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Is the Universe a Hologram? (fascinating science article)

Home › Forum Online Discussion › Philosophy › Is the Universe a Hologram? (fascinating science article)

  • This topic has 0 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 16 years, 9 months ago by Michael Winn.
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  • January 18, 2009 at 6:49 am #30204

    Michael Winn

    note: I love cosmology, whether done by physicists or meta-physicists. Both exemplify the power of imagination, ie. essence of our creative power to shape the chi field.

    This article is gives a nice snapshot of the cutting edge of physics cosmology, which of course at some level is a mirroring of the meta-physical reality that is imagining the physical reality of the universe. Study of our physical process, whether inside our body or inside the body of the cosmos, reveals truths about our energetic powers and spiritual nature.

    Enjoy this exploration of “heaven” the sphere, and “earth” the contents of the sphere and its holographic projection. It doesn’t deal with of course the issue of “will”, i.e. who is willing the holographic projection, and how is that “will” reflected internally by “us”, the holographic bits of data?
    Michael

    OUR WORLD MAY BE A GIANT HOLOGRAM
    by Marcus Chown
    New Scientist
    January 15, 2009

    http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20126911.300-our-world-may-be-a-giant-
    hologram.html

    Driving through the countryside south of Hanover, it would be easy to miss
    the GEO600 experiment. From the outside, it doesn’t look much: in the corner
    of a field stands an assortment of boxy temporary buildings, from which two
    long trenches emerge, at a right angle to each other, covered with
    corrugated iron. Underneath the metal sheets, however, lies a detector that
    stretches for 600 metres.

    For the past seven years, this German set-up has been looking for
    gravitational waves — ripples in space-time thrown off by super-dense
    astronomical objects such as neutron stars and black holes. GEO600 has not
    detected any gravitational waves so far, but it might inadvertently have
    made the most important discovery in physics for half a century.

    For many months, the GEO600 team-members had been scratching their heads
    over inexplicable noise that is plaguing their giant detector. Then, out of
    the blue, a researcher approached them with an explanation. In fact, he had
    even predicted the noise before he knew they were detecting it. According to
    Craig Hogan, a physicist at the Fermilab particle physics lab in Batavia,
    Illinois, GEO600 has stumbled upon the fundamental limit of space-time —
    the point where space-time stops behaving like the smooth continuum Einstein
    described and instead dissolves into “grains”, just as a newspaper
    photograph dissolves into dots as you zoom in. “It looks like GEO600 is
    being buffeted by the microscopic quantum convulsions of space-time,” says
    Hogan.

    If this doesn’t blow your socks off, then Hogan, who has just been appointed
    director of Fermilab’s Center for Particle Astrophysics, has an even bigger
    shock in store: “If the GEO600 result is what I suspect it is, then we are
    all living in a giant cosmic hologram.”

    The idea that we live in a hologram probably sounds absurd, but it is a
    natural extension of our best understanding of black holes, and something
    with a pretty firm theoretical footing. It has also been surprisingly
    helpful for physicists wrestling with theories of how the universe works at
    its most fundamental level.

    The holograms you find on credit cards and banknotes are etched on
    two-dimensional plastic films. When light bounces off them, it recreates the
    appearance of a 3D image. In the 1990s physicists Leonard Susskind and Nobel
    prizewinner Gerard ‘t Hooft suggested that the same principle might apply to
    the universe as a whole. Our everyday experience might itself be a
    holographic projection of physical processes that take place on a distant,
    2D surface.

    The “holographic principle” challenges our sensibilities. It seems hard to
    believe that you woke up, brushed your teeth and are reading this article
    because of something happening on the boundary of the universe. No one knows
    what it would mean for us if we really do live in a hologram, yet theorists
    have good reasons to believe that many aspects of the holographic principle
    are true.

    Susskind and ‘t Hooft’s remarkable idea was motivated by ground-breaking
    work on black holes by Jacob Bekenstein of the Hebrew University of
    Jerusalem in Israel and Stephen Hawking at the University of Cambridge. In
    the mid-1970s, Hawking showed that black holes are in fact not entirely
    “black” but instead slowly emit radiation, which causes them to evaporate
    and eventually disappear. This poses a puzzle, because Hawking radiation
    does not convey any information about the interior of a black hole. When the
    black hole has gone, all the information about the star that collapsed to
    form the black hole has vanished, which contradicts the widely affirmed
    principle that information cannot be destroyed. This is known as the black
    hole information paradox.

    Bekenstein’s work provided an important clue in resolving the paradox. He
    discovered that a black hole’s entropy — which is synonymous with its
    information content — is proportional to the surface area of its event
    horizon. This is the theoretical surface that cloaks the black hole and
    marks the point of no return for infalling matter or light. Theorists have
    since shown that microscopic quantum ripples at the event horizon can encode
    the information inside the black hole, so there is no mysterious information
    loss as the black hole evaporates.

