AlwaysAsking.com Podcast

Was the universe made for life? - AlwaysAsking.com

October 16, 2020 Jason K. Resch Episode 7
AlwaysAsking.com Podcast
Was the universe made for life? - AlwaysAsking.com
Show Notes Transcript

Was the universe made for life? In other words, were physical laws and constants of nature somehow chosen to allow for complex life?

Over the last century, physicists and cosmologists made a series of disturbing discoveries: cosmic coincidences. They found that parameters of nature and physical law seen specially crafted to make life possible. What are the implications?

Are we just very lucky? Was the universe designed for us. Or, might it imply the existence of other unseen universes. In this episode we review the latest data and theories to find answers to these questions.

Original article: https://alwaysasking.com/was-the-universe-made-for-life/
Youtube episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOmdVVgtLLs

Support the show

Amy:

You're listening to the always asking.com podcast. This is episode number seven. Today's question was the universe made for life? over the last century, physicists and cosmologists made a series of disturbing discoveries of cosmic coincidences. They found that parameters of nature and physical law are seen specially crafted to make life possible. What are the implications of this? Are we just very lucky? Was the universe designed? Or does it imply the existence of other universes and today we will review the data and theories to find answers to these questions. Enjoy

Brian:

was the universe made for life? In other words, were physical laws and constants of nature somehow chosen to allow for complex life? In the past 65 years, science has gradually revealed a shocking lesson by every right you shouldn't be alive, none of us should. It was only too easy for something to have gone wrong. For instance, had gravity been a little stronger, or had carbon been slightly different, or had neutrinos not existed. In all cases, the result is disaster. A dead universe devoid of chemistry, life and consciousness. Yet somehow, through incredible luck, divine intervention, or otherwise, we dodged every bullet who enjoy a universe with life. Among possible universes, ours is among the rare few where life of any kind is possible. And against all odds, the universe is a place where life is possible. To what can we ascribe this great fortune? How can it be explained? as, quote? what really interests me is whether God could have created the world any differently? In other words, whether the requirements of logical simplicity admits a margin of freedom. And quote, Albert Einstein, why is the universe the way it is? Could it have been any other way? First clues. In the past century, cosmologists and particle physicists developed a nearly complete understanding of our world and cosmos. Our current understanding now covers a range from the astronomical scales of superclusters, down to the subatomic scales of quarks. between the 1960s and 1980s, cosmologists developed a model of the history and initial conditions of the universe known as the lambda CDM model, which is also known as the standard model of cosmology. The lambda CDM model has recently been confirmed by satellite observations, including observations made by the COBE w map, and Planck satellites. Likewise, between the 1950s and 1970s, particle physicists developed a model that describes fundamental forces of nature and all known elementary particles. It is called the Standard Model of particle physics. Aside from describing known particles, this model predicted particles that have never been seen. For instance, it predicted the Higgs boson. The Large Hadron Collider at CERN, detected the Higgs boson in 20 1248 years after it was predicted, earning Peter Higgs and Francois Engler the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics. But these new theories also disturb physicists and cosmologists, the more they came to understand the particulars of our universe, the properties of particles, the strength of the forces, the initial conditions of the Big Bang, the more they realized we shouldn't even be here. Quote, as we look out into the universe and identify the many accidents of physics and astronomy that have worked together to our benefit, it almost seems as if the universe must in some sense have known we were coming and quote, Freeman Dyson in energy in the universe 1971. A perfect balance in the 1960s cosmology transition from a loose set of unconfirmed speculations into a hard science backed by observation. In this emerging field, cosmologists found a coincidence that couldn't be brushed off as mere luck, it demanded explanation. In 1948, Ralph alpha and Robert Herman were the first to predict that if the Big Bang happened, space should be filled with a uniform radiation emanating from all directions in the sky, a primordial heat remaining from the earliest moments of the universe. At the time, there was no technology to detect this radiation alpha Herman's prediction soon fell into obscurity and was forgotten. 16 years later, the chairman of physics at Princeton, Robert Deke rediscovered this prediction. With his colleagues, Jim Peebles and David Wilkinson, they plans to build a device able to detect this radiation. They could thereby confirm or disprove the Big Bang. But as fate had it, they were beaten to the punch by two radio astronomers Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson of Bell Labs. In 1964, Penzias and Wilson spent a frustrating year trying to isolate the source of a signal interfering with their observations to no avail. a mutual friend suggested that they reach out to Robert Dick, who was a short drive away from their facility in Holmdel, New Jersey. Penzias and Wilson called dick who was in his office with people's and Wilkinson. After hearing the details of this interference signal from the Bell Labs, researchers, Dick turned to his colleagues and said, well, boys, we've been scooped. The Princeton team drove to the Bell Labs facility to hear the signal for themselves. The signal had all the right characteristics. Its temperature, distribution, consistency, directionality, and intensity all matched perfectly with predictions of The Big Bang Theory. They listen to a cosmic hum of radiation that had been traveling through space for billions of years, the universe had a beginning. It was one of the greatest scientific discoveries of the 20th century, it earned Penzias and Wilson, the 1978 Nobel Prize in Physics. But this wasn't the end of the story. In 1969, Dick recognized an unsettling consequence of the Big Bang and the expansion of the universe, it is highly unstable. Have the density of the universe been slightly greater, the universe would have collapsed billions of years ago, long before life formed, have the density been slightly less, the universe would have expanded too fast for galaxies and stars to form. It was as though the universe sat on a knife's edge. Had it not been so balanced, it would have fallen to either side and we wouldn't be here. Why the universe is density is perfectly balanced is known as the flatness problem. Since according to general relativity, a perfect balance implies that spatial curvature is zero, flat, and modern observations confirm space is flat to within the precision of our measurement abilities within 1%. Due to the unstable nature of the balance, it implies that earlier, the balance was even greater. calculations reveal that if the curvature is below 1%, today, then one second after the Big Bang, it would have been 10 to the power of 15 times less. The situation is analogous to rolling a bowling ball down the lanes so long the ball could roll for billions of years. If we find the ball drifted less than 1% from center after rolling for billions of years, it suggests the ball must have been even closer to center when it started. Quote, if the rate of expansion one second after the Big Bang had been smaller, by even one part in 100,000 million million, it would have relapsed before it reached its present size. On the other hand, if it had been greater by a part in a million, the universe would have expanded too rapidly for stars and planets to form. And quote, Stephen Hawking in a brief history of time 1996 edition, it appears as though we are the winners of a cosmic lottery, have there been just slightly more mass, then the universe would have collapsed billions of years ago, had there been slightly less, there would be no galaxies, stars, planets or humans, there'd be no time for any structures to condense out of a rapidly expanding interstellar gas. Our universe is a Goldilocks universe where the density is just right, and monkeying with physics. As long as human beings have looked up at the night sky, we've wondered what the stars were and what makes them shine. But despite wondering for hundreds of thousands of years, only in the last 80 have we come to understand how and why the stars shine. In 1920, Arthur Eddington speculated that fusion of hydrogen into helium powered the stars, but it wasn't until 1939 that Hans Beth did the math to prove it, earning Beth the 1967 Nobel Prize in Physics. The only chemical elements produced in the Big Bang were hydrogen and helium along with trace amounts of lithium and beryllium. It was believed that stars could account for the production of the 88 other naturally occurring elements, the elements we know and love, which form our bodies and are necessary for our existence. These include carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, sodium, ion, and so on. But there was a problem. In 1939, it was discovered that there is no stable element with an atomic mass of five. This is known as the mass five roadblock. Like a staircase missing a step, it prevented heavier elements from being built up adding one hydrogen nucleus at a time. Instead, the process will hold it helium for a helium atom with two protons and two neutrons, and perhaps two helium atoms could fuse to make beryllium eight, and thereby jump over the missing fifth step. But this didn't work either. In 1932, john cockcroft and Ernest Walton found that beryllium eight is unstable, it lasts for less than a thousandth of a trillionth of a second of their work on them the 1951 Nobel Prize in Physics for transmuting the elements realizing the long held dream of alchemists there are no stable elements with a mass number of five or eight. In the words of William Fowler, the mass gaps at five and eight spelled the Doom of gamers hopes that all nuclear species could be produced in the Big Bang one unit of mass at a time. So yet another step was missing. With no known mechanism to get over the hurdle of the mass five and mass age roadblocks, there was no explanation for how elements necessary to life came to be. This problem led the cosmologists Fred Hoyle in 1953, to make what's described as the most outrageous prediction ever made in science, piles outrageous prediction was the existence of a yet undiscovered excited energy state of the carbon 12 nucleus, which had somehow been missed by all the particle physicists in the world. If this state existed, it would allow the triple alpha process the simultaneous collision of three helium four nuclei to yield carbon 12. If carbon could be made this way, the mass five and mass age roadblocks could be cleared, and then other heavier elements could be built one hydrogen or helium nucleus at a time. Without this state, carbon would be many millions of times rarer, and we wouldn't be here. So Hoyle reasoned, this state of carbon must exist. In 1953, pile traveled from Cambridge, England to visit William Fowler's Nuclear Physics Lab at Caltech. Pile asked that Fowler's lab do the experiments to check for this state of the carbon 12 