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A way to 'see' extra dimensions

Monday, 5 February 2007
Cosmos Online
A way to 'see' extra dimensions

A computer-generated rendering of a multi-dimensional geometry similar to a warped throat. According to U.S. researchers, comparing theoretical models like this to the radiation left over from the early universe may provide a way to test the string theory model of physics.

Credit: Wikipedia

SYDNEY: The extra dimensions key to the mind-boggling concept of the universe called string theory might actually be measurable, according to U.S. researchers.

Physicists at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, have demonstrated that it might be possible to ‘see’ the shapes of the extra dimensions by searching for their influence on the still-visible echoes of the Big Bang.

String theory proposes that every object in the universe is made up not of particles, but of tiny, vibrating strings of energy. Each type of fundamental particle is the result of strings vibrating in different ways.

Much of the excitement over string theory stems from its apparent ability to ‘unify’ the four fundamental forces - electromagnetism, gravity, and the strong and weak nuclear forces - into phenomena that can be explained with a single set of equations, thus providing a complete picture of the universe. Creating such a ‘grand unified theory’ of physics, a quest that dominated the careers of many physicists, including Albert Einstein, has so far proved impossible under more conventional models of particle physics.

Although it may have tremendous power to explain the structure of the cosmos, string theory has so far been untestable, partially because it predicts that the universe is made up not only of the four dimensions we can perceive (three spatial dimensions and time), but of another six, 10 in total.

The extra spatial dimensions are hidden inside the ones we can percieve - rolled up into as-yet unknown shapes at every single point in our universe. According to Gary Shiu, the study’s lead author, the physical laws of the universe and the characteristics of elementary particles depend on the geometry of these dimensions. In order to test whether string theory can explain the structure of the universe, he said, scientists must determine whether the extra dimensions exist and what shape they take in our universe.

In today's universe, the shapes created by the extra dimensions are tiny and have been impossible to detect. The team’s new approach, reported in the journal Physical Review Letters, centred on the idea that in the instant after the Big Bang, when the universe was still just a speck, the extra dimensions might have been more apparent. Even, said Shiu, comparable in size to the four we can perceive. In these conditions, the team thought it might be easier to pinpoint the effect of the extra dimensions on the shape of space.

Using two different types of mathematically well-understood multidimensional geometries called warped throats, the team created two different models of hypothetical early universes. When the team compared the two models, they found that the hidden dimensions caused small but significant changes in the structures produced.

"Our results with simple, well-understood shapes give proof of the concept that the geometry of hidden dimensions can be deciphered from the pattern of cosmic energy," he said. "This provides a rare opportunity in which string theory can be tested."

The next step, said Shiu, is to look for the influence of extra dimensions in the energy distribution of our own early universe. Satellites such as the U.S. Cosmic Background Explorer and Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe have created such maps by observing microwave radiation left over from the Big Bang - radiation has persisted virtually unchanged for the last 13 billion years. But, said Shiu, current data from these satellites are not precise enough to look for the influence of extra dimensions.

Upcoming experiments such as the European Space Agency's Planck satellite should have the sensitivity required to detect subtle variations caused by different geometries, he added.

The implications of such a possibility are profound, said Henry Tye, a physicist at Cornell University in New York. "If this shape can be measured, it would also tell us that string theory is correct."

Readers' comments

My brain hurts

Ow

A quantum point is the first dimension

I have been seeing a quantum point as the first dimension.
It is connected to each point in 3D space, thus while an
individual point it is also universal connecting to all regions of 3D space.
Time does not exist, but is rather the duration of change, or expansion of the universe, perhaps due to the vacuum energy or dark energy of the universe. Time is thus durational motion/expansion. That requires an adjustment in math models of time and it's values and meanings.
While these other dimensions, beyond our 3D, but not really beyond, from our 3D view seem very small, when viewed within these other dimensions they are possibly as vast as our universe, if not more?
I wonder if the dark energy/dark matter might be more prominent in these other dimensions. And might just be as inhabited as our universe. The grays with their more advanced brain; size, activity, and hormonal, might be able to utilize these other dimensions to their use. But as we attempt to discern the qualities of dark energy/dark matter realms we MUST use caution as to how we interact since there is a high(strange)probability we could create a disturbance in those dark realms and to the beings within.

From someone who has had interactions with both beings that seem of this universe and solid, as well as, a being of dark matter or energy. This being absorbed sunlight thus giving an appearance of being black. Red eyes like coals, for those with the clearance to have heard about these encounters.

Ramblings of mind of a former 'high-strange' hillbilly.

WELCOME TO THE TWILIGHT ZONE...

This might sound kind of crazy, but WHAT IF these so-called hidden dimensions are really other realms of a spiritual matter?

Hmmm... it makes me wonder...

Ehh, not so much. What are

Ehh, not so much. What are you even doing at this site, talking about spirituality?

What?!!

What ever happened to experimental results? Are we replacing experiments that we learned in school with computer models? If we do measure the CMBR finely and see the variations predicted by a COMPUTER MODEL, how do we know that they are caused by multidimensional strings? If Multi-dimensional physics is correct, show me a particle of a certain mass and given lifetime that we can measure in a LABORATORY!! Enough with hanging it on the big bang - no particle, no valid theory. That's what Weinberg and previous generations of physicists had to do!

These comments appaul me.

The concept is simple. Mathematics are beautiful. We use mathematics to describe the universe. Two separate theories that are not unified is not a beautiful. I just do not understand why there is so much criticism. Most people can barely do the math question asked above. This article has nothing to do with spirituality, and the dimensions are not necessarily "other dimensions" that you can hop to from time to time. It is just implying that there is simply more than meets the eye.

visual perspective

ok but what if you can see these shapes and such what if they are always aroud you ,and you can see them what is that??????