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Before we get started, just wanted to let you
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know we have some new merch at the merch
store celebrating 10 years of Space Time.
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How did the universe begin? How can
something come from nothing? One way to
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“solve” this most difficult of philosophical
conundrums is to avoid it altogether. Maybe
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the universe didn’t begin at all. Maybe the
Big Bang was just one in an endless cycle.
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On February 11th, 2015 a new show called PBS Space
Time appeared on YouTube. In the 10 years since,
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together we've explored the insides of black holes
and ventured across the edge of the universe and
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seen the beginning and end of time and the peeked
at the underlying clockwork of nature. It's been
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brain-breaking and existentially humbling journey.
And we're so happy you have been on this ride with
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us. Well, that ride continues. We have exciting
new plans for year 11 that will be revealed in
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due course. For now, two things you can do to help
us get the anniversary celebration started. First,
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post in the comments to say how long you've been
watching ... and if you joined more recently how
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much of the back catalog of over 400 videos did
you actually manage to get through. And second,
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merch! We’ve got a limited edition 10
year anniversary design as well as some
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classic logo merch. Having this gear
doesn't just make you incredibly cool,
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you also helps us keep going for another decade.
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No one wants the end of the universe. Maybe
that’s why the idea of a cyclic universe is so
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appealing. So much so that it appears in mythical
cosmologies of Hinduism, Buddhism, Zoroastrianism,
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and the cosmologies of the Norse, Mayans,
Egyptians, Greeks, and no doubt more. It makes
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sense. We tend to extrapolate from the patterns
we see in nature. We see recurring cycles of day
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and night, of the seasons, of life and death. Why
shouldn’t the entire universe go through cycles?
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Of course, the evidence has to support
our extrapolations, and we now know
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that the evidence does not support cyclic
cosmologies. Right? The universe and time
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itself started at the Big Bang and space
will expand forever and that’s it. Or so
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says mainstream cosmology. But apparently
cyclic cosmology has not lost its appeal,
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because scientists have found a way
to make it work for our universe.
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The original Big Bang model has all of space
originating in an infinitesimal point at the
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beginning of time, and expanding from there.
This fits a lot of observations of our universe.
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The recession of the galaxies
reveals the expansion of space,
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and the cosmic microwave background is
pretty clearly the afterglow of an early
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hot, dense state. But some observations
aren’t so easily explained. For example,
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in our universe matter and energy are very evenly
spread out, but in the basic Big Bang model there
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wasn’t time for this smoothing to happen before
the expansion threw distant regions beyond causal
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contact. This is the horizon problem. There’s
also the fact that a basic-Big-Bang universe
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isn’t expected to be so perfectly flat, which
requires an uncannily perfect balance between
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matter and dark energy. And if the universe
that began in an extremely hot, dense state,
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than certain relics of this phase should
persist—so-called magnetic monopoles.
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Of course we’ve talked about the horizon,
flatness, and magnetic monopole problems,
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as we have the most popular solution—cosmic
inflation. This proposes an extreme,
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exponential expansion phase in the extremely
early universe. Inflation becomes the bang in
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the big bang, and it allows an initially smooth
universe to be expanded beyond causal contact,
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as well as being nicely flattened
space and scattering those pesky
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monopoles far enough apart that
they're unlikely to ever be seen.
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To top it all off, inflation explains how the
universe got its large-scale structure. It
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predicts quantum fluctuations in the inflaton
field, which became the gravitational seeds
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that grew into galaxies and galaxy clusters.
Inflation goes further, predicting the those
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fluctuations should lead to the same level of
lumpiness at all size scales—so-called scale
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invariance. And that’s exactly what we see in
the lumps of the cosmic microwave background.
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Inflation does such a good job
that it’s practically mainstream,
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but there are some downsides. Modern versions
of the idea predict that if inflation happened,
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then it never ended. Sure our little
patch quit with that extreme growth,
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spawning our much-slower expanding universe. But
as long as inflation didn’t stop everywhere all
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at once, then out there, somewhere, this eternally
inflating greater universe is blowing up forever,
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constantly spawning bubble universes.
Some find this idea a little extravagant.
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The other issue with inflation is that
it doesn’t avoid a beginning of time,
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nor a point of infinite density—a singularity at
that beginning. You can push that singulary as far
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back as you like, but in inflationary models
it has to be there, just like in the regular
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Big Bang. And any theory that predicts
a singularity is automatically suspect.