nucleus, which he predicted should be at an energy level of 7.6 8 million electron volts. Quote, I was very skeptical that this steady state cosmologists, this theorist should ask questions about the carbon 12 nucleus pile just insisted, remember, we didn't know him all that well. Here was this funny little man who thought that we should stop all this important work that we were doing otherwise and look for this state, and we kind of gave him the brush off. And quote, William Fowler in interview 1973 but Hoyle succeeded in convincing a junior physicist at the lab Ward whaling to check for it. Five months later, pile received word, whaling confirmed the existence of the excited state of carbon 12. And it was almost exactly where Heil predicted that 7.65 5 million electron volts. foils prediction is remarkable because he used astrophysics, the physics of stars to find unknown properties in nuclear physics, the physics of atoms and then nuclei, follow was an instant convert, quote. So it was really quite a tour de force that a man who walked into the lab predicted the existence of an excited state of a nucleus. And when the appropriate experiment was performed, it was found and no nuclear theorists starting from basic nuclear theory could do that then, nor can they really do it now. So hoyles prediction was a very striking one. And quote, William Fowler in interview 1973 his father took a year off from his post at Caltech to work with Hoyle in Cambridge. Together with two astronomers, Margaret and Jeffrey Burbidge, they worked out a complete theory of element formation, showing how every element is produced and explaining the relative abundances of the elements as found in nature. And their work was revolution. And it made a name for the author's. For this work. Fowler received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1983. poil, however, did not share in the prize creating controversy. In any event, no one denied the significance of their accomplishment. With their 1957 paper, humanity finally had an understanding of where all the matter which makes up our world, our food, our shelter, our very bodies came from the innermost depths of long dead stars. This is what Carl Sagan meant when he said we are star stuff harvesting starlight quote, We are literally the ashes of long dead stars. If you're less romantic, we are the nuclear waste from the fuel that made those stars shine and quote. So Martin Reese in what we still don't know, why are we here 2004. And so the world as we know it is to the carbon 12 nucleus having this chance property, like the delicate balance of the density of the universe, the existence of this state hangs in a delicate balance. As it happens, the energy level of this state is at 7.655 mega electron volts, have the energy level of this state being less than 7.596 mega electron volts or greater than 7.716 mega electron volts, there will be almost no carbon in the universe. The minor miracle of the carbon 12 nucleus having this excited state and it being in exactly the right range did not go unnoticed. Quote, some super calculating intellect must have designed the properties of the carbon atom. Otherwise the chance of my finding such an atom through the blind forces of nature would be utterly miniscule. A common sense interpretation of the facts suggests that a super intellect has monkeyed with physics, as well as with chemistry and biology, and that there are no blind forces worth speaking about in nature. The numbers one calculates from the facts into me so overwhelming as to put this conclusion almost beyond question. And quote, Fred Hoyle in the universe past and present reflections 1982. The balancing of the Universes density and the fortune of the carbon 12 excited state with just the first of many cosmic coincidences, the more scientists probe the inner workings of the universe, the more lucky coincidences they found, with each one evidence gathered to support the idea that the laws of physics are finely tuned to permit the emergence of complexity. And with that complexity, life, cosmic coincidences, and the expansion rate of the universe and the existence of the excited state for the carbon 12 nucleus are due to fundamental physical forces. For instance, the expansion rate of the universe is governed by the strength of gravity and the energy of the vacuum. Likewise, the excited state of carbon 12 is determined by electromagnetic and nuclear forces. So far, particle physicists have identified 25 dimensionless constants in the standard model, while cosmologists have identified five others in a universe where these fundamental constants have different values is just as mathematically and logically consistent as our own. They represent other universes among the set of possible universes. Accordingly, these constants are considered free parameters of the 30 known fundamental physical constants, very few of them can change to any significant degree without leading to a barren universe. For instance, universe is of only hydrogen universes with no aggregations of matter, or universes of only black holes. Let's review the fragility of our universe two tweaks to these constants, chemistry and life. Our universe has a rich chemistry, the 92 naturally occurring chemical elements can combine in a nearly unlimited number of ways. Atoms assemble into molecules that encode digital information and can even self arrange into structures that reproduce themselves in three minutes after the Big Bang. The only elements in the universe were hydrogen and helium, in the universe remain this way for hundreds of millions of years. A thin haze of light gas. it's doubtful that any life could arise in a universe with only these elements of helium is chemically inert, and by itself, hydrogen can only make dihydrogen. Without chemistry, the universe would be lifeless. Fortunately, the fusion in stars gave us 90 other elements, and with them new ways to combine, react and generate complexity. of the 92 stable chemical elements 60 can be found in your body, and of those around 30 are believed to play a biological role in humans as the King of the elements. Some elements are more important than others when it comes to supporting life. Of those carbon is the most special. For its unique role in chemistry, carbons been called the king of the elements of carbon is the only element that can link up for other atoms and also form unlimited chains made of links with itself. Carbon is therefore the glue that binds large and complex molecules together. Nearly every molecule with more than five atoms contains carbon. And this includes essentially all bio molecules, carbohydrates, fats, proteins, RNA, DNA, amino acids, cell walls, hormones, and neurotransmitters. Without carbon, there could be no life as we know it, there could be no life based on molecules. Since complex molecules are impossible without the glue of carbon to hold them together. That carbon exists at all is due to the miracle of the oil state, which depends on properties of nuclear and electromagnetic forces in a desert universe. After hydrogen and helium, oxygen is the most abundant element in the universe. by mass, it makes up 89% of the oceans, and 50% of Earth's crust even makes up the majority of your weight. For every 100 pounds, someone weighs 65 pounds Oxygen. Oxygen is important to life for its reactivity. It reacts with every element except for fluorine and the noble gases. without oxygen, there could be no h2 Oh, and the whole universe would be a desert. And we owe our existence not only to the presence of oxygen in the universe, but to the availability of oxygen outside the cause of stars. All oxygen came from the cause of massive stars. When these stars exhausted their fuel, their cause collapsed under their own weight. These cores are roughly the size of our moon that have the mass of our Sun. Accordingly, their gravitational field is 200 billion times stronger than Earth gravity. It's so strong that in falling matter reaches a quarter of the speed of light by the time it hits the center. In 10 seconds 10% of the stars mass is converted into energy, and the result is a type two supernova, also known as a core collapse supernova. The stars outer layers falling in would create a black hole and lock away all oxygen forever. Except this doesn't happen. In the last moments of collapse, interactions by the weak nuclear force trigger a bounce that blows away the outer layers of the star. Have the weak force been stronger, this bounce would happen too early. If it had been weaker, then the bounce would happen too late. In both cases, the result is a disaster. The entire star, along with all of its oxygen would fall into a black hole and never be seen again. without oxygen chemistry is crippled. There would be no water, acids, bases, sugars, carbohydrates, fats, proteins, alcohols, nor any respiration, combustion or photosynthesis as we know them. Our lives are indebted to yet another precise balance. This time, it is a balance of the seemingly inconsequential weak nuclear force. Quote, every breath you take contains atoms forged in the blistering furnaces deep inside stars. Every flower you pick contains atoms blasted into space by stellar explosions that blazed brighter than a billion suns. And quote, Marcus Chan in the magic furnace, the search for the origins of atoms 2001. Particle Physics and life. The chemical properties of elements are set by properties of smaller parts called particles. These include protons, neutrons, and electrons in the nucleus of the atom is made of nucleons protons and neutrons, while the outer shell of the atom is composed of electrons. nucleons are themselves made of more fundamental particles called quarks. The Standard Model contains 17 known elementary particles, and nearly every particle in the Standard Model of particle physics has to exist, or else we would not be here. Moreover, in most cases, the properties of each particle such as its mass have to be just so a world of electrons and electrons being so small and like may seem remote and abstract, but the world we know is primarily the world of electrons. The light we see is emitted by electrons. Sounds we hear are carried by electrons bouncing off each other, and tastes and smells we experience are caused by chemical reactions driven by electrons. Every time we touch something, we feel the repulsion of that things electrons. Every chemical reaction is activity between electrons. Accordingly, the properties of elements, the compounds, they can form, their level of reactivity, all of it is determined by the properties of electrons. If the mass or charge of electrons are different values, all of chemistry would change. For example, if electrons were heavier, atoms would be smaller and bonds would require more energy. If electrons were too heavy, there would be no chemical bonding at all. If electrons were much lighter bonds would be too weak to form stable molecules like proteins and DNA, visible and infrared light would become ionizing radiation, and they would be as harmful as x rays and uvr. To us now, our own body heat would damage our DNA. Luckily for us, electrons weigh just enough to yield a stable but not sterile chemistry. Quote, the laws of science, as we know them, at present contain many fundamental numbers, like the size of the electric charge of the electron, and the ratio of the masses of the proton and the electron. The remarkable fact is that the values of these numbers seem to have been very finely adjusted to make possible the development of life. For example, if the electric charge of the electron had been only slightly different stars either would have been unable to burn hydrogen and helium, or else they would not have exploded. And quote, Stephen Hawking in a brief history of time 1988 