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Sunday, March 12, 2006
Reading List: The Cosmic Landscape
- Susskind, Leonard. The Cosmic Landscape. New York: Little, Brown, 2006. ISBN 0-316-15579-9.
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Leonard Susskind (and, independently, Yoichiro Nambu) co-discovered
the original hadronic string theory in 1969. He has been a prominent
contributor to a wide variety of topics in theoretical physics over
his long career, and is a talented explainer of abstract theoretical
concepts to the general reader. This book communicates both the
physics and cosmology of the “string landscape” (a term he
coined in 2003) revolution which has swiftly become the consensus
among string theorists, as well as the intellectual excitement of
those exploring this new frontier.
The book is subtitled “String Theory and the Illusion of
Intelligent Design” which may be better
marketing copy—controversy sells—than descriptive of the
contents. There is very little explicit discussion of intelligent
design in the book at all except in the first and last
pages, and what is meant by “intelligent design”
is not what the reader might expect: design arguments in the
origin and evolution of life, but rather the apparent
fine-tuning of the physical constants of our universe, the
cosmological constant in particular, without which life as
we know it (and, in many cases, not just life but even atoms,
stars, and galaxies) could not exist. Susskind is eloquent in
describing why the discovery that the cosmological
constant, which virtually every theoretical physicist would
have bet had to be precisely zero, is (apparently) a small
tiny positive number, seemingly fine tuned to one hundred
and twenty decimal places “hit us like the proverbial ton
of bricks” (p. 185)—here was a number which, not only
did theory suggest should be 120 orders of magnitude greater, but
which, had it been slightly larger than its minuscule value,
would have precluded structure formation (and hence life) in
the universe. One can imagine some as-yet-undiscovered
mathematical explanation why a value is precisely zero
(and, indeed, physicists did: it's called supersymmetry,
and searching for evidence of it is one of the reasons they're
spending billions of taxpayer funds to build the
Large Hadron
Collider), but when you come across a dial set with the
almost ridiculous precision of 120 decimal places and it's
a requirement for our own existence, thoughts of a benevolent
Creator tend to creep into the mind of even the most
doctrinaire scientific secularist. This is how the appearance of
“intelligent design” (as the author defines it)
threatens to get into the act, and the book is an
exposition of the argument string theorists and cosmologists
have developed to contend that such apparent design is entirely an illusion.
The very title of the book, then invites us to contrast two
theories of the origin of the universe: “intelligent
design” and the “string landscape”. So,
let's accept that challenge and plunge right in, shall we?
First of all, permit me to observe that despite frequent claims
to the contrary, including some in this book, intelligent
design need not presuppose a supernatural being operating
outside the laws of science and/or inaccessible to discovery
through scientific investigation. The origin of life on
Earth due to deliberate seeding
with engineered organisms by intelligent extraterrestrials
is a theory of intelligent design which has no supernatural
component, evidence of which may be discovered by science
in the future, and which is sufficiently plausible to have
persuaded Francis Crick, co-discoverer of the structure
of DNA, was the most likely explanation.
If you observe a watch, you're entitled to infer the existence
of a watchmaker, but there's no reason to believe he's a
magician, just a craftsman.
If we're to compare these theories, let us begin by stating them
both succinctly:
Theory 1: Intelligent Design. An intelligent being created the universe and chose the initial conditions and physical laws so as to permit the existence of beings like ourselves.
Theory 2: String Landscape. The laws of physics and initial conditions of the universe are chosen at random from among 10500 possibilities, only a vanishingly small fraction of which (probably no more than one in 10120) can support life. The universe we observe, which is infinite in extent and may contain regions where the laws of physics differ, is one of an infinite number of causally disconnected “pocket universes“ which spontaneously form from quantum fluctuations in the vacuum of parent universes, a process which has been occurring for an infinite time in the past and will continue in the future, time without end. Each of these pocket universes which, together, make up the “megaverse”, has its own randomly selected laws of physics, and hence the overwhelming majority are sterile. We find ourselves in one of the tiny fraction of hospitable universes because if we weren't in such an exceptionally rare universe, we wouldn't exist to make the observation. Since there are an infinite number of universes, however, every possibility not only occurs, but occurs an infinite number of times, so not only are there an infinite number of inhabited universes, there are an infinite number identical to ours, including an infinity of identical copies of yourself wondering if this paragraph will ever end. Not only does the megaverse spawn an infinity of universes, each universe itself splits into two copies every time a quantum measurement occurs. Our own universe will eventually spawn a bubble which will destroy all life within it, probably not for a long, long time, but you never know. Evidence for all of the other universes is hidden behind a cosmic horizon and may remain forever inaccessible to observation.
Might we expect surprises as we subject our simulated universe to ever more precise scrutiny, perhaps even astonishing the being which programmed it with our cunning and deviousness (as the author of any software package has experienced at the hands of real-world users)? Who knows, we might run into round-off errors which “hit us like a ton of bricks”! Suppose there were some quantity, say, that was supposed to be exactly zero but, if you went and actually measured the geometry way out there near the edge and crunched the numbers, you found out it differed from zero in the 120th decimal place. Why, you might be as shocked as the naïve Perl programmer who ran the program “printf("%.18f", 0.2)” and was aghast when it printed “0.200000000000000011” until somebody explained that with about 56 bits of mantissa in IEEE double precision floating point, you only get about 17 decimal digits (log10 256) of precision. So, what does a round-off in the 120th digit imply? Not Theory 2, with its infinite number of infinitely reproducing infinite universes, but simply that our Theory 1 intelligent designer used 400 bit numbers (log2 10120) in the simulation and didn't count on our noticing—remember you heard it here first, and if pointing this out causes the simulation to be turned off, sorry about that, folks! Surprises from future experiments which would be suggestive (though not probative) that we're in a simulated universe would include failure to find any experimental signature of quantum gravity (general relativity could be classical in the simulation, since potential conflicts with quantum mechanics would be hidden behind event horizons in the present-day universe, and extrapolating backward to the big bang would be meaningless if the simulation were started at a later stage, say at the time of big bang nucleosynthesis), and discovery of limits on the ability to superpose wave functions for quantum computation which could result from limited precision in the simulation as opposed to the continuous complex values assumed by quantum mechanics. An interesting theoretical program would be to investigate feasible experiments which, by magnifying physical effects similar to proposed searches for quantum gravity signals, would detect round-off errors of magnitude comparable to the cosmological constant.
But seriously, this is an excellent book and anybody who's interested in the strange direction in which the string theorists are veering these days ought to read it; it's well-written, authoritative, reasonably fair to opposing viewpoints (although I'm surprised the author didn't address the background spacetime criticism of string theory raised so eloquently by Lee Smolin), and provides a roadmap of how string theory may develop in the coming years. The only nagging question you're left with after finishing the book is whether after thirty years of theorising which comes to the conclusion that everything is predicted and nothing can be observed, it's about science any more. Update: Text highlighted in red added, discussing future experimental signatures which might suggest our universe is a simulation. (2006-03-12 13:07 UTC) Update: What if there is no top-level universe? (2006-03-15 19:35 UTC)