Explore the Possibility of Other Universes with Hawking's "The Grand Design

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In summary: As the conversation discusses, Stephen Hawking's book "The Grand Design" is available through Amazon and bookstores. The book discusses the possibility of other universes, or "branes," existing outside of our own and the difficulty in observing them. The conversation also touches on the use of millimeters to describe the distance between universes and the concept of dimensions in string theory. There is no evidence yet for the existence of additional dimensions, but it is possible that we may be able to detect them through detailed tests of gravity. The conversation also discusses the idea of time as another dimension and how it can be thought of in relation to the other spatial dimensions.
  • #1
PhanthomJay
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Before I post my question, I'd first like to remind everyone (who don't already know) that Hawking's new book, "The Grand Design", is available through Amazon, and may also already be in the the bookstores. If it's as good as his last 2, it should be a beauty!

Now for my question:
A recent post in this forum on "Planck Length" got me thinking. In Hawking's prior book, "The Universe in a Nutshell", he mentioned the possibility of other universes (Branes) that could exist outside of our own. We would never be able to observe such Universes, since light is confined to 'our' Brane Universe (although he noted that short wave gravity waves might be able to penetrate through the Brane into our Universe). Anyway, he noted that if such universes exist, they could be as close as a "few millimeters" away from ours. Now I was wondering, why a few millimeters? Wouldn't a "Planck's Length" away from ours be more 'logical'? What's the significance of a ' silly few millimeters"? The Planck length is very significant..a few millimeters is not, in my opinion. Agree?
 
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  • #2
I agree, although hawking probably mean "a few millimeters away" as a metaphor for very close, the thing is, it would be impossible to figure out the distance it is away from yourself anyways because it is another universe, in another dimension, that may not have the spatial dimensions we do.
 
  • #3
The General Public appeals to terms like millimeters, systems their accustomed to. There is no use in using a concept like Planck Length when it serves no relevance or purpose to the layman reader.
 
  • #4
Kevin_Axion said:
The General Public appeals to terms like millimeters, systems their accustomed to. There is no use in using a concept like Planck Length when it serves no relevance or purpose to the layman reader.
If that's the case, Hawking could have said 'less than a millimeter'. I think he didn't know. Gee whiz, does anyone?
 
  • #5
Talking about distance in these terms is actually sensible. The extra dimensions in string theory are, after all, exactly like the three spatial dimensions we are familiar with. So it makes perfect sense to use the same units of length as a measure.

The difficulty is that we can't visualize such things very well, because this would be one millimeter in a direction orthogonal to all three spatial dimensions we are familiar with! What we usually do, then, is visualize our own three spatial dimensions in just two dimensions, seeing it as a membrane stretching through a higher-dimensional space. There could be another brane right next to it, and we'd be hard pressed to notice.

However, this doesn't mean that all interaction with another brane is impossible. Gravity cannot be confined to a brane like the other forces can, and thus we may potentially be able to detect the existence of higher dimensions (or of other branes!) through very detailed tests of gravity, especially at short distances.

To date, we have seen no evidence suggesting the existence of additional dimensions through gravity, and sadly there is a huge range of parameter space that is likely completely unmeasurable in practice. But who knows? Maybe we'll get lucky...
 
  • #6
The difficulty is that we can't visualize such things very well, because this would be one millimeter in a direction orthogonal to all three spatial dimensions we are familiar with!
I missed that 'orthogonal 'part. Thanks!
 
  • #7
Doesn't this also depend on how one would see the dimensions? For example, I see that while we are aware of the first and second dimensions, we do not truly live in them. We only live in the third and fourth dimension. Or the "Brane" with the third and fourth dimensions. Although we only imagine time and not phisically see it, i do not think it is a completely different dimension than the first three. Why does time have to be a completely different dimension? What is so special about it? I just see it as another dimension, therefore, how would one be able to use the units of measurement that we do in our third dimension to measure those of the fourth or higher ones?
 