A starless universe, electrons are very light compared to the protons and neutrons. The protons mass m sub p is 1,836.15 times the mass of an electron m sub e, and the neutrons mass m sub n is 1,838.68 times the mass of an electron m sub e. in a ton of coal, the electrons contribute little more than half a pound. We've seen how electron weight is of critical importance to chemistry. But so to our masses of other particles, it was important that one, protons and neutrons be close in weight to yet different mass by more than one electron, three, and also that neutrons be heavier than protons. As it happens, all three of these conditions hold true. had any of them not been met, we end up with a universe devoid of life in particle physics provides no explanation for why neutrons are heavier than protons rather than the other way around. Except if protons were heavier, there could be no lifelike us. A free neutron is a neutron not part of an atomic nucleus. Free neutrons are unstable. They have a mean lifetime of about 15 minutes. Left alone, a free neutron will decay into a proton and electron. Such decay is possible because neutrons weigh more than a proton and electron put together had instead, protons weighed more than neutrons would be stable and protons would be unstable. A free proton would then be able to decay into a neutron and a positron. But most of the hydrogen in the universe has a nucleus that is nothing but a free proton. If protons were unstable, then hydrogen is unstable. Little hydrogen would survive today, there would be no stars as we know them, only neutron stars and black holes. properties of subatomic particles at the smallest scales determine the course of events of the universe at the largest scales. If neutrons weighed ever so slightly less There would be no stars. It was also necessary that neutrons be unstable, had protons and neutrons weighed the same or been within one electrons weight, then both nucleons would be stable, and they would have equal numbers of protons and neutrons in the first minutes following the Big Bang. Again, the result is disaster. With equal numbers, each proton could pair with a neutron to form hydrogen to hydrogen to rapidly reacts to form helium four, there would be no more hydrogen of any kind in the universe. No fuels are power stars like our Sun, no water, no organic chemistry, no life. In a universe without atoms and photons are particles of light and carriers of the electromagnetic force. photons are the reason the sun warms you like magnets repel electrons binds to nuclei to make atoms and why your eyes can see. A laser beam consists of photons, so to our old gamma rays, x rays, ultraviolet light, visible light, infrared, microwaves and radio waves. Of all known particles, only two are massless. One is the glue and the other is the photon. It was necessary for life in the universe that photons be massless Have they not been, there would be no atoms. Virtual photons carry the electrostatic and magnetic forces. Because photons are massless virtual photons can act over any distance. If on the other hand, photons had mass, then virtual photons could only act over short ranges on the order of the size of a nucleus. There would then be no attraction or repulsion by electrons and nothing to bind them to atoms. There would be no chemistry only plasma ghosts to the rescue very to kilometer under a mountain in Japan 13,000 electronic eyes vigil over a tank of ultra pure water. This is the Super camio cans detector at the kameoka Observatory in Japan. Each eye is 20 inches wide and sensitive enough to detect single photons as they wait. In total darkness shielded from radiation by the mountain submerged in 20 Olympic sized swimming pools of water and the eyes wait patiently for a flash of light to appear in the water. If they're lucky, this happens maybe once every 100 minutes. But what could cause a flash of light out of total darkness ghost particles. The flashes are due to a tiny particle known as the neutrino. neutrinos are so small and light, it takes half a million of them to equal the weight of one electron. Further, they have no electric charge and so can pass straight through normal matter. Even whole mountains. A wall of LED one light year thick would only block half of them. Quote, neutrinos are really pretty strange particles when you get down to it. They're almost nothing at all, because they have almost no mass and no electric charge. They're just little wisps of almost nothing. And quote, john Conway and PBS interview 2011. The infrequency of neutrino detection at the kameoka Observatory is not because neutrinos are rare, neutrinos are everywhere. Each second 100 billion neutrinos pass through the tip of your thumb. On Earth, most neutrinos come from the core of the sun. About 2% of the sun's energy is radiated away is neutrinos. To neutrinos The earth is transparent, that day or night, they pass through us unnoticed. This is earns neutrinos the nickname of ghost particles. This is why neutrinos are so hard to detect only once every few hours is a neutrino stopped by the massive water tank in kameoka. But on February 24 1987, something strange happened. It had not happened before nor has it happened since in the span of 10 seconds, the kameoka Observatory registered 12 separate flashes, it was not a problem with the equipment at the same time, and on the other side of the world. The IMD detector in Ohio also saw a flurry of flashes in their neutrino detector during those same 10 seconds. Something somewhere released an incredible burst of neutrinos. As it turned out, the source of this neutrino burst was something far away and long ago, the death of a star beyond the galaxy. These neutrino labs were the first to detect the explosion. And astronomers wouldn't notice the event until several hours later. Today, a network of neutrino labs now former supernova early warning system in 2002, Masatoshi Koshiba, who directed the neutrino experiments, and Raymond Davis Jr, who built the first neutrino detector share the Nobel Prize in Physics for the detection of these neutrinos. Given their ghostly nature, it would be easy to write off neutrinos as playing no important role in the universe and having no relevance to life. But we owe our existence to the tiny neutrino. It is the neutrino that rescues oxygen and other vital elements from disappearing into the collapsing core of a dying star. During a core collapse, 100 times more energy is released in 10 seconds than our sun will emit in her 10 billion year life. Around 99% of this energy is released as neutrinos, only a ghost particle could escape from the core and reach the outer layers of the collapsing star. There they deposit a little of their energy, giving the outer layers enough of a push to blow the star apart and save elements like oxygen from otherwise certain doom. There would be no oxygen, no water, and likely no life if it weren't for the neutrino and the role it plays during the deaths of these giants. Quote, a very interesting question to me is, is the universe more complicated than it needs to be to have us here? In other words, is there anything in the universe which is just here to amuse physicists, and it's happened again, and again that there was something which seemed like it was just a frivolity like that, where later we've realized that, in fact, no, if it weren't for that little thing, we wouldn't be here. I'm not convinced, actually, that we have anything in this universe which is completely unnecessary to life. And quote, Max Tegmark and what we still don't know why are we here 2004 fundamental forces and life there are just four fundamental forces in nature. One, electromagnetism, two, gravity, three, the weak nuclear force and for the strong nuclear force, these forces drive all movement and every physical interaction. In each of them. Scientists have noticed an inexplicable balancing act of electromagnetism, and the greatest damn mystery in physics. The movement of the compasses needle is driven by the electromagnetic force. The strength of the electromagnetic force is determined by a dimensionless constant called the fine structure constant alpha. Alpha equals 0.00729351, approximately one over 137 due to alpha having a value of one over 137, the speed of an electron in a hydrogen atom is one 137 the speed of light. It also sets the fraction of electrons that emit light when they strike phosphorescent screens at one 100 and 37th. Determining such fundamental properties as the speed of electrons in atoms means alpha determines how large atoms are, which in turn determines what molecules are even possible. A different alpha would change properties like the melting point of water and the stability of atomic nuclei. Physicists calculated that had alpha differed from its current value by just 4%. The carbon 12 excited energy level would not be in the right place, there would be almost no carbon in the universe if alpha were one over 131, or one over 144. Quote, it has been a mystery ever since it was discovered more than 50 years ago, and all good theoretical physicists put this number up on their wall and worry about it. Immediately, you would like to know where this number for a coupling comes from? Is it related to pi or perhaps to the base of natural logarithms? Nobody knows. It's one of the greatest damn mysteries of physics, a magic number that comes to us with no understanding by man. You might say the hand of God wrote that number. And we don't know how he pushed his pencil. We know what kind of Dance to do experimentally to measure this number very accurately, but we don't know what kind of dance to do on the computer to make this number come out without putting it in secretly, and quote, Richard Fineman in QED the strange theory of light and matter 1985 gravity and the lives and deaths of stars, the gravitational force between an apple and the earth pulls both together. The strength of gravity is determined by a dimensionless constant called the gravitational coupling constant, alpha sub G, alpha sub G equals 5.907 times 10 to the power of minus 39. It is striking how small alpha sub G is. The smallness of alpha sub g means gravity is exceptionally feeble compared to the other forces so much weaker. It's an unsolved mystery of physics called the hierarchy problem. If alpha sub g were larger, you and everything else in the universe would weigh more. Conversely, if alpha sub g was smaller, everything would weigh less. But if gravity was so weak, we wouldn't be here. In 1947, the physicist Pascal Jordan noticed a strange coincidence, he described it in his book The origin of the stars. The coincidence he noticed was that the mass of the Sun is suspiciously close to the weight of a proton divided by alpha sub g to the power of three over two. And, in fact, the mass of nearly every star is within a factor of 10. From this number, there is a reason for this, the electrostatic repulsion between two protons is about 10 to the power of 36 times stronger than their gravitational attraction. and, accordingly, once you have around 10 to the power of 36, times three halves, or 10, to the power of 54 protons in one place, as in a star, the gravitational attraction between the star and the proton begins to eclipse the strength of two protons repulsion, sparking fusion. But should the mass of a compact object increase much past this level, the star becomes unstable and will either blow itself apart or collapse into a neutron star or black hole at the Chandra Sacre limit. The reason stars are so big is because gravity is so weak. If gravity was stronger, everything miniature rises, planets, mountains, animals, even the observable universe need to shrink to not collapse under their weight. And see why are things the size that they are