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  • Our universe started with the Big Bang

  • but only for the right definition of our universe

  • and

  • started for that matter. In fact, the Big Bang is probably nothing like what you were taught.

  • A hundred years ago, we discovered the beginning of the Universe

  • Observations of the retreating galaxies by Edwin Hubble and Vesto Slipher

  • Combined with Einstein's then brand-new general theory of relativity

  • Revealed that our universe is expanding and if we reverse that expansion far enough,

  • mathematically, purely according to Einstein's equations

  • It seems inevitable that all space and mass and energy

  • should once have been compacted into an infinitesimally small point

  • a singularity, it's often said that the universe started with this singularity

  • and the Big Bang is thought of as the explosive expansion that followed

  • And before the Big Bang singularity, well, they say that there was no before because time and space simply didn't exist

  • Now if you think you've managed to get your head around this bizarre notion

  • Then I have some bad news, that picture is wrong.

  • And at least according to pretty much every serious physicist who studies the subject.

  • The good news is that the truth is way cooler, at least as far as we understand it

  • Now, before a certain crowd starts

  • with all the scientists keep changing their minds. They don't know anything or the Big Bang Theory is just a theory

  • Let me be very clear, the evidence for a hot dense early universe is practically incontrovertible.

  • The Cosmic Microwave Background is a direct line of sight to the universe as it was

  • Only a few hundred thousand years after the hypothetical beginning of time

  • We can see pretty much directly that all space and matter in the universe was once crunched at least a thousand times closer together

  • There's also the relative abundance of simple elements hydrogen and helium in particular

  • Whose ratio is exactly what we expect if the entire universe was a dense

  • billions of degrees nuclear furnace for the first several minutes of its existence

  • In fact,

  • There's powerful evidence that we should not rewind Einstein's equations that far, at least without introducing some very new physics

  • For one thing there's also convincing observational evidence that the time before around 10 to the power of negative 32 seconds

  • Included a period of extremely rapid expansion called cosmic inflation

  • We've talked about the reasons we need inflation in previous episodes and I'll come back to it in a bit

  • adding that initial growth spurt solves a couple of the big problems with the Big Bang Theory, but it doesn't change the fact that

  • Rewinding the expansion of the universe even at different speeds still leads us towards the T equals zero

  • singularity. I'm going to come back to why we need to forget the idea of this singularity

  • Doing so will change the way we think about cosmic inflation and about the beginning of the universe

  • But before we kill the whole idea of the Big Bang singularity, we need to understand what we're killing

  • What does it really mean for all of space to be compacted into a single point?

  • This idea is especially weird if the universe is infinite

  • Now the universe may or may not be infinite

  • but if we can understand this for the infinite case

  • Then getting all of this for the finite case is baby stuff at least by comparison

  • It's tricky to talk about the size of an infinite universe

  • Instead of the overall volume or radius we talk about the size of an expanding infinite universe in terms of the scale factor

  • That's the distance between any two points in space at some moment in time

  • Relative to their distance at some other reference moments that reference moment is typically taken to be right now

  • So the scale factor of the universe is currently one

  • Several billion years ago, the scale factor was half, all points in the universe were half as far apart as they are today.

  • So when I talk about rewinding the expansion,

  • I mean running the clock backwards to track a shrinking scale factor.

  • One way to do that is to keep halving the scale factor.

  • Do that enough times and any two points, no matter how far apart they were, will end up

  • as close together as you'd like.

  • Do it enough times and the universe could end up as hot and dense as you like

  • But it'll still be infinite, spatially, the scale factor is incredibly small

  • But an incredibly small number times infinity is still infinity

  • Rewinding the universe this way doesn't leave us with a singularity

  • The singularity is when all points are not just next to each other

  • but literally in the same spot

  • at which point temperature and density are infinite.

  • That last tiny step is a doozy

  • The scale factor goes from incredibly small to zero.

  • So the infinite universe becomes

  • infinitesimal all points become the same point and

  • three-dimensional space becomes zero dimensional

  • That's the singularity

  • We say that it didn't happen in any one place because a point is zero dimensional there weren't

  • spatial dimensions for it to happen in

  • At the same time we say the Big Bang happened

  • Everywhere at once because even the tiniest fraction of a second later

  • The universe has infinite size and everywhere is expanding equally

  • Even if the universe is not infinite then whatever space there is

  • Comes into being at the same time from that singularity. But what happens to time at the Big Bang singularity?

