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Space Science

Can String Theory Accommodate Inflation? 243

David Shiga writes "String theory is the leading contender for a "theory of everything" that could unite all the forces of physics. But a recent study suggests that it may be more difficult than scientists had hoped to square string theory with inflation — the widely accepted notion that the early universe had a period of especially rapid expansion. Some say this could even lead to the abandonment of either string theory or inflation, though no one is ruling out a possible resolution yet."
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Can String Theory Accommodate Inflation?

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  • Ahem: (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @06:03PM (#20579921)
    It is said that papers in string theory are published at a rate greater than the speed of light. This, however, is not problematic since no information is being transmitted.
    • Well, yeah. If you need to lose string theory or lose inflation... it isn't much of a choice.

      Which do you want to lose postmodernism or trashing romance novels. Well, the romance novels are at least information...
      • If you need to lose string theory or lose inflation... it isn't much of a choice.

        Yeah, we need to lose string theory.

        I propose tube theory... it works for the internet.

        In the early universe, the contents of tubes moves faster than the tubes themselves.
        Unfortunately, new particles called P2Ps are slowing down the tubes.
    • Re:Ahem: (Score:5, Funny)

      by mikael ( 484 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @08:55PM (#20581713)
      Remember the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy...

      As Disaster Area's earnings require hypermathematics, their chief research accountant was named Professor of Neomathematics at the University of Maximegalon and in his Special Theories of Tax Returns he proves that space-time is "not merely curved, it is, in fact, totally bent."
  • Lately (Score:2, Insightful)

    by kwabbles ( 259554 )
    I don't think ANYTHING can accomodate inflation.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @06:05PM (#20579951)
    Does string theory incorporate the inflation of meatballs and saucy noodles (i.e. strings) due to FSM?
    • by Chris Burke ( 6130 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @06:10PM (#20580017) Homepage
      saucy noodles (i.e. strings)

      Whoa, whoa there. Noodles aren't "i.e." strings. Noodles are weak, wimpy string posers unable to carry any significant vibrations which given strings their energetic properties. At least according to string theory. Also, according to string theory pirates cannot exist. So you see string theory is the enemy of the FSM.
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        Inflation is proof that there is a creative Flying Spaghetti Monster out there somewhere. It is NOT, however, proof that such a force is intelligent or anything we'd think of as a being.
      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        Whoa, whoa there. Noodles aren't "i.e." strings. Noodles are weak, wimpy string posers unable to carry any significant vibrations which given strings their energetic properties. At least according to string theory. Also, according to string theory pirates cannot exist. So you see string theory is the enemy of the FSM.

        Strings are the anti-noodle. As we can not see the true face of the the Spaghetti Monster, being that we are corporeal and not created in His image, so are noodles only a worldly approximation
        • One time I ate so much spaghetti that I sneezed and spaghetti flew out of my nose!

          The universe, like the human body is 99.9999% snot!
  • by riscfuture ( 997873 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @06:07PM (#20579973) Homepage
    "String theory is the leading contender for a 'theory of everything' that could unite all the forces of physics. [citation needed]"
  • ObXKCD (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Eponymous Bastard ( 1143615 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @06:07PM (#20579975)
    Yet another post validating this argument [xkcd.com]

    (yeah, yeah, it's old. So sue me)
  • String theory's inability to accommodate inflation has been driving me nuts ever since we converted everything to type string. What a mistake that was. String theory needs some more time in the oven before it's going to be universally acceptable.
    • String theory's inability to accommodate inflation has been driving me nuts ever since we converted everything to type string.

      That's what StringBuffers (StringBuilders for all you .NET guys) are for.
      • That's what StringBuffers (StringBuilders for all you .NET guys) are for.

