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The elusive |
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Theory of Everything |
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Experiment Will Help Probe
"Theory of Everything"
Summary - (Mar 26, 2004) Theorists are working madly to develop the new
"Theory of Everything" that will tie together all the forces in the Universe
into one unified explanation. Experimenters are also working to come up with
ways to test these various theories, and narrow down the ones that actually
predict what happens in Nature. One upcoming experiment called LATOR will
test how the Sun's gravity bends light emitted by mini-satellites - it will
be so precise that many theories will be invalidated if it doesn't find
deviations from Einstein's predictions.
Full Story -
Sooner or later, the reign of Einstein, like the reign of Newton before him,
will come to an end. An upheaval in the world of physics that will overthrow
our notions of basic reality is inevitable, most scientists believe, and
currently a horse race is underway between a handful of theories competing
to be the successor to the throne. |
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Image credit: NASA/JPL |
In the running are such mind-bending ideas as an 11-dimensional universe,
universal "constants" (such as the strength of gravity) that vary over space
and time and only remain truly fixed in an unseen 5th dimension,
infinitesimal vibrating strings as the fundamental constituents of reality,
and a fabric of space and time that's not smooth and continuous, as Einstein
believed, but divided into discrete, indivisible chunks of vanishingly small
size. Experiment will ultimately determine which triumphs.
A new concept for an experiment to test the predictions of Einstein's
relativity more precisely than ever before is being developed by scientists
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). Their mission, which effectively
uses our solar system as a giant laboratory, would help narrow the field of
vying theories and bring us one step closer to the next revolution in
physics.
A House Divided
It may not weigh heavily on most people's minds, but a great schism has long
plagued our fundamental understanding of the universe. Two ways of
explaining the nature and behavior of space, time, matter, and energy
currently exist: Einstein's relativity and the "standard model" of quantum
mechanics. Both are extremely successful. The Global Positioning System
(GPS), for instance, wouldn't be possible without the theory of relativity.
Computers, telecommunications, and the Internet, meanwhile, are spin-offs of
quantum mechanics.
But the two theories are like different languages, and no one is yet sure
how to translate between them. Relativity explains gravity and motion by
uniting space and time into a 4-dimensional, dynamic, elastic fabric of
reality called space-time, which is bent and warped by the energy it
contains. (Mass is one form of energy, so it creates gravity by warping
space-time.) Quantum mechanics, on the other hand, assumes that space and
time form a flat, immutable "stage" on which the drama of several families
of particles unfolds. These particles can move both forward and backward in
time (something relativity doesn't allow), and the interactions between
these particles explain the basic forces of nature -- with the glaring
exception of gravity.
The stalemate between these two theories has gone on for decades. Most
scientists assume that somehow, eventually, a unifying theory will be
developed that subsumes the two, showing how the truths they each contain
can fit neatly within a single, all-encompassing framework of reality. Such
a "Theory of Everything" would profoundly affect our knowledge of the birth,
evolution, and eventual fate of the universe.
Slava Turyshev, a scientist at JPL, and his colleagues have thought of a way
to use the International Space Station (ISS) and two mini-satellites
orbiting on the far side of the sun to test the theory of relativity with
unprecedented accuracy. Their concept, developed in part through funding
from NASA's Office of Biological and Physical Research, would be so
sensitive that it could reveal flaws in Einstein's theory, thus providing
the first hard data needed to distinguish which of the competing Theories of
Everything agree with reality and which are merely fancy chalk-work.
The experiment, called Laser Astrometric Test Of Relativity (LATOR), would
look at how the sun's gravity deflects beams of laser light emitted by the
two mini-satellites. Gravity bends the path of light because it warps the
space through which the light is passing. The standard analogy for this
warping of space-time by gravity is to imagine space as a flat sheet of
rubber that stretches under the weight of objects like the sun. The
depression in the sheet would cause an object (even a no-mass particle of
light) passing nearby the sun to turn slightly as it went by.
In fact, it was by measuring the bending of starlight by the sun during a
solar eclipse in 1919 that Sir Arthur Eddington first tested Einstein's
theory of general relativity. In cosmic terms, the sun's gravity is fairly
weak; the path of a beam of light skimming the edge of the sun would only be
bent by about 1.75 arcseconds (an arcsecond is 1/3600 of a degree). Within
the limits of accuracy of his measuring equipment, Eddington showed that
starlight did indeed bend by this amount -- and in doing so effectively
impeached Newton.
LATOR would measure this deflection with a billion (109) times the precision
of Eddington's experiment and 30,000 times the precision of the current
record-holder: a serendipitous measurement using signals from the Cassini
spacecraft on its way to explore Saturn.
"I think [LATOR] would be quite an important advance for fundamental
physics," says Clifford Will, a professor of physics at Washington
University who has made major contributions to post-Newtonian physics and is
not directly involved with LATOR. "We should continue to try to press for
more accuracy in testing general relativity, simply because any kind of
deviation would mean that there's new physics that we were not aware of
before."
Solar laboratory
The experiment would work like this: Two small satellites, each about one
meter wide, would be launched into an orbit circling the sun at roughly the
same distance as Earth. This pair of mini-satellites would orbit more slowly
than Earth does, so about 17 months after launch, the mini-satellites and
Earth would be on opposite sides of the sun. Even though the two satellites
would be about 5 million km apart, the angle between them as viewed from
Earth would be tiny, only about 1 degree. Together, the two satellites and
Earth would form a skinny triangle, with laser beams along its sides, and
one of those beams passing close to the sun.
Turyshev plans to measure the angle between the two satellites using an
interferometer mounted on the ISS. An interferometer is a device that
catches and combines beams of light. By measuring how waves of light from
the two mini-satellites "interfere" with each other, the interferometer can
measure the angle between the satellites with extraordinary precision: about
10 billionths of an arcsecond, or 0.01 ľas (micro-arcseconds). When the
precision of the other parts of the LATOR design are considered, this gives
an overall accuracy for measuring how much gravity bends the laser beam of
about 0.02 ľas for a single measurement.
"Using the ISS gives us a few advantages," Turyshev explains. "For one, it's
above the distortions of Earth's atmosphere, and it's also large enough to
let us place the two lenses of the interferometer far apart (one lens on
each end of the solar panel truss), which improves the resolution and
accuracy of the results."
The 0.02 ľas accuracy of LATOR is good enough to reveal deviations from
Einstein's relativity predicted by the aspiring Theories of Everything,
which range from roughly 0.5 to 35 ľas. Agreement with LATOR's measurements
would be a major boost for any of these theories. But if no deviation from
Einstein is found even by LATOR, most of the current contenders--along with
their 11 dimensions, pixellated space, and inconstant constants--will suffer
a fatal blow and "pass on" to that great dusty library stack in the sky.
Because the mission requires only existing technologies, Turyshev says LATOR
could be ready to fly as soon as 2009 or 2010. So it may not be too long
before the stalemate in physics is broken and a new theory of gravity,
space, and time takes the throne.
Originally from:
www.universetoday.com/am/publish/experiment_theory_everything.html
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The composition of matter (as at
March 2004):
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