Showing posts with label Astrophysics and Cosmology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Astrophysics and Cosmology. Show all posts

Monday, April 9, 2007

Superstrings connect : What Happened Before The Big Bang



What is the fundamental thing that makes up matter? Do extra dimensions exist? If they do, where are they? Do parallel universes exist? How our visible universe was created?

Imagine you could find an explanation for everything in the universe, from the smallest events possible to the biggest. This is the dream which has captivated the most brilliant scientists since Einstein. But to make the dream true they needed “The theory of everything” which will unitie all the four fundamental forces into a single equation. The four forces (gravity, electromagnetism and the strong and weak nuclear forces) would be unified by an equation perhaps one inch long. During the last thirty years of his life Albert Eienstein sought, relentlessly for this theory and he came up empty handed and once said “Nature shows us only the tail of the lion”. But now scientists says that they have got that theory and that is the super string theory.

In the heart of string theory:
Think of a guitar that has been tuned by stretching the string under tension across the guitar. Depending on how the musical notes will be created by the string. These musical notes could be said to be excitation modes of that guitar string under tension.In similar manner, in string theory the elementary particles could be thought of as the musical note or excitation modes of elementary strings.So, roughly speaking everything in the universe in made of tiny strings, because the sub-atomic particles are really just resonance or vibrations of a tiny string.In string theory as in guitar playing, the string must be stretched under tension in order to become excited. The strings are floating at space time.If string theory is a quantum theory of gravity(it’s a theory which can unifie General Reletivity & Quantum mechanics, where general reletvity explains the largest events & quantum mechanics the smallest thing in the universe) then the average size of a string is about 10*-33 centimeters, or about a millionth of a billionth of a billionth of a billionth of a centimeter. Unfortunately, this means that the strings are too small to see by current or expected particle physics technology.There are both open & closed looped strings.
Extra dimensions:
We live in a universe of three dimensional space (3D), or can say four dimensional space-time. It means we can move back-front, up-down & left-right in these three ways. With these three dimensions adding time we get four dimensional (4D) space-time. But string theory says something different, strange and amazing.If a string has to oscillate properly if needs ten dimensions! Yes ten dimensions. But where are the extra six dimensions? Super string theory gives the answer. The extra six dimensions are compactified. The best way to draw this is to use complicated 6D geometry called Calabi-You manifold, in which all the intrinsic properties of elementary particles are hidden.There are infinite number of ways to wind a string around and extra dimension. Each way in topologically described by an integer called winding number, which can be positive or negative depending on the orientation of the string.
Five theories of everything!At first of early nineties there was total five distinct string theories in 10D space.The theories are So (32), Type I ,IIA,IIB & E8 X E8 heterotic.In that time string theory was said as “The theory of everything”. But it has five types. So it there are five theories of everything! and it is really impossible because we need only one. Besides Michel Duff (University of Michigan) and his team combined gravity and super symmetry which is called supergravity. Their equation said that totally there will be .11 dimensions where string theory said 10. So with everything string theory was in an embarrassing position. They were trying to add the eleventh dimension. It might rescue them.
Brane world:In 1995 Joe Polchinski of the University of California in Santa Barbara electrified the string-theory community with a major discovery that has subsequently impacted every field of physics. He discovered D-branes.D-branes are surfaces where the free ends of open strings are fixed. They come in various dimensions. 0.2-branes for example are two dimensional and can also be called D2-membranes, or super membranes. D0-branee are like particle like and D1-branes are string like. Higher dimensional objects can exist as well. D-branes are essential for making string-theory mathematically consistent, and have far-reaching implications for a theory of quantum gravity.

M-theory:
At last scientist’s were able to add the last one dimension, the eleventh dimension and something happened remarkable — the five theories turned out to be simply different manifestations of a more fundamental theory. It means in 11 dimensions looking from the mountain-top, looking down you could see string theory as being part of a much larger reality, reality of eleventh dimension.So with the addition of one extra dimension string theory made sense again, but it had become a very different kind of theory.Here the tiny invisible strings of string theory stretched and they combined. The astonishing conclusion was that all matter in the universe was connected to one vast structure: a membrane. In effect our entire universe is a membrane. The quest to explain everything in universe could begin again and at its heart would be this new theory. It was dubbed membrane theory or M-theory, but so enigmatic and profound did the idea seem that some thought ‘M’ should stand for other things as — magic, mystery, majesty, madness or mother theory. This is the mother of all superstring theories.