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And even if inflation didn’t have its issues, it’s
worth exploring other options. So what about the
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option where, instead of asking what happened at
the beginning of time, we ask what happens if time
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never had a beginning? Cyclic cosmologies exist
in many ancient traditions, but also in modern
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cosmology. Soon after we noticed that the universe
was expanding, scientists came up with models in
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which the universe eventually slows and starts
contracting, then bounces into a new Big Bang,
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and repeats over and over. But these models
didn’t manage to do away with the beginning
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of time because both entropy and the lifespan
of the universe had to increase with each
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bounce. That means we couldn’t extrapolate the
bouncing back in time indefinitely. There had
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to be a first. And anyway, these cyclic universes
didn’t solve the problems that inflation solves.
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But it turns out that cyclic cosmologies can give
us everything we want. To explain the horizon,
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flatness and monopole problems without
inflation, and at the same time eliminate
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that pesky beginning of the universe. In fact,
it turns out that the same type of field that
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causes inflation can also be tweaked to give an
infinitely regenerating universe. This is the
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idea of the ekpyrotic universe—named after the
cyclic cosmology of the ancient Greek Stoics,
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in which the universe is rebirthed in
fire—ekpyrosis—between unending cycles. By
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the way, this is a very different idea to the
conformal cyclic cosmology of Roger Penrose,
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and I refer you to our previous episode
for that equally awesome proposal.
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The ekpyrotic universe was first proposed in 2001
in a paper by Justin Khoury and collaborators.
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Now, I’m going to come back to the ideas
of this paper, but first I want to give the
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part of the story told in a followup paper
by two of the original authors. In 2002,
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Paul Steinhardt and Neil Turok showed how the
same type of quantum field proposed to cause
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inflation—the inflaton field—can be tweaked to
resurrect the universe rather than blowing it up.
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The extreme accelerating expansion of inflation
is driven by the same type of quantum field as
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we think now drives the relatively
chill acceleration that we attribute
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to dark energy. It’s a scalar field—the
simplest type of quantum field in that
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it’s just a simple numerical property—a field
strength—in space everywhere. The field also
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has a potential energy associated with that
numerical value. Sometimes the relationship
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between field value and its potential energy is
simple—stronger the field the more the energy,
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sometimes it's complicated. For example, in some
versions of inflation, the field value slowly
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drops and energy decreases, but then the energy
reaches a minimum value and any further change
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in the field would add more energy. Therefore
the field becomes stable and inflation stops.
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But there are lots of different ways you can
relate the field energy to the field value. And,
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as shown by Steinhardt and Turok one of
those ways gives you a cyclic universe.
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We normally think of dark energy as being due
to a constant energy density everywhere in space
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that does not change over time. But maybe dark
energy changes only very slowly. For example,
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if there’s this quantum field that is slowly
changing in value—say, decreasing—with barely
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noticeable changes in the associated energy. Then
we have accelerating expansion far into the future
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even as the field value drops. But eventually the
energy in that field fades and becomes negative,
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and as that happens acceleration slow, then
expansion slows and the universe briefly halts.
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And then the universe recollapses. The field
potential bottoms out in a minimum and rises
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back to zero. Now, we might expect the
field to get stuck in that minimum,
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however during this contraction,
gravitational potential energy is
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converted into kinetic energy of the field
so that the field value blows past this
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minimum. In the final phase of contraction
the field has no potential energy—no “dark
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energy” equivalent—and the kinetic energy
of the field gets converted into radiation.
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This liberates the universe from
the constraints of this quantum
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field and it quickly starts expanding again.
The radiation spawns matter and then dissipates,
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the matter dominates for a while,
and finally dark energy takes over
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and we find ourselves back where we
started in the roughly the modern era.
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So how does this version of a cyclic universe
solve all our problems? Well, the magic happens
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in the contraction phase—what the authors call
the ekpyrotic period. When the universe was
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at its largest, matter was so far-flung that the
only meaningful energy in the universe was in its
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scalar field, and the only meaningful structure in
the universe were the quantum fluctuations in that
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field. Now as the universe collapses very slowly,
those fluctuations are amplified. The shape of the
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scalar field is tuned so that these fluctuations
have a scale-invariance—equal frequency for all
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sizes of lumps, just as is observed in
the CMB and as is predicted by inflation.
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That contraction phase also smooths out the
universe, solving the horizon problem. And
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the universe does not reach arbitrarily high
temperatures, so no magnetic monopoles ever
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need to be created. There’s no singularity, and
there’s no significant difference between one
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cycle and the next, so this model is consistent
with cycles extending back in time forever.
