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  • WHETHER YOURE PONDERING ALTERNATE TIMELINES THAT SPLIT INTO INFINITE POSSIBILITIES,

  • A COMPLETELY DIFFERENT SET OF FUNDAMENTAL PARTICLES,

  • OR A REALITY WHERE YOU CAME UP WITH THAT HILARIOUS COMEBACK

  • JUST IN TIME,

  • YOU HAVE TO ADMIT THAT THE IDEA OF PARALLEL UNIVERSES

  • IS PRETTY EXCITING.

  • AND WITH MODERN ADVANCES IN COSMOLOGY AND PARTICLE PHYSICS,

  • WERE REFINING OUR IDEAS OF WHAT, EXACTLY, OUR OWN UNIVERSE IS MADE OF,

  • HOW IT GOT STARTED, AND WHETHER THERE MIGHT JUST BE ANOTHER ONE,

  • TWO, OR INFINITELY MANY MORE OUT THERE....

  • OR RIGHT IN HERE.

  • SO, HOW CLOSE ARE WE TO FINDING A PARALLEL UNIVERSE?

  • WHEN WE CONSIDER WHAT MIGHT LIE BEYOND OUR

  • OBSERVABLE UNIVERSE, A FEW PRETTY COOL THEORIES EMERGE.

  • MANY ARE NOT DIRECTLY TESTABLE JUST YET; AFTER ALL, IF WE COULD OBSERVE IT,

  • IT WOULD BECOME PART OF OUR OBSERVABLE UNIVERSE, RIGHT?

  • BUT AS IT TURNS OUT, WE HAVE PLENTY OF PLACES TO LOOK

  • IN THE GAME OF HIDE-AND-SEEK FOR OTHER UNIVERSES.

  • SO LET’S START WITH THE MOST BASIC, VANILLA THEORY, AND WORK OUR WAY UP

  • TO THE MOREGHOST-PEPPER-ICE-CREAM-WITH-RAINBOW-SPRINKLES”-TYPE IDEAS.

  • THERE’S A TYPE I MULTIVERSE, A QUANTUM MULTIVERSE,

  • A MIRROR UNIVERSE, BUBBLE UNIVERSES, AND BABY UNIVERSES INSIDE BLACK HOLES.

  • THE FIRST PROPOSAL IS WHAT PHYSICIST MAX TEGMARK COINEDTHE TYPE 1 MULTIVERSE,’

  • OR WHAT I LIKE TO CALL,  “MORE OF THE SAME.”

  • - One version is just to say that we can observe some finite region in the universe, but there's

  • probably more out there.

  • So that sort of multiverse almost certainly exists.

  • It just says that the universe is much bigger than the universe that we can see,

  • but that's not that much of a surprise.

  • OKAY, BUT IF OUR OWN UNIVERSE IS DEFINED BY WHAT WE CAN OBSERVE, WHAT IF IT’S THOSE

  • OBSERVATIONS THEMSELVES THAT SPAWN MORE UNIVERSES?

  • WHAT IF, EVERY TIME YOU CHOSE AN ICE CREAM FLAVOR, FOR EXAMPLE, THIRTY OTHER UNIVERSES

  • BRANCHED OFF WHERE ALL OTHER POSSIBLE OUTCOMES CAME TO FRUITION?

  • THIS IS THE NEXT POSSIBILITY, WHAT YOU MIGHT CALL THEQUANTUM MULTIVERSE”...

  • WHERE THINGS GET A LITTLE MORE INTERESTING.

  • The multiverse where, whenever something in the quantum world happens, the universe kind

  • of splits into two copies is the so-called many-worlds version of quantum mechanics.

  • In quantum mechanics you can have version A of something, and version B and usually

  • that's something like an electron, but it doesn't weird us out that much that there's

  • two versions of an electron.

  • There are experiments that are now making two superposed, that is, kind of added-up

  • versions of complex molecules.

  • There are people who are even trying the simplest viruses and as technology gets better, we

  • might find that there's a limit to how big of an object we can make two versions of...

  • or there might not be.

  • At some point, we might have two versions of a person.

  • BUT DON’T GET TOO EXCITED TO MEET YOUR NEW EVIL TWIN, OR SPOCK WITH A GOATEE,

  • ANYTIME SOON.