    Crucially, this provides a deep physical insight: the 3D information about a
    precursor star can be completely encoded in the 2D horizon of the subsequent
    black hole — not unlike the 3D image of an object being encoded in a 2D
    hologram. Susskind and ‘t Hooft extended the insight to the universe as a
    whole on the basis that the cosmos has a horizon too — the boundary from
    beyond which light has not had time to reach us in the 13.7-billion-year
    lifespan of the universe. What’s more, work by several string theorists,
    most notably Juan Maldacena at the Institute for Advanced Study in
    Princeton, has confirmed that the idea is on the right track. He showed that
    the physics inside a hypothetical universe with five dimensions and shaped
    like a Pringle is the same as the physics taking place on the
    four-dimensional boundary.

    According to Hogan, the holographic principle radically changes our picture
    of space-time. Theoretical physicists have long believed that quantum
    effects will cause space-time to convulse wildly on the tiniest scales. At
    this magnification, the fabric of space-time becomes grainy and is
    ultimately made of tiny units rather like pixels, but a hundred billion
    billion times smaller than a proton. This distance is known as the Planck
    length, a mere 10-35 metres. The Planck length is far beyond the reach of
    any conceivable experiment, so nobody dared dream that the graininess of
    space-time might be discernable.

    That is, not until Hogan realised that the holographic principle changes
    everything. If space-time is a grainy hologram, then you can think of the
    universe as a sphere whose outer surface is papered in Planck length-sized
    squares, each containing one bit of information. The holographic principle
    says that the amount of information papering the outside must match the
    number of bits contained inside the volume of the universe.

    Since the volume of the spherical universe is much bigger than its outer
    surface, how could this be true? Hogan realised that in order to have the
    same number of bits inside the universe as on the boundary, the world inside
    must be made up of grains bigger than the Planck length. “Or, to put it
    another way, a holographic universe is blurry,” says Hogan.

    This is good news for anyone trying to probe the smallest unit of
    space-time. “Contrary to all expectations, it brings its microscopic quantum
    structure within reach of current experiments,” says Hogan. So while the
    Planck length is too small for experiments to detect, the holographic
    “projection” of that graininess could be much, much larger, at around 10-16
    metres. “If you lived inside a hologram, you could tell by measuring the
    blurring,” he says.

    When Hogan first realised this, he wondered if any experiment might be able
    to detect the holographic blurriness of space-time. That’s where GEO600
    comes in.

    Gravitational wave detectors like GEO600 are essentially fantastically
    sensitive rulers. The idea is that if a gravitational wave passes through
    GEO600, it will alternately stretch space in one direction and squeeze it in
    another. To measure this, the GEO600 team fires a single laser through a
    half-silvered mirror called a beam splitter. This divides the light into two
    beams, which pass down the instrument’s 600-metre perpendicular arms and
    bounce back again. The returning light beams merge together at the beam
    splitter and create an interference pattern of light and dark regions where
    the light waves either cancel out or reinforce each other. Any shift in the
    position of those regions tells you that the relative lengths of the arms
    has changed.

    “The key thing is that such experiments are sensitive to changes in the
    length of the rulers that are far smaller than the diameter of a proton,”
    says Hogan.

    So would they be able to detect a holographic projection of grainy
    space-time? Of the five gravitational wave detectors around the world, Hogan
    realised that the Anglo-German GEO600 experiment ought to be the most
    sensitive to what he had in mind. He predicted that if the experiment’s beam
    splitter is buffeted by the quantum convulsions of space-time, this will
    show up in its measurements (Physical Review D, vol 77, p 104031). “This
    random jitter would cause noise in the laser light signal,” says Hogan.

    In June he sent his prediction to the GEO600 team. “Incredibly, I discovered
    that the experiment was picking up unexpected noise,” says Hogan. GEO600’s
    principal investigator Karsten Danzmann of the Max Planck Institute for
    Gravitational Physics in Potsdam, Germany, and also the University of
    Hanover, admits that the excess noise, with frequencies of between 300 and
    1500 hertz, had been bothering the team for a long time. He replied to Hogan
    and sent him a plot of the noise. “It looked exactly the same as my
    prediction,” says Hogan. “It was as if the beam splitter had an extra
    sideways jitter.”

    No one — including Hogan — is yet claiming that GEO600 has found evidence
    that we live in a holographic universe. It is far too soon to say. “There
    could still be a mundane source of the noise,” Hogan admits.

