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  • Okay so this is a paper entitled

  • "A structure in the early universe at z~1.3 that exceeds the homogeneity scale of the R-W concordance cosmology"

  • I think that's quite a mouthful for a title

  • That is not a catchy title

  • It isn't really a catchy title, no

  • Um but, the physics and the astronomy behind it is rather interesting

  • Give me a better title

  • Um, "The discovery of an implausibly large structure in the universe"

  • Wow, that's better! You should have written the title.

  • There's some big structure out there, a long way away from Earth, and it's- they're saying it's the biggest structure that there is in the universe

  • So this is basically a collaboration which are looking at quasars in the universe, or these very bright active nuclei in galaxies

  • Not to study the quasars themselves, but because where there's a quasar there's a galaxy

  • So they're a good way of figuring out where galaxies are in the universe, where the galaxies themselves are too faint to see

  • And they're mapping out these quasars in three dimensions to figure out whether they're randomly spread in space

  • Or whether they're clustered together, and if they are clustered together how they're clustered together

  • Such a large structure is incompatible with a universe which is homogeneous on very large scales

  • Homogeneous means you're in no special place

  • That what we see around us is representative of everywhere else in the universe

  • And so, um, you don't expect, that the argument goes, I'm not so sure I buy it yet

  • You don't expect to see such a big structure in a universe that is meant to be, on average, homogeneous

  • So a quasar is a very, very bright nucleus of a galaxy

  • It's so bright it actually outshines the whole galaxy around it

  • The picture we have of these things is, we believe that pretty much every galaxy has one of these massive black holes in the middle

  • And probably what's happening where you see a quasar, it just means that that black hole is particularly active

  • Which means stuff is falling into it, which is making it light up

  • And so when these things were first discovered, they were called quasars

  • Because they were called "quasi-stellar objects"

  • Which means they look basically like stars because all you see is this bright nucleus of the galaxy

  • It's only when you look very carefully you see actually there's a whole galaxy around it

  • But they're very useful as sort of lighthouses

  • Because you can see a quasar at enormous distances all the way across the universe

  • Even if you couldn't see a normal galaxy

  • What is the scale above which you would say everything looks fairly uniform,

  • And below which you expect there to be structures?

  • As you said, you know, we are, you and I are quite different (laughs)

  • In many ways, and then you can just go up

  • Planets are different

  • Stars and then galaxies, they're different from one another

  • And you keep going to bigger and bigger scales, and you think, "Well, there's nothing homogeneous here"

  • "When I look around, things are looking quite different"

  • But the idea is that if you go on to large enough scales

  • And by "large enough," we're really talking on scales of more than 100 megaparsec

  • A parsec is about 3 lightyears, so we're talking about 300 million lightyears

  • You have to go before you begin to sort of suggest that above that scale things should start looking very similar

  • So what these people have found is that looking at the distribution of quasars in space

  • They're not randomly distributed. That's not news

  • But what they've actually found is that they form these incredibly large structures

  • When you start kind of mapping out the quasars, you find they form these enormous filaments

  • The latest thing that they've found, which this paper is all about

  • is a structure where the largest dimension of it is fairly elongated

  • and the longest dimension of this collection of quasars is about 4 billion lightyears long

  • And bearing in mind that the entire universe is only about 13 billion lightyears across

  • So this is almost a third the size of the universe, this structure

  • So it's a huge collection of these things

  • That sounds like the ultimate elephant in the room!

  • That sounds like it's the dominant beast of the universe.

  • And actually it causes a problem because the picture we have

  • is that when you go to large scales, the universe is supposed to be homogeneous

  • There's this thing called the Cosmological Principle, which says that

  • one bit of the universe is really very much like another bit of the universe

  • And of course if you've got a structure this big

  • it really means that one bit of the universe isn't really like another bit of the universe

  • because one bit's got this massive structure in it, and another bit hasn't got this massive structure in it

  • The big question is whether that is

  • A) Is it real? Is it a real feature? I can't really comment on that

  • I just find it mindblowing that the idea you can have 73 quasars linking across a distance of 4 billion lightyears

  • It just blows my mind

  • So how did they determine that they've got this structure? But let's assume it is, let's assume it's a real structure

  • The next question is: Is it compatible with an idea that the universe, on large scales, is homogeneous?