        Java has a StringBuilder too now. It's a non-threadsafe StringBuffer that avoids synchronization overhead during the initial phase of the universe's expansion. If you're inflating only one universe you can do it more efficiently.
    • by QRDeNameland ( 873957 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @06:44PM (#20580421)
      This is a vindication of us old school proponents of char* theory.
  • by feepness ( 543479 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @06:12PM (#20580027)
    If the Fed cuts interest rates next week.
  • Brazil needs to know... and they will be in a conundrum!

    Strings or inflation???

    What a choice!
  • Ok so the Universe came into being with rapid inflation, during the first 0.001 seconds or whatever it was. Then things settled down to all this matter getting itself organised into hydrogen clouds, which formed starts, some of which were super massive and only existed for 100 million years, before blowing themselves to bits, thus creating second generation stars (like Sol) and the stuff of heavier and various other elements (which makes up most of the planets and debris whizzing around Sol), but many star

  • by M-theory. My understanding is that there are 5 different versions of 10-dimensional string theory that can be generalized to 11-dimensional M-brane theory. Not sure about the inflation thing though, I just wanted to throw in the fact that you are talking about an old theory.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Guppy06 ( 410832 )
      Why do I have the sudden vision of zombies shuffling around in lab coats crying out for "branes?"
  • Well Duh (Score:3, Funny)

    by DanielMarkham ( 765899 ) * on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @06:43PM (#20580407) Homepage
    If all the little strings are broken, it's no wonder the universe is flying apart!
  • by binarybum ( 468664 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @06:45PM (#20580439) Homepage
    no one is ruling out a possible resolution yet.

      Ah-hem, I am. Please let the record reflect that I was the first to do so.

    done. wake me up when there are more scientific milestones up for grabs.
  • Admittedly, there is an active and very loud group which has been theorizing that string theory will - at some point in the future - provide a grand unified theory of physics that is testable.

    But there is a large and growing group of Ph.D.s who disagree, and believe that string theory is an evolutionary dead end in theoretical physics.

    It is remarkable that now they're trying to push their theories into other spheres, when their core concepts are, as yet, unproven.

    [caveat - I know this is controversial, in t
    • What? What other spheres? In order to be a grand unified theory, it must account for inflation, or either: String Theory is wrong or There is no inflation.

      Your 'large and growing group of Ph.D.s' aside, it has the best promise of being a method to quantize gravity. There are other methods that should be researched as well, loop quantum gravity springs to mind.

    • Admittedly, there is an active and very loud group which has been theorizing that string theory will - at some point in the future - provide a grand unified theory of physics that is testable.

      If there is indeed a "theory of everything," it may be so far outside the range of our current intellect that the complete development of the theory could take centuries. If we are willing to throw away anything just because it hasn't made a new prediction within 30 years, we might be dooming ourselves to NEVER fig

  • No it's not (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Secret Rabbit ( 914973 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @06:55PM (#20580567) Journal

    String theory is the leading contender for a "theory of everything"

    Actually, not it's not. For this to be the case, it would have to predict something that is experimentally verifiable. Which has yet to be the case. All it is now is some really messy math. And even that's giving it something b/c most of it is the typical hand-wavy (read: non-rigorous) "math".

    Quite frankly, the only good thing that I see here is that there might be an end to String Theory a.k.a. the "theory" that sucks up most of the money for research even though more than 3 DECADES have gone by without /one/ bloody experimentally verifiable prediction. Perhaps after this is all said and done with, we can spend some money on some actually *promising* areas of research.

  • If it can't be tested, it's not science...it's pseudoscience.

    String theory is the sort of intellectual game normally played by religions. There's always a part which can never be tested or disproved and that's where you'll end up if you start a "debate". An impasse is the best you can ever achieve if you try.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by pclminion ( 145572 )

      If it can't be tested, it's not science...it's pseudoscience.

      String theory makes tons of predictions, all of which align perfectly well with reality. So in that sense, it is testable. However, is does not (yet) predict anything that HASN'T ALREADY BEEN EXPLAINED by other theories. It meshes PERFECTLY with our observations. But nobody has yet used it to predict something that has never been observed before.