in. A stronger gravity not only decreases the stars size, but also its life expectancy. A smaller style leaks heat more quickly. If gravity were 10 times stronger, and equivalently hot star would live just one 10th of the time. So if alpha sub g had 37 zeros rather than 38 after its decimal point, a star like our Sun would live not 10 billion years, but 1 billion short lived stars Doom complex life, it took billions of years for multicellular life to appear on Earth, the chance for life to appear at all only diminishes as alpha sub g increases. The cosmologists Martin Reese described the astrophysics of a hypothetical universe where alpha sub G is a million times stronger than it is, quote, he would leak more quickly from these mini stars. In this hypothetical strong gravity world, stellar lifetimes would be a million times shorter. Instead of living for 10 billion years, a typical star would live for about 10,000 years, many sun would burn faster and would have exhausted its energy before even the first steps in organic evolution had got underway. And quote, so Martin Reese in just six numbers 1999. Life owes its existence to weak gravity. But we should also be grateful that alpha sub g isn't zero or negative. And this leads to disaster of another kind. with zero or negative gravity, no galaxies, stars or planets form, there would be no place for life To begin, for there would be no places at all, the weak nuclear force and the biggest explosions. The weak force is ultimately responsible for the eerie glow surrounding nuclear reactors. The weak nuclear force causes particle decay, the decay rate is set by a dimensionless constant called the weak force coupling constant alpha sub W. Alpha sub W is approximately 0.000001 or two tend to the power of minus six. Unstable particles such as neutrons muons, and pi ions spontaneously convert or decay into other particles. For example, invader decay and neutron decays into a proton, electron and neutrino is a larger alpha sub w shortens the lives of unstable particles and accelerates radioactive decay. But altering alpha sub w has other consequences. The value of alpha sub w causes the biggest explosions in the universe. The biggest manmade explosion was the 50 mega tons are bomba, and it had a yield of 50 million tons of TNT. Its mushroom cloud rose to 42 miles reaching the edge of space at five times the height of Everest. Yet this explosion is pitiful next to the biggest explosions known as the biggest explosions in the universe, our core collapse supernovae, they release the energy of 10 to the power of 28 Tsar bombs, if each sandgren equal to billions our bombs, and if every grain of sand on earth speeches exploded at once, that would approach the power of a core collapse supernova. Quote, the neutrino luminosity of a core collapse supernova briefly exceeds the light output of all the stars of the observable universe. And quote, Cray Hogan and why the universe is just so 1999. As we've seen, these most powerful explosions depend on the most ghostly of particles the neutrino, but the explosions also depend on the neutrino having the right amount of ghostliness ever so rarely, a neutrino interacts with a particle through the weak nuclear force. For instance, a neutrino might interact with an electron and give it enough energy to knock it away from its atom. This electron, if traveling fast enough, creates a shockwave of light, the optical equivalent of a sonic boom known as the cheering cough effect. The effect is named for Pawel cheering cough, who first noticed it in 1934, earning him a share of the 1958 Nobel Prize in Physics. This effect is responsible for the flashes of like neutrino detectors look for, and also the blue glow seen inside nuclear reactors. Since neutrinos feel the weak nuclear force, the value of alpha sub w determines the ease at which neutrinos interact with regular matter. It sets the neutrinos level of ghostliness. Recent models show that alpha sub w been less than half its current value, neutrinos would leave the collapsing core too quickly to forestall the collapse. Conversely, add alpha sub w being more than five times its current value, then neutrinos would be trapped in the core for too long. Again, they would be unable to prevent the collapse of the star. Recent computer simulations reveal how the largest explosions in the universe are caused by otherwise on assuming particles. Core collapse supernovae are the source of all free oxygen in the universe. Every Breath You Take and drop of water you sip contains oxygen from these stars blown into space by neutrinos. If alpha sub w had been a little bigger or smaller, elements necessary for life would stay forever trapped in the remnants of giant stars. Accordingly, life as we know it depends on alpha sub w being close to 0.000001. The strong nuclear force and sticky nuclear arms and the strong nuclear force reveals its power whenever atoms split or fuse. The strong nuclear force is the glue that holds the atomic nuclei together. The stickiness of this glue is determined by a dimensionless constant call the strong force coupling constant alpha sub s. Alpha sub s is approximately one of the four fundamental forces alpha sub s is the strongest. It is 137 times stronger than the electromagnetic force and a million times stronger than the weak nuclear force. Unlike electromagnetism, and gravity, the strong force is range limited, it can only be felt up to a few feet photometers away. A larger alpha sub s makes fusion easier and fishing harder. With a smaller alpha sub s, the reverse happens. We are lucky alpha sub s is much larger than alpha. If it weren't, the strong force wouldn't be able to overcome the electrostatic reaction. have protons and nuclei of atoms wouldn't stay together at all. In such a universe, the only possible atom is hydrogen. Accordingly, if the strong force weren't so strong, we wouldn't be here. In your body, only about 1% of your weight comes from the weight of your constituent particles, and the other 99% comes from the binding energy of the strong nuclear force. And the reason there are about 100 chemical elements is due to the fact that the strong force is about 100 times stronger than the electromagnetic force. But it is a delicate balance, the strong force must not be too strong, had alpha sub has been 3.7%. Stronger, fusion would be too easy. All hydrogen would have fused into helium in the first minutes after the Big Bang, there would be no water, no organic compounds, nor fuel for stars like our Sun. Yet, if alpha sub s were 11%, weaker, hydrogen two wouldn't be stable. Hydrogen two plays a necessary role in fusion of stars like our Sun. So with a slightly weaker, strong force, again, our sun doesn't shine. A more recent analysis has placed even tighter constraints on alpha sub s, given the details of how carbon and oxygen are produced in the cause of stars. Quote, even with a change of 0.4%, in the strength of the nuclear nuclear force, carbon based life appears to be impossible, since all the stars then would produce either almost solely carbon or oxygen, but could not produce both elements and quote, Luke a bombs in the fine tuning of the universe for intelligent life 2011. Why does alpha sub s have the value it does? No one can say. All we know is that if it didn't, there would be no one here to speculate about it. cosmology life, we've seen how particle physics operating at the smallest scales of reality is littered with coincidences that make life possible. But particle physicists are not alone in mystifying themselves with discoveries of this kind of cosmologists studying the largest scales of reality. And the origins of the universe have found that had the initial conditions not been just right, none of us would be here. infinitely intelligent babies and spacetime dimensionality are University is marked by having three dimensions of space, height, width, depth, and one dimension of time. Under Einstein's relativity, space and time merge into a unified whole called space time. Since there are three dimensions of space and one of time, physicists sometimes refer to this as a three plus one spacetime. See what is time, even the number and character of dimensions appear significant to life. In a two dimensional space like flatland, topological constraints make certain vital structures difficult or impossible to form. 2d space imposes limits on complexity, for example, digestive tract cat creatures in half. Furthermore, nerve cells neurons, and blood vessels can't cross without intersecting difficulties of another kind appear when the number of spatial dimensions increases beyond three, with four rather than three dimensions of space, Newton's inverse square law becomes an inverse cube law. In space with greater than or equal to four dimensions, orbits are unstable. Planets either crash into their stars or drift away. Electron orbits also become unstable. In 1997, the cosmologists Max Tegmark was the first to notice and describe the apparent necessity of three plus one spacetime to life. Quote, with more or less than one time dimension, the partial differential equations of nature would lack the hyperbolicity property that enables observers to make predictions. In a space with more than three dimensions, there can be no traditional atoms and perhaps no stable structures in that space with less than three dimensions allows no gravitational force and may be too simple and barren to contain observers. And, quote, Max Tegmark in on the dimensionality of spacetime 1997 spacetime falls into the one place where life is possible. Quote, this leaves three spatial data I mentioned in one time dimension as the only viable option. In other words, an infinitely intelligent baby could in principle before making any observations at all, calculate from first principles that there's a level two multiverse with different combinations of space and time dimensions, and that three plus one is the only option supporting life. Paraphrasing Descartes, it could then think kognito, ergo three space dimensions and one time dimension before opening its eyes for the first time and verifying its predictions. And quote, Max Tegmark in our mathematical universe 2014 dark matter and the cosmic web. cosmologists suspect there exists a particle even more ghostly than the neutrino. While neutrinos can feel both gravity and the weak force, particles of dark matter are thought to only respond to gravity. There are many theories for what Dark Matter could be. Examples include axions, sterile neutrinos, and wimps. And so far all have eluded direct detection. If Dark Matter only interacts through gravity, it would be invisible, even to such sensitive detectors as the Super kamioka. And for all that is presently known, dark matter particles could be everywhere, and many might be streaming through Earth and our bodies right now. But if they are, we wouldn't have the slightest clue. The rotational speeds of stars within galaxies provided hints of Dark Matters presence. In 1884, Lord Kelvin analyzed the speeds of stars orbiting the galaxy, he found that stars moved so fast that they should fly off, there wasn't enough gravity from visible matter to keep them in orbit. This led Kelvin to speculate that most matter is in dim or dark stars. current models suggest that by mass, dark matter makes up 84.5% of all the matter in the universe, regular matter is less common. Modern detection efforts have mostly ruled out large aggregations of regular matter, such as black holes, rogue planets, and brown dwarfs as candidates for this missing mass. This finding has led most physicists to look to a yet undiscovered particle or family of particles as responsible. Dark Matter may be invisible, but that doesn't mean it's unimportant. On the contrary, dark matter