  • It could be that, we know there are fluctuations in a universe that's homogeneous

  • There has to be because without those fluctuations, we wouldn't form, you wouldn't form structures

  • So it could be that what we're seeing is just a rather extreme fluctuation, which is perfectly consistent

  • And in fact there is a slightly smaller structure that was observed a couple of years ago

  • called the Sloan Great Wall

  • This was also seen in the Sloan survey

  • This is a structure of 200-300 megaparsecs, so it's not quite as big as this one

  • And even then that was pushing the idea of homogeneity

  • So here's this structure that they've identified

  • Which, as I say, is about, as I say, from end to end here, is about 4 billion lightyears long

  • And so they've sort of played this game of join the dots

  • They've found where all the quasars are and found where all their nearest neighbors are

  • and used that to kind of span between them to say it looks like there's a structure here

  • You have to be very careful when you're playing this game because

  • If you just threw down a bunch of quasars at random, once in a while they'd start forming things that looked like structures

  • And so the exercise that you have to go through once you've found something that looks like a structure

  • is to say, "Is this consistent with just part of a random collection of things and I just happen to have seen them arranged in this way?"

  • And the statistics they've done in this paper show that what they've found

  • is very unlikely to be just a random distribution of things

  • It really looks like they've found a real structure in that sense

  • A collection of these quasars which have formed into this arrangement of quasars

  • which is not consistent with them just being randomly spattered around the place

  • The model that we're talking about, just to give this, trying to put some flesh to these bones

  • is the universe is very smooth on very large scales

  • so if I think of the matter distribution in the universe, if I think of it as a mill pond

  • And that matter distribution is perfectly flat, that mill pond is perfectly flat

  • that's your homogeneous bit

  • but on top of it there are these little ripples, right?

  • coming from fish, some of those are fish

  • And um, so these ripples are there, and those are the small fluctuations

  • So you've got the background, homogeneous. Everything's smooth.

  • And then you've got the small fluctuations,

  • And where you've got slight excess fluctuations, that means the gravitational pull

  • You've got slightly more matter, so from Newton's law

  • Where the force of attraction is proportional to the mass, you've got slightly more here, that will cause things to attract to it

  • And then it will leave regions where it's attracting matter from. They'll be devoid of matter.

  • They actually will create voids.

  • The force that we think shapes the large-scale structure of the universe is gravity

  • It forces things to collapse in certain dimensions

  • and actually you end up forming these sort of sheets of things and filaments and those kinds of things

  • which we've seen all the time when we look at galaxies in the nearby universe

  • We find that they're not randomly spread. There are some places where there are clusters of galaxies

  • Some places where there are none at all, some places where they form into these sort of sheet-like structures or filament-like structures

  • So presumably the physics is the same on these scales

  • When forming these very large structures, this gravity's forcing things to collapse in certain directions

  • The problem is that that's not what theory predicts, right?

  • The picture we have of the universe is that gravity shouldn't have formed structures on these kind of scales.

  • So that's why it's starting to kind of start to challenge our picture of cosmology

  • is that it seems to be there but we're struggling a bit to come up with an explanation as to how it might have formed

  • which of course, that's when science starts getting interesting

  • when you start finding things that you weren't expecting to find.

  • In that analogy you made with the fish or whatever it was making little ripples on our mill pond

  • What's the reality? In the real universe, what's causing these fluctuations that allow large structures to form?

  • Okay, so this is where it gets really fun

  • Now we're moving back to the very early universe

  • How early? About 10^-35 seconds into the universe

  • That's really...Point zero zero zero zero zero zero, 35, 34 zeroes and a one, okay? Seconds into the universe

  • And this is a period known as, where the universe expanded exponentially quickly

  • And so the space expanded exponentially rapidly

  • And in that universe was a thing called a scalar field, a bit like the Higgs field

  • permeating the whole of the universe, and it fluctuated because of quantum mechanics

  • just like the Higgs field fluctuates. (Randomly?) Randomly

  • And those fluctuations, the big difference that goes on here, is that those fluctuations don't just remain small

  • Because the universe is expanding so rapidly, they quickly get--they--get grabbed hold of

  • I'm getting too excited and I'm speaking too quick--slow down

  • They, they (Ed, I will never accuse you of speaking too quickly)

  • These fluctuations get grabbed hold of by the expansion of the universe, and stretched onto big, big scales

  • and those are the cosmological scales

  • and it's there that the initial seeds came from.

  • So what we're seeing when we look at the large-scale structures in the universe

  • When we look at the microwave background fluctuations in the W map

  • and see these hot and cold spots

  • What you're actually seeing is an imprint of those very early moments,

  • way before a microsecond, way before a nanosecond into the universe's history

  • when these fluctuations from the field emerged.

  • (A big, blown-up projection of just a funny little wobble in a field) Wow

Okay so this is a paper entitled

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