      Calling string theory "untestable" is ignorant. It makes extremely concrete predictions which are

      • "But nobody has yet used it to predict something that has never been observed before."

        And that's the problem!

        "Calling string theory "untestable" is ignorant. It makes extremely concrete predictions which are borne out in reality."

        A certain proverb about carts and horses comes to mind...

        • And that's the problem!

          Just because it hasn't happened yet doesn't mean it can't. I'm not exactly holding my breath for it, but string theory hardly falls into the category of "crackpot science." It receives government funding for jab's sake.

    • Not being falsifiable is a strong indicator, but that doesn't mean it is incorrect, or pseudo science. Scientific method is being used. It correlates with what we see, just like the theory of gravity in it's infancy. I use that example, not to compare it to gravity, only to explain there is often a period of time before an observation is put to a falsifiable test.

      I am always glad to see people looking our for pseudoscience, but it does need to be tempered with thought.

  • Sure it can (Score:5, Funny)

    by RelliK ( 4466 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @07:08PM (#20580701)
    They'll just add 5 more dimensions.
  • Inflation was introduced because the presumptive model of the Big Bang says that the universe sprang from an infinitesimally small point. At some time later, the expansion rate of the universe is thought to have changed. This change in expansion rate (inflation) was required by the assumption about the point-source of the Big Bang, working backwards from what we see around us today.

    But what if the Big Bang was not a point source?

    If the universe (the one that we see and experience in our daily lives, anyway)
    • Dude, the very mention of a brane can get you a perma-ban from /.

      The very fact that you're disputing an obvious kludge like inflation can be hazardous to your health.

      But I agree with you, (although I'm far from a physicist) inflation has always seemed like "WTF happened here? Well, it's this crazy thing you see, and we'll select some data to go with it. Heck, we'll even throw some dark matter in there too."
      People should remember that there was a time, not so long ago, when everyone knew that heavens revolve
  • by IntelliTubbie ( 29947 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @07:23PM (#20580865)
    One of the sharpest critiques of string theory is that it isn't really one theory -- it's many, many theories (something like 10^500), depending on how the hidden dimensions are wrapped up. It looks like this study showed that a certain flavor of string theory (IIA) might not be able to accommodate inflation -- but not to worry, the string theorists say, there are plenty of other flavors of string theory that might indeed allow inflation after all! But therein lies the problem: no matter how an experiment turns out, one can cook up a version of string theory that agrees with it! What we really need is a meta-theory (M-theory?) that tells us *which* string theory to use, but so far it doesn't exist. This is why some critics call string theory a "theory of anything."

    Cheers,
    IT
  • Some say this could even lead to the abandonment of either string theory or inflation

    So if the facts don't match the theory, just abandon the facts. Sounds like a neat idea. It should at least make it *much* easier to come up with a "theory of everything".
  • ...let it be string theory that gets booted. The only scientific research into string theory that should be ongoing is that which seeks to determine whether or not string theory is even falsifiable. If it is not, you may as well call it a religion or shuffle it over to the philosophy department. I'm not so thirsty for a quantum theory of gravity that I'll buy into this voodoo.

    Some say this could even lead to the abandonment of either string theory or inflation, though no one is ruling out a possible reso

  • On the contrary, (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Verte ( 1053342 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @07:46PM (#20581103)
    String theory is probably the only theory that really supports inflation. If the net energy in the universe is constant, then the net curvature must be constant, therefore it could only appear smaller if curvature were balanced between other dimensions.
  • by sdedeo ( 683762 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @07:53PM (#20581149) Homepage Journal
    I'm not a string theorist, but I am a cosmologist. Here are some thoughts:

    Inflation has not been "confirmed" in away way. It's the best explanation for a very very limited number of datapoints we have on the "early" Universe. Very smart people (e.g., Sean Carroll, now at CalTech) have made convincing cases that inflation is actually incoherent in important ways. I have spent quite a bit of time trying to come up with alternatives to inflation, and it's damn hard -- it "works" very well, in the sense that it solves a bunch of problems all at once that are hard to solve individually. But it does invoke plenty of nonstandard physics we've never seen in the Universe, let alone the lab.