appears necessary to our existence. Detailed computer simulations of the universe reveal the critical role Dark Matter plays in the formation of galaxies, stars, and life. Gravity caused dark matter to coalesce in filaments, or tendrils, forming a great cosmic web. This web is the scaffolding for the structures of the universe is a regular matter, which makes up galaxies and galaxy clusters clumped along the filaments of this web. Quote, I worked on trying to make universes without dark matter in a computer, and they were always a disaster. They just never worked. So a universe without dark matter is just a failed universe. It's a pretty boring, barren place. Galaxies just don't form. And if galaxies don't form, stars don't form. And if stars don't form, presumably people don't form. It was only when we got the right chemistry, you know, the right mix of dark matter and ordinary matter that we suddenly came up with replica universes that for all intents and purposes look just like the real thing. And quote, Carlos Franklin, what we still don't know. Why are we here 2004. Galaxy like objects only appear in computer simulations having the right mix of dark matter. Without dark matter, and also the right ratio of dark matter to ordinary matter. Our universe would be a boring, barren place, universal homogeneity and unwelcome stars in the 1964 detection of microwaves by Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson helped establish the Big Bang in terrestrial measurements showed the signal had an equal intensity coming from every direction in the sky. But according to cosmological theories, the signals shouldn't be uniform, there needed to be some density variations, or else gravity wouldn't have caused any clumping into galaxies at all. It took satellite based measurements to give sufficient precision. The measurements painted a picture of the mottled nature of the CMB. The cosmic microwave background or CMB, is a map of the oldest radiation in the universe as it appears across the sky. project leaders behind these satellite measurements, George Smoot and john Mather received the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physics. In the words of the prize committee, the measurements marked the inception of cosmology as a precise science of the temperature of space across the night sky is nearly but not perfectly uniform. It varies by approximately two parts in 100,000. This has been termed the homogeneity constant Q, Q is approximately 0.00002, or two times 10 to the power of minus five. The variations in temperature are due to density variations in the early universe. Over time, these density differences became magnified through gravity to see all the large scale structures we see today, the web of dark matter, galaxy super clusters and galaxies themselves. We are very fortunate that Q is two parts in 100,000, rather than in 10,000, or 1 million. In either case, we probably wouldn't be here. Q determines the size and densities of galaxies, or reduced q leads to small and sparsely populated galaxies. Such galaxies wouldn't have the gravity to keep and recycle the heavy elements bequeathed by previous generations of stars. If key were much smaller, galaxies wouldn't form at all. A larger queue is no better. Had queue been larger galaxies become so densely populated that stars often pass near each other. These unwelcome guests cause havoc for planets, they can permanently alter planetary orbits even cause planets to be ejected from their star system. This would be a disaster for any life developing on such worlds. If q were even bigger, say one part in 1000, then there would be no stars or galaxies, only monster black holes that quickly swallow all matter in the universe. And, again, there will be no chance for life as we know it. Fortunately, with q equals two times 10 to the power of minus five, our universe is neither too lumpy nor too smooth. It's just right. The stars are close enough to reuse elements from previous generations, but not so close. They run into each other, the cosmological constant, and Einstein's greatest blunder is the strength of the force that drives the expansion of the universe is determined by a number called the cosmological constant lambda. Lambda is approximately 2.888 times 10 to the power of minus 122. Lambda is incredibly small, it has 120 zeros after the decimal point, and then a two lambda is referred to by many names such as Quintessence, dark energy, vacuum energy, zero point energy, anti gravity, and the fifth force. Regardless of what we call it, all names refer to the same phenomenon that the universe is expansion is not slowing but accelerating. In 1917, in an effort to explain how the universe could be static and eternal, the prevailing belief at the time without gravitationally collapsing, Einstein introduced lambda as a parameter to his equations of general relativity. Quote, the system of equations allows a readily suggested extension which is compatible with the relativity postulate and is perfectly analogous to the extension of Parsons equation. For on the left hand side of the equation, we had the fundamental tensor g sub UV multiplied by a universal constant negative lambda at present unknown without destroying the general covariance, this field equation with lambda sufficiently small is in any case also compatible with the facts of experience derived from the solar system. And quote, Albert Einstein in cosmological considerations in the general theory of relativity 1917 but observations by vesto Slifer and later by Edwin Hubble and Milton humus and suggested the universe was not static but dynamic. In 1922, Alexander Friedman showed that the equations of general relativity could account for and describe an expanding universe in a final blow. Arthur Eddington who ironically proved Einstein right in 1919. By performing the first test of general relativity prove Einstein's static cosmological model wrong in 1930. Eddington showed that a static universe is unstable and therefore could Not be eternal. Einstein was quick to change his mind. He said new observations by Hubble and humans and concerning the redshift of light in distant Nebula we make the presumptions near that the general structure of the universe is not static. He added, the redshift of the distant nebulae have smashed my old construction like a hammer blow. According to George gameau, Einstein said, the introduction of the cosmological term was the biggest blunder he ever made in his life, and Einstein likely considered as a blunder not for being wrong, but because he missed an opportunity. And Einstein not tried to prove a static universe and instead looked at what his own equations implied. He might have predicted a dynamic universe before observational results came in. Einstein could have scooped Hubble, the idea of a cosmological constant was abandoned. But in 1980, it made a return with the theory of cosmic inflation and cosmic inflation fill gaps in the Big Bang. It explained where all the matter and energy came from, why the universe is expanding, and why the density of the universe rests on a knife edge. See what caused the Big Bang. All inflation needed to get started was for the energy of the vacuum to be nonzero. If vacuum energy is nonzero, space expands on its own, exactly in the way that a cosmological constant predicts. Quote, the repulsive gravity associated with the false vacuum is just what Hubble ordered. It is exactly the kind of force needed to propel the universe into a pattern of motion in which any two particles are moving apart with a velocity proportional to their separation. And, quote, Alan Guth in eternal inflation and its implications 2007 inflation provided an answer to one fine tuning question. It answered Why is the density of the universe so close to the critical density, but in doing so, inflation reintroduced lambda, and the value of lambda highlighted a fine tuning coincidence so extreme that it's considered one of the greatest unsolved mysteries in physics. JOHN Wheeler and Richard Fineman estimated that there ought to be enough vacuum energy in the space of a light bulb to boil the Earth's oceans. According to quantum field theory, we expect the inherent energy of the vacuum to be 10 to the power of 113 joules per cubic meter. That type two supernova, by comparison is just 10 to the power of 46 joules. But when cosmologists measured the vacuums energy, they found it to be pitifully weak 1,000,000,000th of a joule per cubic meter. In this case, theory and experiment disagreed by a factor of 10 to the power of 122. This error is described as the worst theoretical prediction in the history of physics. The question of why this prediction was so bad is called the cosmological constant problem, or the vacuum catastrophe. It remains one of the great Unsolved Mysteries of physics. But there is at least one reason why vacuum energy is so low, you probably guessed had it not been as small as it is, life could not exist. In 1987, before lambda was measured, Steven Weinberg predicted that lamda must be nonzero positive and smaller than 10 to the power of minus 120. Weinberg reason that had lambda be negative, the universe would have gravitationally collapsed billions of years ago, had instead lambda been slightly larger than it is, say around 10 to the power of minus 119. Then the universe would expand too quickly for galaxies, stars or planets to form. In 1998. Two teams of astronomers studying distant supernovae confirmed Weinberg's prediction, and they found that the expansion rate of the universe was not slowing down, but accelerating. The observed rate of accelerated expansion places lambda 2.888 times 10 to the power of minus 122. This was exactly in the range Steven Weinberg had predicted 11 years earlier. For ediscovery Saul Perlmutter, Adam recent Brian Schubert received the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics 80 years after introducing it, Einstein's cosmological constant was vindicated. The only difference is lambda is not at a value that keeps the static universe but instead is slightly larger, and so it drives an expansion of vacuum energy appears in the Casimir effect and Vander Waals forces. These forces allow geckos to climb walls and colloidal solutions like mayonnaise to hold together despite being a mix of oil and water. The same energy that holds Mayo together pushes the galaxies apart. But the probability of lambda having the value it does this so low that it was inconceivable to physicists, there appears to be no reason it should be so small, aside from the fact that a miniscule lambda is necessary for there to be any complex structures or life in this universe. Quote, the fine tunings, how fine tunes are they, most of them are 1% sort of things. In other words, if things are 1%, different, everything gets bad. And the physicist could say, maybe those are just luck. On the other hand, this cosmological constant is tuned to one part in 10, to the power of 120 120 decimal places. Nobody thinks that's accidental. That is not a reasonable idea that something is tuned to 120 decimal places just by accident. That's the most extreme example of fine tuning. And quote, Leonard Susskind in what we still don't know, are we real? In 2004? How lucky were we? We've seen the near misses good fortunes, and happy accidents that conspired to make life possible in this universe. Life requires complex structures. complex structures require large aggregations of matter, and many ways to organize it. And this requires a rich chemistry. And in this universe, a rich chemistry requires stars and stars need the right kind of particles with the right masses, a balance of the forces and precisely set initial conditions for the universe. What are the odds everything would work out just