  • To get that you can't think about the universe as having one big clock that

  • Rewinds and then winks out of existence of the Big Bang or into existence if you're going forward

  • No, you have to think about time in the way Einstein

  • Intended there is no universal clock time is relative

  • Clocks are attached to each observer each moving frame of reference to see what time does at the Big Bang

  • We have to trace a path through space and time

  • back to the singularity

  • We trace a path called a geodesic which in general relativity is the shortest path between two space-time coordinates

  • These are the grids we use to map space-time

  • Remember that in our rewind all points in the universe get arbitrarily close together before merging at T equals zero

  • Well, that's the same as saying that all geodesics in the universe converge at the Big Bang singularity

  • In the same way all lines of longitude converge at the North Pole

  • so each

  • Geodesic tracks earlier and earlier times as it approaches the Big Bang

  • infinite clocks rewinding toward zero and then they all converge and

  • Then what well then nothing

  • All geodesics end at the Big Bang singularity and their timelines end with them

  • Or they start depending on how you want to think about it

  • The point is that in the pure Einsteinian picture

  • There is no before the Big Bang because no time line in this universe can be traced there. This is called

  • geodesic in completeness and it also happens at the singularity in the center of a black hole all

  • timelines end this time in the forward direction

  • The analogy with the North Pole is a good one and Einstein himself used

  • It lines of longitude end at the North Pole and it's meaningless to ask what is north of the North Pole?

  • from the pure Einsteinian point of view

  • It's meaningless to ask what happened before the Big Bang or after reaching the black hole Center?

  • Okay, so I'm taking my time to explain something

  • I already told you is wrong

  • But it's important because the extreme weirdness of the Big Bang singularity is part of what tells us. It's wrong

  • Any time you encounter a singularity in the mathematics of a physical theory you have good reason for skepticism

  • It's probably telling you that your physical theory is incomplete and that you push that theory too far

  • That's what's happening here

  • We used general relativity to rewind the universe, but we already know that despite its incredible successes

  • Gr. Is an incomplete theory?

  • At the crazy densities and temperatures of the Big Bang singularity and just after gr. Comes into terrible conflict with quantum mechanics

  • We've talked about that conflict and its possible resolutions before

  • But the upshot is that we just don't know how the universe behaves in those conditions

  • But we do know that pure general relativity is not a good description

  • and so he probably shouldn't believe its prediction that all space was compacted into a single point and that this is where

  • Time started. Ok. So what are the alternatives?

  • Can we really track?

  • Geodesics and the timelines they embody through the Big Bang and out the other side

  • If so, what do we find there?

  • There are several possibilities and they deserve their own episodes and we'll actually get to those soon

  • But to whet your appetite first up cosmic inflation can offer a temporary reprieve from the singularity

  • eternal inflation suggests that our universe appeared as a

  • regularly expanding bubble in an

  • unimaginably larger continuously inflating space-time in that case before the Big Bang was a period of

  • exponential expansion that could have lasted

  • indefinitely

  • We'll get to the nitty-gritty of that with its inflow tongs and bubble universes real soon

  • There are also various cyclic universe options

  • the first cyclic universe idea was the Big Bounce in which the

  • Gravitational attraction of all matter in the universe was enough to cause it to re-collapse and then presumably bounce outwards again

  • We now know that there isn't anywhere near enough matter to do that

  • unless we bring in string theory the

  • Steinhardt-Turok model suggests that our universe floats in a higher dimensional space

  • living on geometric objects called brains

  • collisions between those brains initiate cycles of expansion of contraction

  • Then there's Roger Penrose

  • Conformal cyclic cosmology it's even weirder because it postulates the infinite future

  • boundary of an eternally expanding universe

  • Looks like the Big Bang of a new universe

  • Mathematically so our heat death is someone else's Big Bang?

  • There are some less abstract ways to get a new universe out of an old one

  • for example an extreme quantum fluctuation could initiate a new Big Bang given infinite time or

  • The same amount of time could lead to all particles randomly converging back to the same spot

  • Or maybe black holes birth new universes as in least smullins becomed universe hypothesis

  • There's a poetry to that last one the geodesics approaching the black hole singularity

  • Become the geodesics emerging from the new Big Bang singularity

  • people love cyclic and regenerating universes

  • They appeal to our sense of narrative which might be a reason to be wary of these hypotheses

  • Now they also appeal to our intuition for causality

  • Things happen because prior events caused them many of our ideas

  • Just push back the uncomfortable something from nothing moments

  • physicists have a thing or two to say about that from quantum fluctuations from nothing - Stephen Hawking's

  • timeless interpretation of internal inflation that draws on the holographic principle

  • all things we'll discuss in the future as we travel beyond the beginning of Space-Time.

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