For all the visualizations, artist's renderings and animations of the birth of our universe, it is still exceedingly hard to imagine the Big Bang: from nothing emerges everything.
But what if you could create a big bang on a lab bench -- make a model of the universe's emergence. University of Maryland engineering professor Igor Smolyaninov has proposed just that, describing the opportunity to create a "toy big bang" using precisely designed metamaterials that are mathematically analogous to certain conditions of the real-world big bang.
Metamaterials are artificially engineered structures made to embody properties not always possible in nature. Specifically, some metamaterials can reproduce the behavior of light in a variety of spacetimes unlike the dimensions we perceive in the world (with two dimensions of space and two of time, for example). Because light moves in a metamaterial the same way it would move in a certain spacetime, we can see a representation of what might happen in such a spacetime by dealing with the metamaterial instead.
Smolyaninov gives a mathematical demonstration that one metamaterial -- representing two space dimensions and two time dimensions -- could undergo a phase transition leading to the equivalent of a sudden reduction to only one time dimension and the creation of lots of particles. In effect, it would be like a model Big Bang -- the creation of a new 2,1 spacetime and a bunch of matter.
[via The Physics arXiv Blog]
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Ummm - last time I checked there were 3 dimensions of space - not 2! And it is very likely those 3 dimensions are contained in much higher dimensional space, somewhere around 10 or 11 dimensions.
I am working on something of a "tabletop" project myself. It is my hope to produce a working model revealing something akin to a Cyclic-Standard Model (call it what you will).
Here are a couple of helpful images:
img6.imageshack.us/img6/8906/exodus3.jpg
img183.imageshack.us/img183/518/exodus.jpg
Regards,
Clint Adkisson
Wylie, TX
goingtothestars@gmail.com
(972) 914-8088
A 'toy' Big Bang?
What could possibly go wrong with that?