right? How likely would it have been to get a life sustaining universe if the fundamental constants of nature were chosen at random, the right particles, without the right particles of the right masses, we don't have a chemistry. chemical properties depend on three parameters. The proton mass m sub p of the electron, proton mass ratio, beta, and the fine structure constant alpha. If the electron mass were 50% less stars would be too dim. If 250% more, there would be no hydrogen. If the proton mass was 0.1% less, there would be only hydrogen. If 0.2% more, there would be only neutrons. If the photon had a mass, there would be no atoms. If the neutrino didn't exist, there would be no free oxygen. In the graph depicting our island of habitability within the possibility space of two parameters, beta and alpha. Constraints preventing life appear in the shaded regions of life is possible in the unshaded area. If a grand unified theory is true, alpha must fall between the two vertical lines. The dashed line shows universes where stars are hot enough to emit light with enough energy to trigger chemical reactions. For example, photosynthesis. across the range of every possibility, our universe occupies a position on the dashed line and the unshaded region marked by plus, quote, virtually no physical parameters can be changed by large amounts without causing radical qualitative changes to the physical world. And quote, Max Tegmark in his the theory of everything, nearly the ultimate ensemble theory in 1998, balanced forces to get the right physics having the right structures of the smallest scales of atomic nuclei, and the largest scales of stars and galaxies, the four forces have to have a finely tuned balance. If electromagnetism were 4%, less or 4% more, there'd be almost no carbon. If gravity was non positive, there would be no structures. If it were not less than 10 to the power of minus 36, there would be no long lived stars. If the weak force were 50% less, or five times more, there would be no rebound of a core collapse, and hence no oxygen. If the strong force were 11% less stars wouldn't shine. If 3.7% more there would be no hydrogen In the graph depicting our island of habitability within the possibility space of two parameters, alpha sub s and alpha life is possible in the unshaded area. If a grand unified theory is true, alpha must fall between the two vertical lines. If alpha sub s was slightly stronger, we run into the proton disaster, nuclei of two protons become stable and there would be no hydrogen. Moving to the right, repulsion between protons becomes too strong. As a result, carbon and all heavier elements become unstable. Moving below the horizontal line prevents deuterium from forming, which has a key role in stellar fusion stars like our Sun would not shine across the range of possibilities, our universe, it's squished between all these bounds, occupying a spot marked by the black square. Quote, if any one of the numbers were different, even to the tiniest degree, there would be no stars, no complex elements, no life, and, quote, Martin Reese precise initial conditions. A few cosmological parameters have no impact on biology or chemistry. We can therefore consider them independently tuned from other constants of nature like particle masses and force strengths. These independent cosmological parameters are the density of dark matter zita sub c, the homogeneity constant Q, and the cosmological constant lambda. These parameters drive the formation of galaxies, stars and planets. If spacial dimensionality were less than three things would be too simple. If more than three, there are no stable orbits, if Dark Matter density were 50% less, there would be no galaxies. If 20 times more, there would be no stars. If density fluctuations were less than 10 to the power of minus six, there would be no structures, if less than 10 to the power of minus four stars would be too close. If the cosmological constant were negative, the universe would have collapsed. If it were more than 10 to the power of minus 120, there would be no structures. In the graph depicting our island of habitability within the possibility space of two parameters queue and total matter densities eater life is possible in the unshaded region. If the density q was slightly greater galaxies would be too dense and dangerous to life bearing planets. If q or much less galaxies wouldn't be able to condense out of intergalactic gas. Moving to the right, if the dark matter density is too high, stars can't fragment out of the gas within galaxies. across the range of all possibilities, our universe sits comfortably between these two extremes occupying the spot marked by the star. Quote, it seems clear that there are relatively few ranges of values for the numbers that would allow for development of any form of intelligent life. And quote, Stephen Hawking between order and chaos of life, or more generally, complexity walks a narrow line between a suffocating simplicity and an untameable chaos. On the side of simplicity, we have universes without structure, a universe that's nothing but a diffuse gas devoid of galaxies, stars, and planets. There are universes lacking heavy elements, chemical bonding by atoms capable of linking into large and complex bio molecules. On the side of chaos, we have universes lacking stability. stars that live fast and die young galaxies swarmed by black holes and planets plagued by passing stars, asteroid bombardment, and nearby gamma ray bursts and supernovae. There are universes where chemical bonds form and break too easily, and where all sunlight is ionizing. Fortunately for us, ours is a universe that occupies a happy medium between simplicity and chaos. Here interesting things happen. But things are stable enough to reliably encode and copy information, a universal requirement for life or anything that reproduces of the doesn't also have knobs of particle physics and cosmology we've reviewed every one of them happens to be tuned to a position that makes life possible. Quote, to some of us, it looks like we have to live with the idea that the constants of Nature, the laws of nature, everything that we know about somehow was influenced by our own existence. And quote, Leonard Susskind in what we still don't know, are we real 2004 counting our luck. How lucky should we count ourselves are the odds of a life supporting universe modestly small, like one in 10 are incredibly small like one in 100,000,000,001 way to estimate this is to consider the possibility space for each of the fundamental constants of nature, and then look to see what fraction of that range is compatible with life. For life to be possible required not just one coincidence, but many of each of the constants had to fall in a life compatible range. had anyone been off, it would have sterilized the universe. If there are 12 fundamental constants important to life, then the fraction of life supporting universes having our laws of physics could be calculated as the volume of the 12 dimensional space compatible with life divided by the total 12 dimensional space of possible values. But 12 dimensional spaces are hard to imagine and even more difficult to depict on paper. Alternatively, we can depict this as six two dimensional areas and consider just two constants at a time. For example, we might take any two constants, the weak force versus the strong force, space, dimensions versus time dimensions, electron mass versus proton mass, and so on, and graph six areas. Each area forms a dartboard whose Bullseye is the life friendly range. If the constants of nature were chosen randomly, then getting a life friendly universe is equivalent to throwing a dart at a random spot at each of the six areas and having it hit the bull's eye all six times. If the average area of the bull's eyes is 10% of the total, then the odds of hitting it six times in a row for a random throws one in a million. If the area of the bullseye is 1% of the board, the odds fall to one in a trillion. For a typical dartboard, the area of the bullseye is just one 1296 of the board. The odds of hitting six Bull's eyes in six random throws are one in 4.7 million trillion so lowers to have never happened in the history of darts. But how big are the bull's eyes in the case of fundamental constants? How big are the boards, knowing both is necessary to compute the exact odds of a life friendly universe in dartboards of the fundamental constants of nature, the bullseye marks a life friendly range. In the graphs of life friendly regions, the life compatible areas represent a narrow fraction of the possibility space. This suggests that across the range of all possible values, combinations supporting life are few and far between. Quote, of course, there might be other forms of intelligent life not dreamed of even by writers of science fiction that did not require the light of a star like the Sun or the heavier chemical elements that are made in stars and are flung back into space when the stars explode. Nevertheless, it seems clear that there are relatively few ranges of values for the numbers that would allow the development of any form of intelligent life and quote, Stephen Hawking in a brief history of time 1988 but calculating the exact probability of life is complicated. In most cases, science lacks an understanding of the possible ranges different constants might take and how likely different values are. This makes quantifying the exact likelihood of life difficult, but there is one constant whose range and likelihood are both known. Further, it can be considered independently from the other constant. It plays no role in determining nuclear physics, chemistry or biology is the finest tuning in the dartboards of the fundamental constants. Some Bull's eyes are smaller than others, we might say these parameters are more finely tuned, greater precision was required to set those parameters. Among all the known fundamental constants, one of them is the most finely tuned of all, this finest tuning is lambda, and the cosmological constant lambda is understood to be the inherent energy of the vacuum. According to quantum field theory, the vacuum is a collection of overlapping particle fields with one field for each kind of particle Particles then can be understood as vibrations in their respective field. Each of the few dozen particle fields contribute some amount of energy, which can be positive or negative towards the energy of the vacuum. What's remarkable is that when all of these independent field energies are summed, they cancel out to 120 decimal places, the value of lambda zero, a decimal point, followed by 120 zeros. And then finally 2888. for there to be any structures, complexity, or life in this universe, it was necessary for lamda to be so small, but how likely was it to quote, their smallness with respect to the Planck scale is not understood and is considered as unnatural in relativistic quantum field theory, because it seems to require precise cancellations among much larger contributions. If these cancellations happen for no fundamental reason, they are unlikely in the sense that something random order one numbers gives 10 to the power of minus 120 with a probability of about 10 to the power of minus 120. End quote. authors of direct anthropic bound on the week scale from supernova explosions 2019. To get a feeling for how unlikely such an occurrence is, imagine we had an infinitely sided die. That is, rather than a standard six sided die, we had one with infinitely many sides a sphere. On this die, we can denote each of the infinite values existing between minus one and plus one, we might do this by having bakhtin of minus one white denote plus one, and every shade of gray between the marking the continuous range, and having the magnitude of