    Inflation and dark energy are deeply connected. They both require something called "negative pressure". Negative pressure is bizarre, and actually is from a Newtonian perspective a violation of the conservation of energy (in General Relativity, energy is not conserved -- rather a complicated combination of numbers some of which refer to what we'd measure as energy is conserved.) Negative pressure means that if you take a box of the stuff, and let it expand, at the end of the day there's actually more stuff in there than you started with.

    String theory should better be known as "a collection of approaches." It does not have the coherence of, say General Relativity, which is a mathematically closed system. Talking about "giving up string theory" is kind of dumb -- essentially what you are saying is "do not try to do the following large class of calculation." There are definitely competitors to string theory, but none have captured the attention of a highly fractious community the way string theory has.

    Not sure if anyone's still reading this thread, but I'm happy to talk more about it. Reply with questions if you like!
    • Not sure if anyone's still reading this thread, but I'm happy to talk more about it. Reply with questions if you like!

      Then, let me take you up on that offer!

      I don't know half the physics I'd like to know, but I have at least been reading some popular science books about string theory, and in my understanding, even M-theory suffers from the fact that you can choose an almost arbitrary geometry of the new dimensions (from a certain class of geometries) and receive a theory about a certain universe; the hop

    • by rjh ( 40933 )
      Some questions for a practicing cosmologist, then--please don't think that I'm looking for concrete and solid answers (except where such things unambiguously exist); I'm interested in opinion as much as fact, provided the two are carefully distinguished from each other. :)

      So:
      1. What do you think of Lee Smolin's The Trouble With Physics? Are his criticisms of string theory on target? What about how string theory has changed the culture of cosmology?
      2. My understanding of science is that theories must explain o
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by sdedeo ( 683762 )
        three questions to answer! I will go in order.

        1. I have many many positive things to say about Lee. He is a terrific guy, and one thing he deserves special praise for is that he loves talking to, and taking seriously, younger researchers like me. I buttonholed him on his last vist and we talked for a while about my inflation alternative and he was critical but also encouraging -- a hard note to strike.

        Lee is also a great "cherrypicker", he finds neat things in different parts of physics and brings the
  • Smolin, Wolfram and others consider evolving graph-theoretic networks as a more likely base model for a theory of everything.

    My first, and to-date only, experiment with a simplest-of-class evolving graph very soon produced a good analogy of inflation.

    (Before I figured out what was going on, this 'inflation' had the side effect of making my puter seem to 'go away' even when I capped the clock at ten ticks ... an interesting experience which helped inspire my OSDC 2004 'Design on the Fly' paper [osdc.com.au] (PDF) and slid [meme.com.au]
  • The article seems to be sorely lacking in details, and when it finally does mention the specific models, it seems that they only actually tried to get inflation out of toroidally compactified Type IIa String Theory, claiming that this was generic. If anything, this is the opposite of a generic situation. Toroidal compactifications preserve far too much supersymmetry to be generic, and as the article mentions, there are other reasons to expect that inflation won't be visible in the IIa theory. Additionally,
  • by FridayBob ( 619244 ) on Wednesday September 12, 2007 @08:52PM (#20581679)
    Cosmologists are finding that it is impossible to square string theory with Einstein's theory of General Relativity after all. Some say this could even lead to the abandonment General Relativity...


    ... if only to ensure that string theorists
    around the world do not lose their jobs.
  • And just get rid of both string theory AND inflation.
  • Inflation is only a tentative theory, that has no evidence in favour of it. People only believe it because it is supposedly a 'simple' explanation of some things that we can observe today (e.g. uniformity of the microwave background). However it is not so simple; e.g. there is no firm theory of what caused inflation to start in the first place.

    It gets talked up a lot more than it is actually worth.

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