contradicts accepted theory." So does observed reality. What can physics lose by loading existing apparatus with chemistry? Angela Merkel is a physical chemist. Her success knows "within a hartree" is not good enough, however easy and popular it is to obtain.

12:17 PM, September 28, 2013

Blogger Neil Bates said...

John_____, an infinite universe can indeed expand in the sense of benchmark locations like galaxies that see uniform CMBR will all get farther and farther apart. The pressure issue is all relative to a given object, no other *net* pressure means that gravity or DE can act to attract and repel them just as before. (Also, REM the Newtonian approximation of the outer reference galaxy being just under the continued infinite series of outer shells with gravity all canceling out.)

However, an energy paradox can be formed from this concept. We can imagine a model universe with each reference object (equivalent to a galaxy) connected by elastic bands like a "jungle gym" (x, y, z axes in all directions and repeated indefinitely without an edge. Well, the tension in the bands all cancels out for a given object (vector cancellation of pulls.) So, the objects can continue to expand just as if they were free-floating. However that causes a problem with conservation of energy. (See my blog post at http://tyrannogenius.blogspot.com/2010_03_01_archive.html.)

4:28 PM, September 28, 2013

Blogger Neil Bates said...

Oops I fudged that a bit - pressure does have its own contribution to effective gravitational mass but that just alters the magnitude, it still does not prevent a deceleration/acceleration parameter from applying to an infinite universe. If our universe is expanding past the break even Omega value then it should be hyperbolic and in simplest topology, literally infinite (altho I suppose that DE and vacuum variations etc makes all this dicey.)

10:50 PM, September 28, 2013

Blogger MarkusM said...

Maybe we can ban the multiverse on the long run, just by showing the uniqueness of our world.
There are two (sound) hints I know of:

* The Standard Model (SM) of elementary particles can be derived with little additional input from the axioms of noncommutative geometry.
http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0610241v1

* The method of chaotic quantization reproduces most of the SM parameters to a good accuracy (and interestingly just those).
http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0207081

Best

1:13 AM, September 29, 2013

OpenID johnduffieldblog said...

Neil: IMHO it's best to consider space alone. You know how a balloon analogy is often employed? The balloon skin is elastic. To expand the balloon you pump air in, effectively adding energy. Alternatively you can make the balloon skin weaker, whereupon it expands without any conservation-of-energy issues. For a better analogy move on to the raisins-in-the-cake, but forget about the raisins.

Note that big-bang cosmology says the universe started small. An infinite universe contradicts that. You can't have your cake and eat it.

4:44 AM, September 29, 2013

Blogger Uncle Al said...

An expanding infinite universe is Escher's hyperbolic tesselation of a circle. Draw a larger radius concentric circle about the original, erase the original circle's boundary, expand. Ditto a ball's volume, etc.

10:51 AM, September 29, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

An infinite universe can expand though you have to be careful with defining what you mean with expansion. It's normally taken to mean a 'local' expansion with respect to fixed 'yardsticks'. For example, the space between galaxies increases relative to the size of the galaxies themselves, irrespective of whether or not there's an infinite amount of galaxies. And that is not theory but an observational fact. Best,

B.

4:53 AM, September 30, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Sorry, I realize the last sentence of my previous comment could be misunderstood. This expansion is well described by General Relativity of course. I meant that there's no ambiguity in this prediction.

4:55 AM, September 30, 2013

Blogger Giotis said...

Sabine what you write about String theory landscape is not quite correct in the sense that there is a real dynamical mechanism which allows you to realize the string vacua (i.e. it is not just a mathematical landscape).

To make it concrete suppose in a point of an eternally inflating space the corresponding flux which parametrizes the Calabi-Yau suddenly changes; the end result of this is the transition to another string vacuum i.e. another universe is created.

This is a key point and this is why String landscape is seen in conjunction with eternal inflation. I.e. String landscape provides the possibilities and eternal inflation permits you to realize these possibilities.

5:22 AM, September 30, 2013

Blogger Zephir said...