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Steinhardt and Turok claim that the
scalar field needed to achieve all of
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this magic is no more finely tuned than
the field needed to achieve inflation,
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and so this cyclic model is just as plausible as
the inflationary model because they both result in
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the same observables—at least as far as current
observational sensitivity allows. There are ..
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But is there any more motivation to believe that a
field of the needed variety actually exists? Well,
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these guys say yes, and the mechanism
was proposed the year prior by a team
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including these authors and led by Justin Khoury.
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This does require a little more than a
modification of the inflaton field. It
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requires an entire new dimension of space. 6 new
dimensions really. One motivation for the type of
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scalar field needed, with its particular potential
energy curve, lies within M-theory. This is an
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encompassing framework for string theory, in which
our universe, with its 3 dimensions of space and 1
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of time, exists as a single slice in a greater
object with 4 large spatial dimensions. And
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with 6 coiled, compact dimensions, but we don’t
need to worry about those for this description.
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Our universe would be something called
a brane—short for membrane—living within
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the higher dimensional space—itself
called the bulk. In this picture,
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our universe is one of the boundary layers of the
bulk. We call it the visible brane. Normally this
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brane is just chillin—it’s pretty empty and is
not changing in size. Things get interesting
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when another free-floating brane within the
bulk—called hidden brane—smashes into us. Which,
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apparently, is something that can happen.
Try not to let it keep you up at night. This
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collision dumps a bunch of energy into
the visible brane, sparking a big bang.
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This connects to the description
of the scalar field because we can
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interpret the value of that field as
the distance between the visible brane
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and this incoming hidden brane. So on
the graph we saw earlier, movement to
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the left—decreasing field value—corresponds
to decreasing distance between the branes.
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Khoury paper assumes a simpler form of the
potential than Steinhardt and Turok, with energy
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decreasing exponentially as the branes approach,
which is like a purely attractive force between
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the branes. In the more complex version where
potential energy decreases then increases again,
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we have attraction then repulsion of the
branes. Either way, when the branes collide,
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the energy is dumped into the visible brane
causing space there to start expanding. The
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hidden brane recoils, propelled back
the way it came with the energy of the
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bounce until eventually it’s pulled inwards again.
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In this interpretation, the quantum fluctuations
of matter manifest as wiggles in the incoming
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hidden brane. These result in different parts
of that brane arriving at different times,
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and so there are variations in the start time of
expansion in the visible brane. These ultimately
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result in density and temperature fluctuations
in the resulting cosmic microwave background,
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which, again, have scale invariance. And we
can interpret the solutions to the horizon,
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flatness, and magnetic monopole problems in the
context of colliding branes. Both the visible
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and hidden branes exist long before the
collision, and so they can reach thermal
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equilibrium over a large enough region
to explain the smoothness of the CMB. The
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branes can be very flat over the range that
eventually become the observable universe,
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so there’s flatness achieved. And this type of
Big Bang doesn’t start as a singularity—there’s
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a limit to how hot it gets—and so we don’t
need to create magnetic monopoles here either.
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So, did we just manage to save
the universe from ever ending,
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or save it from ever starting for
that matter? And at the same time,
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did we save ourselves from having to be part
of an eternally inflating multiverse? Let’s
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not get ahead of ourselves. For one thing,
if this ekypyrotic behavior is due to our
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universe colliding with others within a higher
dimensional space, that’s hardly less extravagant
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than the eternal inflation. This M-theory stuff
may not be the cause of the peculiar potential,
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but even so, we’re going to want ways to test
this against the also-untested inflationary model.
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Although the ekpyrotic model predicts almost
exactly the same observables as inflation,
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there are potential differences. There may be
slight differences in the spectrum of density
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fluctuations, but more concretely we would
expect differences in the gravitational waves
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produced in the inflationary versus
ekpyrotic Big Bangs. In either case,
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the extremely energetic early universe would
have generated gigantic gravitational waves,
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weighted towards lower frequency in the ekpyrotic
case compared to inflation. No currently planned
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detector will be able to see these waves, but it’s
conceivable that one day we’ll build a detector
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that can sense they now extremely faint buzz of
ancient spacetime ripples, and read from the m
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the nature of the beginning of this universe.
Those waves may also have left a signature on
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the matter that formed soon after, and we may one
day be readable in the polarisation of the CMB.
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Honestly, it’s crazy to even imagine that we
may one day be able to test ideas like this,
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and actually have a good idea, one way or another,
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whether there’s an infinite multiverse
extending through inflating space, or if
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we’re just one universe in an endless temporal
chain of expanding and contracting spacetime.