the vacuum energy be less than 10 to the power of minus 120 is equivalent to rolling this spherical die a few dozen times. And after adding the numbers, finding the magnitude of the result is less than one in 10 to the power of 120. This is extraordinarily unlikely. To put it in context, consider that the odds of winning a National Lottery are about one in 100 million, or one in 10 to the power of eight, and one in 10 to the power of 120 represents the equivalent odds to winning a National Lottery 15 times in a row. We definitely are winners in a cosmic lottery. Could it all be a coincidence? At a certain point, luck becomes implausible as an explanation. If the same person won a National Lottery 15 times in a row, we would look to other answers besides me luck to explain it. Perhaps someone rigged the game. Or perhaps the person used their winnings to continue buying up all possible tickets. It is a mystery that demands an explanation of the extraordinary odds we overcame to win the right to exist seem to be telling us something important about existence and reality. But what why the universe is made for life. So Martin Reese is professor of cosmology and astrophysics at the University of Cambridge, Master of Trinity College, former president of the Royal Society and the current Astronomer Royal. Reese has spent much of his life on the question of why the universe is suited for life. He authored one of the first papers on the subject, wrote a book on it, and even hosted a television show exploring the topic. In his book, just six numbers, Reese describes three known answers to the question of why the universe is finely tuned for life. coincidence, we're just incredibly lucky, and there is no explanation or reason to Providence. Our universe was designed, chosen or created to allow life multiverse. There are many universes most are barren, but some permit life. Let's consider the implications for each of these answers. As a coincidence, however small it may be, there is a chance that there is a single universe neither designed nor one of many, which just happens to have physical laws and constants that are life permitting. Perhaps things are not so hopeless for life as we estimated. It might be that life finds a way in a large fraction of possible universes. If so, then we shouldn't be so surprised. But there are reasons to doubt this. Life requires a special environment. Life must be capable of maintaining, repairing, copying, and mutating its information. patterns of the environment must allow life to arise and self assemble and also self replicate. Across possible environments, few appear to support both needs. Most seem to miss the necessary balance between simplicity and chaos. If the environment is too simple, there's no hope of getting self arising self replicating forms. If the environment is too chaotic, there's no hope of preserving information across generations. JOHN von Neumann created the first self replicating machine. It was designed to operate within a cellular automaton, a specially crafted environment having its own set of rules, ie its own laws of physics. But in the set of possible cellular automata, only a small fraction has the right balance of complexity and stability to support self replication. Quote, it seems plausible that even in the space of cellular automata, the set of laws that permit the emergence and persistence of complexity is a very small subset of all possible laws. The point is that however many ways there are of being interesting, there are vastly many more ways of being trivially simple or utterly chaotic. And quote, Luke a bombs in the fine tuning of the universe for intelligent life 2011. as Richard Dawkins put it, however, many ways there may be of being alive, it is certain that there are vastly more ways of being dead. Even in a life friendly universe like ours, we find ourselves in a very special place. Most of the universe is intergalactic space, a cold, dark void, having just one hydrogen atom per cubic meter in our environment is some 10 to the power of 30 times denser than average. As Max Tegmark noted only a thousandth of a trillionth of a trillionth of a trillionth of our universe lies within a kilometre of a planetary surface. itself doubtful life could arise in the near vacuum of intergalactic space, nor is it likely to exist in the hot cause of planets or stars. Most of our universes in hospitable life can't always find a way that Earth is alone Eden, trillions of miles sit between her and the nearest plausibly hospitable locations. Kepler 22 B, which may have liquid water is 6000 trillion kilometers away. The rarity of life in the universe speaks to how uncommon life may be across the set of possible universes. Even where life is known to be possible, it appears to be exceedingly rare to see Are we alone. the sensitivity of life to the smallest changes in the fundamental constants further suggests it takes a rare mix of particles, forces and initial conditions working together to make a universe with life. Quote, it is logically possible that parameters determined uniquely by abstract theoretical principles just happen to exhibit all the apparent fine tunings required to produce by a lucky coincidence, a universe containing complex structures, but that I think, really strains credulity. And quote, Frank will check in physics today 2006. But if incredible luck is not the answer, then someone or something must have set things up just right, Providence. Divine Providence is another possible answer to the mystery. This is the belief that the universe was designed and created with intention, perhaps to be interesting to support the existence of intelligent life. Fred Hoyle, who had been a lifelong atheist, was led by his discovery of the carbon 12 excited state to believe in a super calculating intellect who must have designed the properties of the carbon atom. In this, he is not alone. Arno Penzias, who discovered the cosmic Hammer of the Big Bang said astronomy leads us to a unique event, a universe which was created out of nothing one with a very delicate balance needed to provide exactly the conditions required to permit life and one which has an underlying one might say supernatural plan. Quote, a life giving factor lies at the center of the whole machinery and design of the world. And quote, john Archibald Wheeler in foreword to the anthropic cosmological principle 1986. If there is one universe with one set of laws, divine providence is a natural conclusion. So many bullets were dodged in the many fine tuning meanings that it all being a coincidence doesn't hold water. While some physicists were open to this possibility, most were unsettled by it. Fine tunings suggest a fine tuner. But once a day it is invoked as part of an explanation. Further scientific progress holds, as any line of inquiry can be answered with it was God's plan. Quote, this is a dislike of mixing religion into physics. I think they were somewhat afraid that if it was admitted that the reason the world is the way it is, has to do with our own existence, that that could be hijacked by the creationists by the intelligent designers. And of course, what they would say is yes, we always told you so there is a benevolent somebody Way up high in the universe who created the universe exactly so that we could live. I think physicists shrank at the idea of getting involved in such things. And quote, Leonard Susskind in what we still don't know, are we real in 2004. About the claim that creation or a creator is unscientific is now in doubt. In today's scientists have already wet their toes in the area of creating universes, they do so in highly detailed computer simulations. simulation is indispensable to today's scientists. It enables them to create, experiment with and explore cosmic evolution. It allows us to see inside the cause of collapsing stars and understand the physics of alternate universes with different constants or initial conditions. The cosmologists Alan Guth, even thinks it is possible in principle to create and split off an entire new physical universe in the laboratory. Quote, the odd thing is that you might even be able to start a new universe using energy equivalent to just a few pounds of matter, provided you could find some way to compress it to a density of about 10 to the 75th power grams per cubic centimeter, and provided you could trigger the thing inflation would do the rest is such an achievement is obviously far beyond our technology, but some advanced civilization in the distant future might as well, you never know. For all we know, our own universe may have started in someone's basement. And quote, Alan Guth in physicist aims to create a universe literally 1987. If our universe is the result of such an experiment, or if it exists as a simulation performed by a higher being or species, then our universe is life friendly because of the providence of our Creator. The particular constants and laws would have been chosen with intention to see, are we living in a computer simulation? And is it possible to create new universes? But even if this is the case, the mystery still remains. How did the simulator or universe creator come to be? If the creator arose through natural processes, the universe hosting the creator would also have to have been finely tuned. It pushes the question back one step, but does not ultimately answer it. Though we cannot rule out Providence as an explanation. This solution raises as many questions as it answers. Scientists wanting to progress on the mystery of fine tuning Salta, naturalistic explanation of multiverse, if we are not exceedingly lucky, and if our universe was not designed, there is one alternative, many, perhaps even an infinite number of universes exist, there will be life in some and not in others. Quote, we imagined our universe to be unique, but it is one of an immense number, perhaps an infinite number of equally valid, equally independent, equally isolated universes. There will be life in some and not in others. In this view, the observable universe is just a newly formed backwater of a much vaster, infinitely old and wholly unobservable cosmos. If something like this is right, even our residual pride palette as it must be of living in the only universe is denied to us. And quote, Carl Sagan in pale blue dot 1994. Under the multiverse explanation, our universe is just one of a much larger set of other equally real universes, and each of these universes may be ruled by different physics, different forces, constants, particle types, dimensionality, and so on. Most universes won't have rules of the kinds necessary for Life, they will be empty, and no one will be there to appreciate the splendor how many other universes might there be? While we have no way to know the exact number of extent universes, it's possible to estimate the minimum. It is equivalent to asking how many lottery tickets are needed to have a good chance of winning the answer more than the inverse of the likelihood that a single ticket is a winner. So if the odds particular one in 100 million, you need around 100 million tickets for a high chance of winning. Next use this same logic to consider how many universes are needed to make up for the unlikelihood of lambda falling in a life friendly range whose improbability was on the order of one in 10 to the power of 120. Quote, Weinberg's approach for explaining the cosmological constant only works if we're part of a multiverse in which there are a huge number of different universes, their cosmological constants must fill out some 10 to the power of 124 distinct values. Only with that many different universes Is there a high likelihood that there's one with a cosmological constant that matches ours, and quote, Brian Greene in the hidden reality 2011 this