  • QUANTUM PHENOMENA ARE FAMOUSLY TOUGH TO UNDERSTAND AND MANIPULATE,

  • BECAUSE BY DEFINITION, OBSERVING THEM

  • COLLAPSES THEIR COEXISTING REALITIES INTO JUST ONE: OUR OWN.

  • BUT WHAT IF WE COULD OBSERVE QUANTUM EFFECTS ON OTHER PARTICLES?

  • COULD THERE BE CLUES ABOUT ANOTHER UNIVERSE LURKING RIGHT UNDER OUR NOSE?

  • AND THAT BRINGS US TO THE THIRD IDEA: MIRROR MATTER.

  • - Mirror matter was originally hypothesized because of a discomfort with the fact that

  • the weak force, one of the four fundamental forces in the universe, actually prefers to

  • couple to left-handed particles.

  • We realized that in order for this to be a valid theory, it probably shouldn't interact

  • very strongly with our own universe.

  • Mirror matter was actually one of the first and oldest possible candidates for dark matter.

  • THAT’S WHAT LEAH AND HER COLLEAGUES AT THE OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY

  • ARE BUSY HUNTING FOR,

  • USING ONE PARTICULARLY PERTINENT PARTICLE:

  • THE NEUTRON.

  • What's really interesting about the neutron is because it is electrically neutral, it

  • can undergo a process called oscillation.

  • This is a quantum mechanical phenomenon in which a particle can just move back and forth

  • from one state to another.

  • So if there were some mirror partner to the neutron, some dark neutral twin, then the

  • neutron, in principle, could undergo an oscillation into that particle.

  • And if so, that's something we can detect.

  • - Beyond this wall is a large liquid mercury target.

  • And through a process called spallation, it shakes free a bunch of neutrons from this

  • very heavy mercury nucleus.

  • Once the neutrons are cooled down, they travel down these beam guides

  • into the sample area of the instrument.

  • We use a wall made of a really thick boron carbide to absorb any neutrons

  • that try to pass through.

  • If a neutron can oscillate into a mirror neutron, they'll pass through the wall.

  • And then on the other side of this wall,

  • those mirror neutrons then have a chance to oscillate back into regular neutrons.

  • If we're able to confirm that what we see

  • really acts like a mirror neutron, that would be very strong evidence that something like

  • mirror matter, this mirror universe must exist.

  • WHILE LEAH AND HER TEAM CONTINUE TO SEARCH FOR THAT ELUSIVE MIRROR UNIVERSE,

  • THIS THEORY IS STILL UP IN THE AIR.

  • BUT SHE CAN TELL YOU ONE THING FOR SURE:

  • I definitely don't have a pet Demogorgon. [laughs]

  • WHILE MIRROR MATTER WOULD BE ONE ALTERNATE REALITY RIGHT HERE IN THIS ROOM,

  • WHAT IF THE ANSWER TO THE MULTIVERSE LAY WAY OUT

  • IN WHAT’S KNOWN AS THE COSMIC MICROWAVE BACKGROUND?

  • THERE, AT THE EDGE OF EVERYTHING, LIE CLUES ABOUT THE BEGINNING OF OUR OWN COSMOS.

  • AND IT MAY NOT BE AS STRAIGHTFORWARD AS IT SEEMS.

  • - You can think of the Big Bang as that kind of fireball that was the hot plasma that was

  • expanding, but you can also think of the Big Bang as the beginning of everything, the beginning

  • of time and space and so on.

  • Those two things it turns out are not exactly the same.

  • Could there be a whole era of cosmic history

  • in between the beginning of the universe as a whole

  • and that fireball that led to our observable universe?

  • THIS IS KNOWN ASINFLATION,” AND, IN THE VERSION WHERE IT GOES ON FOREVER,

  • ETERNAL INFLATION.”

  • INFLATION IS THE IDEA THAT SOMETHING AS SMALL AS A KILOGRAM OF MATERIAL CAN BE BLOWN UP

  • TO BECOME THE ENTIRE OBSERVABLE UNIVERSE, AND MORE.

  • This inflation process is, is, it turns out, very, very, very effective.

