Picture from Did the Big Bang begin from a singularity?
After the notes I made in my last post on Big Bang Theory I was fascinated by the following article on "The Big Think" by Big Bang theorist Ethan Siegel.....
Did the Big Bang begin from a singularity? Not anymore. - Big Think
Below I quote parts of the article and interleave my comments.
SIEGEL: But extrapolating beyond the limits of your measurable evidence is a dangerous, albeit tempting, game to play. After all, if we can trace the hot Big Bang back some 13.8 billion years, all the way to when the universe was less than 1 second old, what’s the harm in going all the way back just one additional second: to the singularity predicted to exist when the universe was 0 seconds old?
The answer, surprisingly, is that there’s a tremendous amount of harm — if you’re like me in considering “making unfounded, incorrect assumptions about reality” to be harmful. The reason this is problematic is because beginning at a singularity — at arbitrarily high temperatures, arbitrarily high densities, and arbitrarily small volumes — will have consequences for our universe that aren’t necessarily supported by observations.
And yet, instead, what we’re observing is that the universe’s initial
expansion rate and the total amount of matter and energy within it balance as
perfectly as we can measure.
As we shall see Siegel doesn't contradict Einstein's great theory of gravitation which predicts the possibility of a space-time singularity. Instead he conveniently side steps the question of whether space time space-time singularities are physical by telling us to stop yourself before you go all the way back to a singularity.
SIEGEL: Inflation accomplishes [(correct) predictions] by postulating a period, prior to the hot
Big Bang, where the universe was dominated by a large cosmological constant (or
something that behaves similarly): : the same solution found by de Sitter way
back in 1917. This phase stretches the universe flat, gives it the same
properties everywhere, gets rid of any pre-existing high-energy relics, and
prevents us from generating new ones by capping the maximum temperature reached
after inflation ends and the hot Big Bang ensues. Furthermore, by assuming
there were quantum fluctuations generated and stretched across the universe
during inflation, it makes new predictions for what types of imperfections the
universe would begin with.
SIEGEL: But things get really interesting if we look back at our idea of “the beginning.” Whereas a universe with matter and/or radiation — what we get with the hot Big Bang — can always be extrapolated back to a singularity, an inflationary universe cannot. Due to its exponential nature, even if you run the clock back an infinite amount of time, space will of time, space will only approach infinitesimal sizes and infinite temperatures and densities; it will never reach it. This means, rather than inevitably leading to a singularity, inflation absolutely cannot get you to one by itself. The idea that “the universe began from a singularity, and that’s what the Big Bang was,” needed to be jettisoned the moment we recognized that an inflationary phase preceded the hot, dense, and matter-and-radiation-filled one we inhabit today.
This new picture gives us three important pieces of information about the beginning of the universe that run counter to the traditional story that most of us learned. First, the original notion of the hot Big Bang, where the universe emerged from an infinitely hot, dense, and small singularity — and has been expanding and cooling, full of matter and radiation ever since — is incorrect. The picture is still largely correct, but there’s a cutoff to how far back in time we can extrapolate it.
SIEGEL: Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, we can no longer speak with any sort of knowledge or confidence as to how — or even whether — the universe itself began. By the very nature of inflation, it wipes out any information that came before the final few moments: where it ended and gave rise to our hot Big Bang. Inflation could have gone on for an eternity, it could have been preceded by some other nonsingular phase, or it could have been preceded by a phase that did emerge from a singularity. Until the day comes where we discover how to extract more information from the universe than presently seems possible, we have no choice but to face our ignorance. The Big Bang still happened a very long time ago, but it wasn’t the beginning we once supposed it to be.
MY COMMENT: Yes, I can accept Siegel's talk about our ignorance: in fact Siegel himself doesn't comment on two outstanding questions: Viz: What provides the energy for inflation? The nearest he gets to this question is a reference to a the cosmological constant which is another patch-in not greatly different to patching in initial conditions to fix the problems. The other baffling issue is this: As we follow the shrinking exponential of inflation back in time there comes a point where the scales of gravity and quantum theory collide: What happens then? But quoting Siegel once more we've at least got this to hang onto:
The [Big Bang] picture is still largely correct, but there’s a cutoff to how far back in time we can extrapolate it.
So further extrapolation beyond the hot big bang period is an extrapolation into the dark unknown. Therefore, apart from speculation on all sides, I guess that is how the situation will remain for some time to come. As I said in my last post on Big Bang: People still hanker and yearn after the idea that there was something before the big bang. But what was it? Was it God or just more algorithmically compressible bytes and bits? It might help when the incommensurability of gravitational theory and quantum theory is sorted.
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