The 11th dimension:
With M theory it seemed at least there was a theory which might explain everything in the universe, but before they could decide if this was true the scientists needed to know more about this new eleventh dimension. It quickly became clear it was a place where all the normal rules of commonsense have been abandoned. For one thing it is both infinitely long but only a very small distance across.Scientists like Paul Steinhard (Princeton University) and Burt Or rut (University of Pennsylvania) tell that this 11th dimension exists only one trillionth of a millimetre away from every point in our three dimensional world. So it’s closer than your clothes to your body and yet we can not sense it. In this mysterious space our membrane universe is floating. At first no one could imagine how that worked. Then some suggested it might float like a thin rubber sheet. Others that it might be more like a bubble which vibrated as it was blown aimlessly across space. But is our universe alone or there are parallel universes? Let’s explore it. The journey began with Lisa Randall.

Parallel Universes:
Lisa Randall (Harvard University) had been fascinated by an apparently inexplicable phenomenon: the weakness of gravity.We know there are four fundamental force in our universes. If we assume the intensity of gravity ‘1′, then the intensity of weak Nuclear Force-10*30, strong Nuclear force- 10*40 and strong Nuclear force-10*42 (42 zero after 1). So gravity is extremely weaker than the other three forces. Now you might look around and say gravity does not seem weak, but if you think about if you have the entire earth pulling on you and yet can manage to pick things up.When M Theory emerged, Randall and Sundrum (John Hopkins University) wondered if it might be provide and explanation. Could gravity be leaking from our universe into empty space of the eleventh dimension?Randall tried to calculate how gravity could leak from our membrane universe into empty space, but she couldn’t make it work. Then she hard a theory that there might be another membrane in eleventh dimension. Now he had really strange thought. What if gravity was not leaking from our universe but to it? What if it came from that other universe? On that membrane or brain, gravity, would be as the other forces, but by the time it reached us it would only be a faint signal. Now when she reworked her calculations everything fitted exactly. So our gravity is just a weak signal leaking out of another universe into ours which spends most of the time near the other brane. We only feel the tail end of gravity.The weakness of gravity could at last be explained, but only by introducing the idea of parallel universe. Randall’s idea opened a pandora’s Box. Now suddenly physicists all over the world piled into the eleventh dimension trying to solve age-old problem and every time it seemed the perfect explanation was another parallel universe. Everywhere they looked it seemed they began to find more and more of them.within no time at all eleventh dimension seemed to be jam packed full of membranes. These membranes were possible other parallel universes. In those universes there may be people like us or not, may be different kinds of laws of physics.So M-theory was getting more and more stranger. But could it really be a theory which explained everything in our universe? Did it answered what caused the Bigbang, it mean the explosion from which our universe was created?

Before the Big bang:
Imagine there is an enormous ship standing at harbour which is 150 or 200ft high. This giant wave suddenly jumped from sea surface to air & crushed its windows. It means from 2d to 3d. Burt ovrut suggested our universe is moving through the eleventh dimension like giant, turbulent waves.Burt’s idea caught attention of the physicists and cosmologists. After a conference in Cambridge in which he explained this idea first time, Neil Turok (Cambridge University), Paul Steinhurdt and Burt decided to discuss about bigbang. Started to throw ideas. Suddenly they knocked at the right door and the mystery of bigbang opened.The idea was——-If two brains collide each other then it produces all the effects of early universe. It means Bigbang is the result of the collision of two brains or parallel universes. But the problem was things are not smooth out in our universe. In fact we have little clamps, we have galaxies & lumps of matter. Now they had to explain how the collision of two parallel universe could go on create these lumps of matter. Could they solve it?Yes, they solved it. They answer was — people tended to think of brains as being flat perfect sheets, geometrical plains, but the picture could not be correct. It cannot be perfectly flat. It has to ripple. When the rippling brains approach to each other and collide they don’t hit at exactly the same time, same place, but in fact they hit at different points and at different times. This rippling collision produces lumps of matter.So they finally had their complete explanation of the birth of our universe and the latest understanding of the universe is that there could be infinite number of universes each with a different laws of physics. Bigbangs probably take place all the time. Our universe co-exists with other universes which are also in process of expansion. Our universe could be just one bubble floating in an ocean of other bubbles. Perhaps out there in space there is another universe heading directly towards as — it may only be a matter of time before we collide.