  • It doesn't just create the observable universe or even a million times bigger,

  • but it generally keeps going.

  • Creates huge amounts of space and time,

  • including, possibly, regions of space-time with very

  • different properties than the one that we inhabit.

  • There are these other big regions we might call universes, but they might have very different

  • properties, different laws of physics, different constants, that might have beings in them

  • and so on, that might even have a different number of dimensions,

  • all brought about by a single process.

  • AND THERE ARE A FEW IDEAS ABOUT WHAT, EXACTLY, THAT PROCESS ENTAILS.

  • ONE FLAVOR SUGGESTS THAT THE MULTIVERSE MIGHT LOOK SOMETHING

  • LIKE A ROOT BEER FLOATWHERE OUR UNIVERSE IS JUST ONE

  • IN A SERIES OF BUBBLES.

  • - It's a little bit too far away. [laughs]

  • Now imagine that there's some sphere that

  • smashes into this, right?

  • It'll bruise, it'll dent one side of this

  • and that's exactly what a collision with another bubble would do;

  • it would create a sort of disc on the sky that was a little bit different than

  • every other direction.

  • My collaborators and I have actually done this

  • taken the microwave background data,

  • looked for these signatures, looked for patches on the sky.

  • We found some,

  • that's the exciting thing.

  • The unexcited thing is that the things that we found

  • are totally explainable as just random variations in the regular microwave background.

  • WITH MORE AND BETTER DATA ON THE EDGE OF THE UNIVERSE,

  • WE COULD STUDY FEATURES LIKE TEMPERATURE

  • AND LIGHT POLARIZATION OF THE CMB IN MORE DETAIL,

  • TO DO MORE SENSITIVE TESTS FOR THIS KIND OF IMPACT.

  • AND IN THE REALM OF INFLATION EXISTS ANOTHER OUT-OF-THIS-WORLD THEORYAND THIS ONE

  • MIGHT JUST BE THE CHERRY ON TOP.

  • A fairly natural process, just in the dynamics of inflation, before our sort of hot fireball

  • Big Bang could have created a whole bunch of baby universes.

  • They would appear to us as black holes, but inside each black hole would be a sort of

  • wormhole that connects to a baby universe.

  • SO, IF ALL WE NEED IS TO DO IS FIGURE OUT HOW TO JUMP INTO A LUCKY BLACK HOLE,

  • FIND A BRUISE IN THE FARTHEST STARS, CONFIRM SOME NEUTRONS ARE WHERE THEY

  • SHOULDN’T BE, OR BUILD A QUANTUM COPY MACHINE TO PIN DOWN QUANTUM DYNAMICS FOR GOOD, HOW

  • CLOSE ARE WE TO FINDING A PARALLEL UNIVERSE?

  • Very close.

  • It's right here.

  • For the quantum multiverse, it's here all the time.

  • We just have to believe it.

  • For a mirror sector, it's right here, we just have to detect it.

  • For a baby universe inside a black hole, we have to go and find it.

  • - Over the next five years, we're going to be exploring a lot more possible mechanisms

  • by which the neutron can oscillate into mirror neutrons.

  • And as even better, brighter sources of neutrons appear around the world, on the ten year timescale

  • we think that we can really probe a lot of interesting space

  • where parallel universes might be hiding.

  • - If we're looking for a bubble that's running into our bubble universe, those really could

  • appear in the data at any time, with lots of luck, but that's something that even in five

  • or ten years, more data will certainly exist and that's data

  • that we can check for that effect.

  • So somewhere between right now and thousands of years,

  • I think we'll definitely

  • maybe find one.

  • - To discover something like that would revolutionize physics.

  • I don't even know where we'd go next.

  • But it would be very, very exciting.

  • There's a parallel universe somewhere

  • where you're the smartest person in the world,

  • up to date on all the latest scientific discoveries.

  • You can jump closer to that universe right now

  • by hitting the subscribe button and the bell down below.

  • Thanks for watching and I'll see you next time!

WHETHER YOURE PONDERING ALTERNATE TIMELINES THAT SPLIT INTO INFINITE POSSIBILITIES,

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平行宇宙の発見にどれだけ近づいているのか? (How Close Are We to Finding a Parallel Universe?)

  • 6 1
    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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