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  • What's at the edge of the universe

  • and what happens if we try to get there?

  • You might be thinking, wait, how is there

  • an edge to the universe if it's infinite?

  • This gets talked about a lot.

  • And people usually say one of the following.

  • The universe defines all of space and time that exists.

  • So that's one definition of universe.

  • But is it even part of our universe if we can never

  • interact with it?

  • And what if our universe is very, very different

  • beyond the edge?

  • The universe is infinite because general relativity tells us

  • that the universe is demonstrably flat

  • and therefore the galaxies go on forever.

  • But how flat?

  • Are you sure you measured the universe's curvature

  • with infinite precision?

  • And my favorite, we can never know and never test it.

  • So it's not even a scientific question.

  • Oh, yeah.

  • I'll science any [BLEEP] question I please.

  • This is "SpaceTime."

  • OK.

  • Sorry.

  • Before we get carried away, let's talk about the edge

  • or edges of the universe and what

  • it might take to get there.

  • In a previous episode, we talked about the size of what we

  • call the observable universe.

  • We even gave you a number, 93 billion light years

  • in diameter, 46 billion in radius.

  • Go ahead and watch it again.

  • It'll be useful.

  • While you're at it, we're also going

  • to be talking about the CMB.

  • So it wouldn't kill you to watch that episode also.

  • OK.

  • Let's start with that 46 billion light year number.

  • We defined that as the current radius of the known universe.

  • It's the distance to that blob of the CMB, the most

  • distant thing we can see in that direction.

  • Now, it's not 46 billion light years to that actual blob.

  • It is currently 46 billion light years to whatever galaxy

  • or galaxy clusters that blob evolved into,

  • racing away from us with the expanding universe, as it did.

  • We call this the particle horizon of the universe.

  • It's the current instantaneous distance

  • to the most distant part of the universe that could possibly

  • have a causal connection to us.

  • Anything inside the particle horizon

  • is referred to as the known universe.

  • Now when I say the "current instantaneous distance,"

  • I mean it's the distance that you

  • would have to travel only if the universe froze in its expansion

  • and you were traveling through static space.

  • In cosmology, this sort of instantaneous distance

  • is basically what we call the proper distance between two

  • points.

  • But nothing actually ever travels the proper distance.

  • That's not how spacetime works.

  • The shortest path in spacetime is

  • defined by the geodesic, the path

  • of light between two points.

  • Even light takes time to make any journey.

  • So we have to factor in the time interval, especially when space

  • is changing.

  • To travel to the particle horizon,

  • we need to move through expanding space.

  • And the closer we get to our destination,

  • the more space will have expanded over the remaining

  • distance.

  • How far would you have to travel?

  • Bad news, you'd have to travel infinitely far,

  • even if you were in a spaceship that could

  • travel at the speed of light.

  • Just as black holes have event horizons, so too do universes.

  • The event horizon of a black hole is that point beyond which

  • we can never receive information because light from that point

  • is redshifted into oblivion.

  • It's a boundary to the observable universe.

  • There's a region of this universe from which we can

  • never receive any new signal.

  • That is, any signal that's emitted today.

  • This is because the distance that signal

  • has to travel to get to us will be expanding faster

  • than the speed of light before the signal reaches us.

  • The same thing applies to our light speed spaceship.

  • We can ever get to anything beyond the cosmic event horizon

  • because that space will be moving away from us faster

  • than light before we reach it.

  • Now, here's where it gets weird.

  • The event horizon of the universe

  • is actually closer to us than the particle horizon.

  • Given our best measurements of cosmological parameters,

  • we think that the cosmic event horizon is around 16

  • billion light years away.

  • This means that there are galaxies

  • that we can see now that we could never reach or even

  • communicate with.

  • We're sort of seeing ghost images

  • from outside the part of the universe

  • that we could ever interact with.

  • As our universe expands, more and more of it

  • will cross the event horizon and eventually almost

  • all of that will be lost to it forever.

  • Kind of sad, really.

  • And, of course, all bets are off if we can

  • break the cosmic speed limit.

  • So let's do just that.

  • There's no doubt that Einstein was

  • right in setting that limit for objects moving through space.

  • But two regions of space can have

  • superluminal relative speeds.

  • That's actually the motivation behind the warp drive, which

  • we might get to in a later episode

  • if you're up for the challenge.

  • But for now, let's just assume we have a nice Alcubierre-class

  • warp-ship and we burn the mass energy of entire stars

  • to chase the particle horizon.

  • What do we find?

  • Almost certainly, just more universe.

  • Bummer.

  • Remember, the particle horizon is just

  • defined by the limit of our current view.

  • Move to my left, and my observable universe

  • moves with me.

  • Wait a minute, and my particle horizon expands.