Referance:
Elegent Universe-Brayan Greene
Superstrings-Leonerd Susskind http://www.physicsweb.com/
BBC science & nature
Image courtesy :

Sunday, March 4, 2007

1300 blackholes


Every dot of light in that image is a black hole, hundreds of millions and even billions of light years away. Before you say, "Say wha?", this will take some explanation.

The black holes themselves are black (duh). But as matter falls into them, it can settle into a disk, called an accretion disk. If you remember your college physics — you did take college physics, right? — as something falls into a black hole, it acquires a huge amount of kinetic energy (for you pedants, it actually converts gravitational potential energy to kinetic energy). Think of it this way: when you hold a rock up over the ground, it has potential energy– the potential to move due to gravity. When you let go, that potential energy becomes kinetic energy– the energy of motion. If you don’t think it has energy, then let it hit your toe. The kinetic energy will be converted to a loud crunching sound, and you will potentially have to go to the hospital.

So matter falling into gravity can gather energy, and matter falling into a black hole can get a lot of energy. This is converted to motion and heat, and as the matter piles up into the accretion disk it gets terribly, terribly hot: as hot as millions of degrees. There are also associated magnetic fields and other forces which can make the matter in the disk light up, getting it extremely bright. The bigger the black hole, the brighter this disk can get.

Astronomers think that in the center of every big galaxy there is black hole with millions or even billions of times the Sun’s mass. Guess how bright they can get?

Answer: pretty damn bright. In fact, as long as they are actively feeding, black holes like this are the brightest sustained objects it the Universe. We call them "active galaxies". They’re so bright they they can be spotted when they are billions of light years away. And hey, didn’t I say that the spots in the image above were at that distance?

Yes, good! You’re paying attention. The image at the top of this entry is from the orbiting Chandra X-ray Observatory — it’s only one part of a bigger image revealing 1300 black holes at the centers of galaxies.

When matter gets heated to millions of degrees, it gives off X-rays, so Chandra is a great telescope to spot black holes, especially the supermassive monsters in the centers of galaxies. We’re still trying to figure out just how many galaxies are active, and how many are quiescent like the Milky Way (our central black hole has 4 million times the mass of the Sun, but is not currently feeding, so it’s not active).

Also, we’re not completely sure what the structure of the accretion disk is like near a hole. The current theory is that near the black hole it’s very flat and thin, but farther out it puffs up into a torus or doughnut (or bagel if you’re from New York City). But think about this: imagine putting a pea in the center of a donut hole. From most viewing angles, the pea is hidden. If you view it face-on you can see the pea, but at an angle the donut blocks your view. From edge-on you’re looking through a lot of doughnut and can’t see the pea at all.

This model explains a lot about what we see with these active galaxies, but is it right?

Maybe. Maybe not.

The new observations from Chandra are very interesting. If we see a black hole torus face-on, we expect to see X-rays of all energies, since they are free to get to us. But if we see one edge-on, only the highest-energy X-rays can penetrate the obscuring torus, so we’d expect to see only those high-energy X-rays and no low energy ones. So, looking at 1300 black holes as Chandra did, you’d expect to see a few that are face-on, a few edge-on, and most ranging in between. In other words, the observations should show most black holes sending out a mix of high and low energy X-rays.

Oops. They didn’t. They reveal lots of high-energy-X-ray-emitting-galaxies, and lots of low-energy-X-ray-emitting-galaxies, but very few in between, the opposite of what the model predicted.

Does this mean the model is completely wrong? No, because in fact the model does very well predicting what we see from black holes in a whole bunch of other obsrevations, hundreds and even thousands of them. So what these new data really mean is that the details of the model need to be worked on more. Maybe in active galaxies the torus doesn’t puff up as much. Maybe the disks are bigger than we thought, or there isn’t as much dust in the torus, or a hundred other reasons.

The devil, that rascal, is always in the details. And if there is any actual place in the Universe that could be described as Hell, it’s the gaping maw of a black hole and the swirling maelstrom surrounding it. So there will always be devilish details to hammer out.

One final note: these active galaxies can pour out gamma rays as well– gamma rays have even higher energy than X-rays. NASA and the Department of Energy are building GLAST, an observatory whose main mission is to investigate these supermassive black holes (I’ve written about GLAST several times). It’s due for launch in November, so by this time next year we’ll have a lot more data, and a lot more answers. But we’ll have a lot more questions, too! This is truly the game that never ends, which is one reason it’s so much fun.

Originally posted at http://www.badastronomy.com/bablog/2007/03/12/1300-black-holes/