number 10 to the power of 124 is far greater than the number of atoms in the observable universe estimated to be 10 to the power of 80. Where does all this stuff come from? Is the multiverse theory even scientific when we cannot observe or interact with these other universes? As Paul Davis said, invoking an infinity of unseen universes to explain the unusual features of the one we do see is just as ad hoc as invoking an unseen creator. But as Max Tegmark points out, the idea of parallel universes is not a theory, but a prediction made by several existing theories, which are themselves testable and falsifiable and thus, scientific. Examples include cosmic inflation, which suggests eternal inflation, a reality populated with an exponentially growing number of big bangs, with new universes perpetually created for all time in string theory, which suggests a string theory landscape having at least 10 to the power of 500 unique sets of physical laws with different particle types and fundamental constants in quantum mechanics, whose Schrodinger equation taken at face value implies unseen parallel worlds, a quantum multiverse with branches constantly diverging from our own to explore all possibilities, and see, does everything that can happen actually happen. independent of the search for answers to fine tuning, various fields of science are increasingly pointing in the direction of many universes, a multiverse in 1996, Tegmark went one step further. In his mathematical universe hypothesis, he put forward the idea that the equations of string theory may not be the only equations that can define universes. According to his radical idea, equations of string theory represent just one of an infinite number of self consistent physical equations, and all consistent sets of equations correspond to physically real universes. See how big is the universe? And why does anything exist? But how do parallel universes explain why this universe is made for life? The anthropic principle, the existence of other universes, by itself does not explain why the universe we are in is finely tuned to support life. To get there we need one extra ingredient the anthropic principle. This term was coined by Brandon Carter in his 1974 paper detailing the coincidences in cosmology, but the idea predates this quote, my Princeton colleague, Robert Deke expressed it this way, what good is a universe without somebody around to look at it? And quote, john Archibald Wheeler in from the Big Bang to the Big Crunch 2004 all the places where life is possible may be few and far between. But wherever life exists, it is only found in places where it is possible for life to exist. And this applies whether it is in a life possible universe on a hospitable planet, or by a pool of water in a vast desert. The anthropic principle is the self evident truth that life only finds itself in places compatible with its existence. And therefore, it's no surprise we find ourselves in a universe having a rare combination of life friendly laws, so long as the number of universes is large enough, quote, The analogy here is of a ready made clothes shop. If there is a large stock of clothing, you're not surprised to find a suit that fits. If there are many universes, each governed by a different set of numbers, there will be one where there is a particular set of numbers suitable to life. We are in that one, end quote. So Martin riesen, why is their life in 2000? solving the fine tuning mystery? we've considered three possible answers to the mystery of why the universe is made for life. Which one is right? How could we ever tell? Here we can apply a technique known as Bayesian inference? First, we divide the decision into three answers that are mutually exclusive. at most one is true and collectively exhaustive. At least one is true. coincidence, there is one universe not designed for life. Providence, there is one universe design for life. In the multiverse, there is not one universe. When framed in this way, there is zero uncertainty whether one of the answers is true. The only uncertainties which one is true. If we were to divide up our certainty as to which answer is correct, then if we are consistent, the sum of the certainty across the answers must add to 100%. And we all know this intuitively, when you hear there is a 30% chance of rain tomorrow, you can infer that there is a 70% chance that it will not rain tomorrow, raining and not raining are mutually exclusive as they can't both happen. raining and not raining are also collectively exhaustive, as at least one of those possibilities must occur. We can use this method to narrow down an answer. Is there one universe not designed for life? before considering any evidence, we might equally divide our level of certainty across the three possible answers. Coincidence 33.33%? Providence 33.33% multiverse 33.33% We could also group answers up any way we like, for instance, coincidence 33.33%, Providence or multiverse 66.67% or equivalently? coincidence. 33.33% is not coincidence. 66.67%. According to the rules of Bayesian inference, anytime new evidence is taken into consideration, we must update our certainty accordingly. Say you originally assumed even ants of rain, you would begin with 50% certainty it would rain and the 50% chance it would not rain. But upon learning new evidence, you revise your certainty. If you hear there's not a cloud in the sky, your certainty might shift from a 50% certainty of rain to a 5% certainty of rain and 95% certainty of no rain. Similarly, evidence of fine tuning acts like learning there's not a cloud in the sky. It forces us to revise downwards our initial certainty in the answer that there is one universe which is not designed for life. If fine tuning evidence causes us to revise our certainty in the coincidence answer from 33% to 1%. Then our confidence in not coincidence or equivalently Providence or multiverse rises to 99% of coincidence 1% of Providence or multiverse 99% of the lower the probability of coincidence, the more certain we are that Providence or multiverse is true, since all must add up to 100% of fine tuning evidence suggests that the odds of coincidence may be in the neighborhood of one in 10 to the power of 120 or less. This means we can with overwhelming certainty, rule out coincidence as the answer. This leaves two possibilities and we can conclude with overwhelming certainty that either Providence or multiverse is correct. And, quote most sets of values will give rise to universes that Although they might be very beautiful, would contain the one able to wonder if that beauty one can take this either as evidence of a divine purpose in creation and the choice of the laws of science or as support for the strong anthropic principle. And quote, Stephen Hawking in a brief history of time 1988 is there one universe design for life? If there is only one universe, and we rule out coincidence, that leaves one alternative Providence, the universe was made for life. Quote, anthropic fine tuning is too remarkable to be dismissed as just a happy accident. And quote, john polkinghorne in science and theology 1998. If it's not a coincidence that life is possible, then there had to have been a tuner be the simulator, universe creator, super calculating intellect, intelligent designer, or deity. Its purposes led it to choose from among the many possibilities, one set of physical laws where life is possible. But concluding Providence as an answer requires the assumption that there is only one universe, ruling out coincidence can bring us towards certainty in either Providence or multiverse. But it can't tell us which of these two remaining answers is right. Is there not one universe? Once coincidences ruled out as an answer, we can say? Either one, there is a designer or two, there is a multiverse. Could there really be more to reality than we can see? Are there other universes with different laws, constants, particles and properties? We cannot see everything that exists. Given the finite speed of light, we are not even in a position to see all of our universe. Though we are not in a position to survey all of reality, nature has provided us hints of cosmic inflation, string theory, and fine tuning all suggest our universe is part of a vast and variegated reality. Quote, the most important scientific revolutions all include, as their only common feature, the dethrone lint of human arrogance from one pedestal after another of previous convictions about our centrality in the cosmos, and quote, Stephen Jay Gould, but should have asked possibly infinite reality exist. This leads us back to the notion of a creator, an entity able to design and make universes. According to Martin Reese, our universe may be far from optimal in terms of its potential for complexity. If so, then there exists within the multiverse some universes having a greater capacity for complexity, computation and intelligence than our own. Quote, we can imagine universes that might be more propitious. These, of course would be potential realities far beyond the powers of our brains to conceive. But we can't assume in this grander Cosmos that there couldn't be other universes displaying more complexity than ours. We know that over a few decades, computers have evolved from being able to simulate only very simple patterns to being able to create virtual worlds as it were, with quite a lot of detail in them. And if that trend were to continue, then we can imagine computers which will be able to simulate worlds perhaps even as complicated as the one we think we're living in and quote, so Martin Reese, in what we still don't know, are we real? 2004 final thoughts? Was the universe made for life? This one question threads together humanity's desire to understand its origin and place in the cosmos, and to know whether we were created with intention and purpose or through blind luck and happenstance. reaching a point of progress on this question took the combination of some of the greatest scientific discoveries of the past century. But we cannot say with confidence that life of any kind is rare and precious. Life's Rarity speaks to the existence of something beyond what we can observe a reality that transcends this universe, a reality which is potentially infinite and contains all possibilities. If not coincidence, is the answer, Providence or multiverse? To our surprise, we find that regardless of which answer is right, both lead to the same place a belief in something greater than ourselves. If Providence is the answer, then we get a creator outright. If multiverse is the answer, then we get an A Infinite reality containing universe is greater than our own with beings greater than ourselves. Such beings would be in a position where they could create other universes, either directly or via computer simulation, thereby becoming the source of Divine Providence to those beings they create. The Infinite and comprehensive reality of the multiverse might even contain all things. The hypothetically omniscience mind of God likewise contains all things, or at least knowledge of all things. Is there a difference between the two? might they be the same thing? See, Does God Exist? As the philosopher JJC smart reminds us if we postulate God in addition to the created universe, we increase the complexity of our hypothesis. We have all the complexity of the universe itself. And we have In addition, the at least equal complexity of God. But smart tempered his statement, adding if the theist can show the atheist that postulating God actually reduces the complexity of one's total worldview, then the atheist should be a theist, so it may be with the belief in an infinite reality.

Amy:

This has been another episode presented by always asking.com where we ask the big questions. Thanks for listening