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  • What is the true nature of the universe?

  • To answer this question,

  • humans come up with stories to describe the world.

  • We test our stories and learn what to keep and what to throw away.

  • But the more we learn,

  • the more complicated and weird our stories become.

  • Some of them so much so,

  • that it's really hard to know what they're actually about.

  • Like string theory.

  • A famous, controversial and often misunderstood story,

  • about the nature of everything.

  • Why did we come up with it and is it correct?

  • Or just an idea we should chuck out?

  • To understand the true nature of reality,

  • we looked at things up close and were amazed.

  • Wonderous landscapes in the dust,

  • zoos of bizarre creatures,

  • complex protein robots.

  • All of them made from structures of molecules

  • made up of countless even smaller things:

  • Atoms.

  • We thought they were the final layer of reality,

  • until we smashed them together really hard

  • and discovered things that can't be divided anymore:

  • Elementary particles.

  • But now, we had a problem:

  • They are so small that we could no longer look at them.

  • Think about it: what is seeing?

  • To see something, we need light, an electromagnetic wave.

  • This wave hits the surface of the thing

  • and gets reflected back from it into your eye.

  • The wave carries information from the object

  • that your brain uses to create an image.

  • So you can't see something without somehow interacting with it.

  • Seeing is touching, an active process, not a passive one.

  • This is not a problem with most things.

  • But particles are

  • But particles are very,

  • But particles are very, very,

  • But particles are very, very, very small.

  • So small that the electromagnetic waves we used to see

  • are too big to touch them.

  • Visible light just passes over them.

  • We can try to solve this by creating electromagnetic waves

  • with more and much smaller wavelengths.

  • But more wavelengths, means more energy.

  • So, when we touch a particle with a wave that has a lot of energy

  • it alters it.

  • By looking at a particle, we change it.

  • So, we can't measure elementary particles precisely.

  • This fact is so important that it has a name:

  • The Heisenberg uncertainty principle.

  • The basis of all quantum physics.

  • So, what does a particle look like then?

  • What is its nature?

  • We don't know.

  • If we look really hard,

  • we can see a blurry sphere of influence,

  • but not the particles themselves.

  • We just know they exist.

  • But if that's the case,

  • how can we do any science with them?

  • We did what humans do and invented a new story:

  • A mathematical fiction.

  • The story of the point particle.

  • We decided that we would pretend that a particle is a point in space.

  • Any electron is a point with a certain electric charge and a certain mass.

  • All indistinguishable from each other.

  • This way physicists could define them

  • and calculate all of their interactions.

  • This is called Quantum Field Theory, and solved a lot of problems.

  • All of the standard model of particle physics is built on it

  • and it predicts lots of things very well.

  • Some quantum properties of the electron for example

  • have been tested and are accurate up to

  • 0,

  • 0,00

  • 0,0000

  • 0,000000

  • 0,00000000

  • 0,0000000000

  • 0,000000000000

  • 0,0000000000002 %.

  • So, while particles are not really points,

  • by treating them as if they were,

  • we get a pretty good picture of the universe.

  • Not only did this idea advance science,

  • it also led to a lot of real-world technology we use everyday.

  • But there's a huge problem:

  • Gravity.

  • In quantum mechanics, all physical forces are carried by certain particles.

  • But according to Einstein's general relativity,

  • gravity is not a force like the others in the universe.

  • If the universe is a play,

  • particles are the actors,

  • but gravity is the stage.

  • To put it simply, gravity is a theory of geometry.

  • The geometry of space-time itself.

  • Of distances, which we need to describe with absolute precision.

  • But since there is no way to precisely measure things in the quantum world,

  • our story of gravity doesn't work with our story of quantum physics.

  • When physicists tried to add gravity to the story by inventing a new particle,

  • their mathematics broke down

  • and this is a big problem.

  • If we could marry gravity to quantum physics and the standard model,

  • we would have the theory of everything.

  • So, very smart people came up with a new story.

  • They asked: What is more complex than a point?

  • A line-

  • A line or a string.

  • String theory was born.

  • What makes string theory so elegant,

  • is that it describes many different elementary particles

  • as different modes of vibration of the string.

  • Just like a violin string vibrating differently can give you a lot of different notes,

  • a string can give you different particles

  • Most importantly, this includes gravity.

  • String theory promised to unify all fundamental forces of the universe.

  • This caused enormous excitement and hype.

  • String theory quickly graduated to a possible theory of everything

  • Unfortunately, string theory comes

  • with a lot of strings attached.

  • Much of the maths involving a consistent string theory

  • does not work in our universe with its three spatial and one temporal dimensions.

  • String theory requires ten dimensions to work out.

  • So, string theorists did calculations in model universes.

  • And then try to get rid of the six additional dimensions and describe our own universe

  • But so far, nobody has succeeded

  • and no prediction of string theory has been proven in an experiment

  • So, string theory did not reveal the nature of our universe.

  • One could argue that in this case

  • string theory really isn't useful at all.

  • Science is all about experiments and predictions.

  • If we can't do those,

  • why should we bother with strings?

  • It really is all about how we use it.

  • Physics is based on maths.

  • Two plus two makes four.

  • This is true no matter how you feel about it.

  • And the maths in string theory does work out.

  • That's why string theory is still useful.

  • Imagine that you want to build a cruise ship,

  • but you only have blueprints for a small rowing boat.

  • There are plenty of differences:

  • the engine,

  • the engine, the materials,

  • the engine, the materials, the scale.

  • But both things are fundamentally the same:

  • Things that float.

  • So, by studying the rowing boat blueprints,

  • you might still learn something about how to build a cruise ship eventually.

  • With string theory,

  • we can try to answer some questions about quantum gravity

  • that have been puzzling physicists for decades.

  • Such as how black holes work

  • or the information paradox.

  • String theory may point us in the right direction.

  • When used in this spirit,

  • string theory becomes a precious tool for theoretical physicists

  • and help them discover new aspects of the quantum world

  • and some beautiful mathematics.

  • So, maybe the story of string theory

  • is not the theory of everything.

  • But just like the story of the point particle,

  • it may be an extremely useful story.

  • We don't yet know what the true nature of reality is

  • but we'll keep coming up with stories to try and find out.

  • Until one day,

  • Until one day, hopefully

  • Until one day, hopefully, we do know.

  • This video was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation

  • and realized with the scientific advice of Alessandro Sfondrini.

What is the true nature of the universe?

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