  • Travel to the particle horizon instantaneously and you'll

  • see the Milky Way as a cute baby CMB blob on your new particle

  • horizon.

  • And presumably, a pretty similar distribution of galaxies

  • and clusters all around you.

  • But what if we keep going?

  • What's far beyond that edge?

  • Well, that all depends on the geometry of the universe.

  • On the largest scales, the geometry of spacetime

  • is very flat.

  • It's lumpy on small scales due to stars and galaxies,

  • but smooth on large, sort of like ripples on the ocean.

  • Measurements of the distribution of galaxies and the CMB

  • confirm this flatness with very high, but not infinite,

  • precision.

  • If spacetime really is perfectly flat, then,

  • with the most simplistic application

  • of Einstein's equations, we get that the universe is infinite.

  • Now, people claim this a lot.

  • So if it's true, what happens if you cross the particle horizon?

  • The universe just goes on, and on, and on, and on, and on,

  • and on, and on, and on, and on, and on.

  • And infinity is its own amazing beast.

  • And there are many types of infinity,

  • including some that involve infinitely repeating versions

  • of this bit of the universe.

  • But is our universe really perfectly flat?

  • Think about it this way.

  • The surface of the Earth looks pretty flat to us

  • because we really can't see the curvature locally.

  • But get some perspective by taking

  • a ride on the International Space Station

  • and it's clearly curved.

  • What if the curvature of the universe

  • is so small that we're just not seeing far enough

  • or measuring precisely enough to detect it?

  • It's very possible that the universe has curvature just

  • inside the uncertainty range of the best measurements to date.

  • If that curvature is positive, then it

  • may be that the universe is really

  • the surface of a hypersphere, the 3D surface of a 4D sphere.

  • In that case, our warp-ship would eventually

  • travel all the way around this curved hypersphere

  • and get back to where it started.

  • OK, so how far would it have to travel?

  • Based on a recent estimate of the minimum radius

  • of the curvature of the universe,

  • you'd need to travel an absolute minimum

  • of 18 times the distance to the particle horizon

  • to get back to where you started, assuming expansion

  • froze for the whole journey.

  • We also have to keep in mind that these geometries assume

  • that we can just extrapolate Einstein's equations

  • in the most simplistic way.

  • In addition, although general relativity is pretty cool,

  • it's not a theory of everything.

  • Non-crazy ideas for the origin of cosmic inflation

  • suggest that our universe may just be a slowly expanding

  • bubble in an exponentially infinitely-inflating

  • multiverse.

  • Now, bubble universes may be finite in size regardless

  • of internal geometry.

  • And so they may have a true edge.

  • But what's on the other side?

  • Are the laws of physics, or even the number of dimensions, the

  • same?

  • Tell us what you think in the comments.

  • We'll cross that edge into the multiverse in another episode

  • of "SpaceTime."

  • Squishina and others ask whether it's contradictory or circular

  • to use Einstein's theory of general relativity

  • to prove itself?

  • Well, the only way to test a theory is to use it.

  • However, you're right in thinking that just one

  • prediction is not enough.

  • A model has to make multiple independent and accurate

  • predictions to be accepted as a theory.

  • And there are few theories with as

  • many independent and accurate predictions

  • as general relativity.

  • For example, the predictions GR makes for planetary orbits

  • can give us a mass for the Sun.

  • And that mass predicts the deflection angle

  • for light passing the Sun perfectly,

  • that is its gravitational lensing effect.

  • The same with galaxy clusters.

  • The galaxy orbits give us a mass for the dark matter

  • in the clusters and the lensing gives us a mass consistent

  • with this.

  • Shadowmax889 asks why stars and planets

  • aren't filled with dark matter?

  • Now, this is a great point.

  • Dark matter is cold and clumpy, which

  • means it can bunch together to form galaxies.

  • But it doesn't interact with itself

  • in any other way besides gravitationally.

  • This means there's a limit to its clumpiness.

  • To collapse completely into a star-sized object,

  • it would have to lose a lot more energy.

  • This is really hard unless you can

  • interact electromagnetically.

  • By comparison, the cold hydrogen gas that fills our galaxy

  • clumps together in giant clouds.

  • But then these clouds radiate light in different ways,

  • allowing the gas to cool even more and collapse into stars.

  • Dark matter doesn't do that.

  • So it stays sort of puffed up.

  • MrLewooz asks if we can please stop throwing monkeys

  • into black holes?

  • Don't worry.

  • No monkeys were harmed in the making of "SpaceTime"

  • and any events that can be consistently assigned

  • to our clocks at PBS.

  • Izvarzone informs us that upon winning a Nobel

  • Prize for discovering dark matter particles,

  • he or she would spend all of the prize money on Phoenix cases.

  • And, yeah, I guess that's cool.

  • But I only play 1.6.

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[MUSIC PLAYING]

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