/*..expansion is well described by General Relativity of course. I meant that there's no ambiguity in this prediction..*/

The dense aether model explains expansion of Universe with scattering of light waves at the density fluctuations of vacuum (which are known as a CMBR noise). This leads to change of light waves with distance from ANY observer in this system. This leads to famous Einstein's expansion paradox: the space-time expands globally, although it nowhere expands locally.

Such a situation can be modeled with scattering of ripples at the water surface. One observer sitting at the water surface would see, that the wavelength of surface ripples is shrunken at the place of remote observer. But this distant observer will see exactly the same about first observer. Both perspectives are perfectly equivalent, so there is no expansion of space-time at all from global perspective. But because this global perspective is not available for any observer, we are forced to think about two multiverses with different reference frames, in which each of observer is residing.

IMO the Einstein's expansion paradox is impossible to explain without dense aether model.

6:01 AM, September 30, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Giotis,

Why would it change? Or let me ask the question differently. Suppose somebody found a vacuum that fits with all observed parameter values/gauge symmetries and so on. Do you think anybody would care about the rest? Best,

B.

6:03 AM, September 30, 2013

Blogger Zephir said...

/* Suppose somebody found a vacuum that fits with all observed parameter values/gauge symmetries and so on. Do you think anybody would care about the rest? */

It's a question of economy of such prediction too. The people are looking not only for more exact solutions, but for more effective solutions too. I presume, they're willing to continue with it, until we would be willing to pay them for it.

6:12 AM, September 30, 2013

Blogger Giotis said...

It's a QM effect. If you wait enough it will change.

Before moduli stabilization via fluxes there was the hope that the theory will stabilize the moduli in a way that the end result would resemble our type of vacuum. This together with a vacuum selection principle (maybe derived from some internal consistency condition of the theory) would allow us to further pinpoint our vacuum via a top-down approach.

After KKLT and flux compactifications milestones though(the notorious 10^500 vacua etc)it was realized that such a possibility is very difficult to be realized if not impossible.

Of course even now if they could find the exact string vacuum we are living (via a bottom-up approach) would be extremely important for the theory and in String phenomenology considerable progress has been made in that direction. But of course this doesn't mean that there is no multiverse (at least according to the current state of affairs you never know what future research might reveal).

6:42 AM, September 30, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Giotis,

The question is this: Is it wrong to assume a "selected" vacuum, forget about stabilizing it. Best,

B.

9:14 AM, September 30, 2013

Blogger Giotis said...

I don’t think so (if I understand your question correctly). If you don’t stabilize the moduli you get a bunch of massless scalar fields with undetermined VEVs. The VEVs of these scalars on the other hand are related to the values of specific parameters (e.g. coupling constants) of the effective theory in the 4 uncompactified dimensions; you won’t be able to make predictions if you don’t determine the VEVs of the moduli. Basically you don’t have a model to work with.

3:56 PM, September 30, 2013

Blogger kashyap vasavada said...

This is perhaps a late comment for this blog, but I hope, you Bee, or someone else on this blog would respond. I am somewhat sympathetic to the idea of multiverse in the cosmological sense but not at all in the quantum mechanics (Everett) sense. For QM it seems to me that this is total copout because we do not understand QM . My reasoning is this. This idea in QM is so vague and arbitrary that perhaps it cannot even be called science. Suppose a professor asks his graduate student to do a QM expt next morning. If the student comes to work early then the universe splits. If the student feels lazy that morning and does not do the expt then the universe does not split!!! After the experiment is done with say a billion electrons or photons the final result is completely predictable. Any other graduate student will get the same answer. Thus all the split universes have to conspire to give the same final answer! If the argument is that the universe is split already in heavens before any experiment is done and you are just choosing the branch (by free will?!!), that argument would be too religious and unscientific (Not that I have any objection to that. I am not atheist!). I am puzzled why some distinguished scientists would believe in Everett multiverse at all.

11:35 AM, October 03, 2013

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