  • #8
jswu1996 said:
Doesn't this also depend on how one would see the dimensions? For example, I see that while we are aware of the first and second dimensions, we do not truly live in them. We only live in the third and fourth dimension. Or the "Brane" with the third and fourth dimensions. Although we only imagine time and not phisically see it, i do not think it is a completely different dimension than the first three. Why does time have to be a completely different dimension? What is so special about it? I just see it as another dimension, therefore, how would one be able to use the units of measurement that we do in our third dimension to measure those of the fourth or higher ones?

We live in all three of those dimensions. I can move up, down, left, right, and to, and fro. (3 independent axes). I have length, width, and height.

As far as time being just another dimension, I always thought that was a decent way of thinking about it. Pretend you have a car, and that car always goes 50 miles per hour and can only go exactly 50 mph. That means you can go 50 mph east, or 50 mph north, or, and this is the important part, you can go 50 mph in a northeast direction (such that your northward speed would be say 30 mph and your eastward speed would be 40 mph).

Likewise, we are all constantly moving at the speed of light, it's just that in our day to day experiences we point pretty much straight east (on the time axis). We use all of our "light speed" to travel forward through time. If we speed up our velocity through space, then we use less of our "light speed" on traveling through time, and more of it traveling through space. This is why as one begins to travel through space at velocities approaching the speed of light, time slows down for them, since more of their "velocity" is being used to travel through space, and less of it is being used to travel through time, just like when you pointed your car northeast. You were still going 50 mph, but only 30 mph east and 40 mph north. You are still traveling at the speed of light, just less "east" and more "north" (that is, less through time and more through space).
 
  • #9
jswu1996 said:
Doesn't this also depend on how one would see the dimensions? For example, I see that while we are aware of the first and second dimensions, we do not truly live in them. We only live in the third and fourth dimension.
Huh? We live in all four dimensions. If we only lived in the "third" dimension and time, we would be one-dimensional beings that experience time. You need all three spatial dimensions plus time to describe our experiences.

jswu1996 said:
Although we only imagine time and not phisically see it, i do not think it is a completely different dimension than the first three. Why does time have to be a completely different dimension?
Yes, time and space are but two different aspects of the same thing. The main difference with time is its directionality. You can move left or right, forward or backward, up or down. But you can only move forward in time. This is a pretty major difference.

jswu1996 said:
I just see it as another dimension, therefore, how would one be able to use the units of measurement that we do in our third dimension to measure those of the fourth or higher ones?
Yes, we absolutely can. The unit conversion factor is the speed of light, so one millimeter = [itex]3.3 \times 10^{-12}[/itex] seconds.
 
  • #10
Apparently light is leaking into our universe/brane from the 7th dimension?
 
  • #11
ninjanik18 said:
Apparently light is leaking into our universe/brane from the 7th dimension?
Er, no.
 
  • #12
Photons are open strings in the context of superstring theory and therefore they must propagate along the brane.
 

Related to Explore the Possibility of Other Universes with Hawking's "The Grand Design

1. What is "The Grand Design" by Stephen Hawking?

"The Grand Design" is a book written by renowned physicist Stephen Hawking and co-author Leonard Mlodinow. It explores the concept of multiple universes and how they could potentially exist according to modern scientific theories and discoveries.

2. How does Hawking's book propose the existence of other universes?

Hawking's book discusses the concept of the "multiverse," which is the idea that our universe is just one of many parallel universes existing simultaneously. He presents various scientific theories, such as the inflation theory and string theory, to support this idea.

3. What is the significance of exploring the possibility of other universes?

Understanding the existence of other universes can help us gain a deeper understanding of our own universe and its origins. It also has implications for the laws of physics and the fundamental nature of reality.

4. Is there any scientific evidence for the existence of other universes?

Currently, there is no concrete evidence for the existence of other universes, but there are various theories and mathematical models that suggest their possibility. Hawking's book presents these theories and discusses their potential impact on our understanding of the universe.

5. How can we test the existence of other universes?

Since other universes, if they do exist, are beyond our observable universe, it is challenging to directly test their existence. However, scientists are continuously conducting experiments and observations to test various theories that suggest the existence of other universes, such as the detection of gravitational waves or the observation of the cosmic microwave background radiation.

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