    Gravitational-wave detectors are extremely sensitive, so those who operate
    them have to work harder than most to rule out noise. They have to take into
    account passing clouds, distant traffic, seismological rumbles and many,
    many other sources that could mask a real signal. “The daily business of
    improving the sensitivity of these experiments always throws up some excess
    noise,” says Danzmann. “We work to identify its cause, get rid of it and
    tackle the next source of excess noise.” At present there are no clear
    candidate sources for the noise GEO600 is experiencing. “In this respect I
    would consider the present situation unpleasant, but not really worrying.”

    For a while, the GEO600 team thought the noise Hogan was interested in was
    caused by fluctuations in temperature across the beam splitter. However, the
    team worked out that this could account for only one-third of the noise at
    most.

    Danzmann says several planned upgrades should improve the sensitivity of
    GEO600 and eliminate some possible experimental sources of excess noise. “If
    the noise remains where it is now after these measures, then we have to
    think again,” he says.

    If GEO600 really has discovered holographic noise from quantum convulsions
    of space-time, then it presents a double-edged sword for gravitational wave
    researchers. One on hand, the noise will handicap their attempts to detect
    gravitational waves. On the other, it could represent an even more
    fundamental discovery.

    Such a situation would not be unprecedented in physics. Giant detectors
    built to look for a hypothetical form of radioactivity in which protons
    decay never found such a thing. Instead, they discovered that neutrinos can
    change from one type into another — arguably more important because it
    could tell us how the universe came to be filled with matter and not
    antimatter (New Scientist, 12 April 2008, p 26).

    It would be ironic if an instrument built to detect something as vast as
    astrophysical sources of gravitational waves inadvertently detected the
    minuscule graininess of space-time. “Speaking as a fundamental physicist, I
    see discovering holographic noise as far more interesting,” says Hogan.

    Despite the fact that if Hogan is right, and holographic noise will spoil
    GEO600’s ability to detect gravitational waves, Danzmann is upbeat. “Even if
    it limits GEO600’s sensitivity in some frequency range, it would be a price
    we would be happy to pay in return for the first detection of the graininess
    of space-time.” he says. “You bet we would be pleased. It would be one of
    the most remarkable discoveries in a long time.”

    However Danzmann is cautious about Hogan’s proposal and believes more
    theoretical work needs to be done. “It’s intriguing,” he says. “But it’s not
    really a theory yet, more just an idea.” Like many others, Danzmann agrees
    it is too early to make any definitive claims. “Let’s wait and see,” he
    says. “We think it’s at least a year too early to get excited.”

    The longer the puzzle remains, however, the stronger the motivation becomes
    to build a dedicated instrument to probe holographic noise. John Cramer of
    the University of Washington in Seattle agrees. It was a “lucky accident”
    that Hogan’s predictions could be connected to the GEO600 experiment, he
    says. “It seems clear that much better experimental investigations could be
    mounted if they were focused specifically on the measurement and
    characterisation of holographic noise and related phenomena.”

    One possibility, according to Hogan, would be to use a device called an atom
    interferometer. These operate using the same principle as laser-based
    detectors but use beams made of ultracold atoms rather than laser light.
    Because atoms can behave as waves with a much smaller wavelength than light,
    atom interferometers are significantly smaller and therefore cheaper to
    build than their gravitational-wave-detector counterparts.

    So what would it mean it if holographic noise has been found? Cramer likens
    it to the discovery of unexpected noise by an antenna at Bell Labs in New
    Jersey in 1964. That noise turned out to be the cosmic microwave background,
    the afterglow of the big bang fireball. “Not only did it earn Arno Penzias
    and Robert Wilson a Nobel prize, but it confirmed the big bang and opened up
    a whole field of cosmology,” says Cramer.

    Hogan is more specific. “Forget Quantum of Solace, we would have directly
    observed the quantum of time,” says Hogan. “It’s the smallest possible
    interval of time — the Planck length divided by the speed of light.”

    More importantly, confirming the holographic principle would be a big help
    to researchers trying to unite quantum mechanics and Einstein’s theory of
    gravity. Today the most popular approach to quantum gravity is string
    theory, which researchers hope could describe happenings in the universe at
    the most fundamental level. But it is not the only show in town.
    “Holographic space-time is used in certain approaches to quantising gravity
    that have a strong connection to string theory,” says Cramer. “Consequently,
    some quantum gravity theories might be falsified and others reinforced.”

    Hogan agrees that if the holographic principle is confirmed, it rules out
    all approaches to quantum gravity that do not incorporate the holographic
    principle. Conversely, it would be a boost for those that do — including
    some derived from string theory and something called matrix theory.
    “Ultimately, we may have our first indication of how space-time emerges out
    of quantum theory.” As serendipitous discoveries go, it’s hard to get more
    ground-breaking than that.

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