Andrew Yee
September 29th 05, 06:34 PM
Office of News and Information
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
CONTACT:
Vince Stricherz, 206-543-2580
Sep. 28, 2005
Physicists say universe evolution favored three and seven dimensions
Physicists who work with a concept called string theory envision our
universe as an eerie place with at least nine spatial dimensions, six of
them hidden from us, perhaps curled up in some way so they are
undetectable. The big question is why we experience the universe in only
three spatial dimensions instead of four, or six, or nine.
Two theoretical researchers from the University of Washington and Harvard
University think they might have found the answer. They believe the way
our universe started and then diluted as it expanded -- what they call the
relaxation principle -- favored formation of three- and seven-dimensional
realities. The one we happen to experience has three dimensions.
"That's what comes out when you do the math," said Andreas Karch, a
University of Washington assistant professor of physics and lead author of
a new paper that details the theory.
Karch and his collaborator, Lisa Randall, a physics professor at Harvard,
set out to model how the universe was arranged right after it began in the
big bang, and then watch how the cosmos evolved as it expanded and
diluted. The only assumptions were that it started with a generally smooth
configuration, with numerous structures -- called membranes, or "branes"
-- that existed in various spatial dimensions from one to nine, all of
them large and none curled up.
The researchers allowed the cosmos to evolve naturally, without making any
additional assumptions. They found that as the branes diluted, the ones
that survived displayed three dimensions or seven dimensions. In our
universe, everything we see and experience is stuck to one of those
branes, and for it to result in a three-dimensional universe the brane
must be three-dimensional.
Other realities, either three- or seven-dimensional, could be hidden from
our perception in the universe, Karch said.
"There are regions that feel 3D. There are regions that feel 5D. There are
regions that feel 9D. These extra dimensions are infinitely large. We just
happen to be in a place that feels 3D to us," he said.
In our world, forces such as electromagnetism only recognize three
dimensions and behave according to our laws of physics, their strength
diminishing with distance. Gravity, however, cuts across all dimensions,
even those not recognized in our world, Karch and Randall say. But they
theorize that the force of gravity is localized and, with seven branes,
gravity would diminish far more quickly with distance than it does in our
three-dimensional world.
"We know there are people in our three-brane existence. In this case we
will assume there are people somewhere nearby in a seven-brane existence.
The people in the three-brane would have a far more interesting world,
with more complex structures," Karch said.
With gravity diminishing rapidly with distance, a seven-dimensional
existence would not have planets with stable orbits around their sun,
Karch said.
"I am not precisely sure what a universe with such a short-range gravity
would look like, mostly because it is always difficult to imagine how life
would develop under completely different circumstances," he said. "But in
any case, planetary systems as we know them wouldn't form. The possibility
of stable orbits is what makes the three-dimensional world more
interesting."
Karch and Randall detail their work in the October edition of Physical
Review Letters, published by the American Physical Society. The research
was supported by grants from the U.S. Department of Energy and the
National Science Foundation.
Karch said they hope the work will spark extensive scientific exploration
of many other questions involving string theory, extra dimensions and the
evolution of the cosmos.
###
For more information, contact Karch at (206) 543-8591; or Randall at (617)
496-8188
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
CONTACT:
Vince Stricherz, 206-543-2580
Sep. 28, 2005
Physicists say universe evolution favored three and seven dimensions
Physicists who work with a concept called string theory envision our
universe as an eerie place with at least nine spatial dimensions, six of
them hidden from us, perhaps curled up in some way so they are
undetectable. The big question is why we experience the universe in only
three spatial dimensions instead of four, or six, or nine.
Two theoretical researchers from the University of Washington and Harvard
University think they might have found the answer. They believe the way
our universe started and then diluted as it expanded -- what they call the
relaxation principle -- favored formation of three- and seven-dimensional
realities. The one we happen to experience has three dimensions.
"That's what comes out when you do the math," said Andreas Karch, a
University of Washington assistant professor of physics and lead author of
a new paper that details the theory.
Karch and his collaborator, Lisa Randall, a physics professor at Harvard,
set out to model how the universe was arranged right after it began in the
big bang, and then watch how the cosmos evolved as it expanded and
diluted. The only assumptions were that it started with a generally smooth
configuration, with numerous structures -- called membranes, or "branes"
-- that existed in various spatial dimensions from one to nine, all of
them large and none curled up.
The researchers allowed the cosmos to evolve naturally, without making any
additional assumptions. They found that as the branes diluted, the ones
that survived displayed three dimensions or seven dimensions. In our
universe, everything we see and experience is stuck to one of those
branes, and for it to result in a three-dimensional universe the brane
must be three-dimensional.
Other realities, either three- or seven-dimensional, could be hidden from
our perception in the universe, Karch said.
"There are regions that feel 3D. There are regions that feel 5D. There are
regions that feel 9D. These extra dimensions are infinitely large. We just
happen to be in a place that feels 3D to us," he said.
In our world, forces such as electromagnetism only recognize three
dimensions and behave according to our laws of physics, their strength
diminishing with distance. Gravity, however, cuts across all dimensions,
even those not recognized in our world, Karch and Randall say. But they
theorize that the force of gravity is localized and, with seven branes,
gravity would diminish far more quickly with distance than it does in our
three-dimensional world.
"We know there are people in our three-brane existence. In this case we
will assume there are people somewhere nearby in a seven-brane existence.
The people in the three-brane would have a far more interesting world,
with more complex structures," Karch said.
With gravity diminishing rapidly with distance, a seven-dimensional
existence would not have planets with stable orbits around their sun,
Karch said.
"I am not precisely sure what a universe with such a short-range gravity
would look like, mostly because it is always difficult to imagine how life
would develop under completely different circumstances," he said. "But in
any case, planetary systems as we know them wouldn't form. The possibility
of stable orbits is what makes the three-dimensional world more
interesting."
Karch and Randall detail their work in the October edition of Physical
Review Letters, published by the American Physical Society. The research
was supported by grants from the U.S. Department of Energy and the
National Science Foundation.
Karch said they hope the work will spark extensive scientific exploration
of many other questions involving string theory, extra dimensions and the
evolution of the cosmos.
###
For more information, contact Karch at (206) 543-8591; or Randall at (617)
496-8188