How many universes are there Chris Anderson

(Music)

Sometimes when I’m on a long plane flight,

I gaze out at all those mountains and deserts

and try to get my head around how vast our Earth is.

And then I remember that there’s an object we see every day

that would literally fit one million Earths inside it.

The sun seems impossibly big,

but in the great scheme of things, it’s a pinprick,

one of about 400 billion stars in the Milky Way galaxy,

which you can see on a clear night

as a pale, white mist
stretched across the sky.

And it gets worse.

There are maybe 100 billion galaxies detectable by our telescopes,

so if each star was the size of a single grain of sand,

just the Milky Way has enough stars to fill

a 30 foot by 30 foot stretch of beach three feet deep with sand.

And the entire Earth doesn’t have enough beaches

to represent the stars in the overall universe.

Such a beach would continue for literally hundreds of millions of miles.

Holy Stephen Hawking, that is a lot of stars.

But he and other physicists now believe in

a reality that is unimaginably bigger still.

I mean, first of all, the 100 billion galaxies within range of our telescopes

are probably a minuscule fraction of the total.

Space itself is expanding

at an accelerating pace. The vast majority of the galaxies

are separating from us so fast

that light from them may never reach us.

Still, our physical reality here on Earth

is intimately connected to those distant, invisible galaxies.

We can think of them as part of our universe.

They make up a single, giant edifice,

obeying the same physical laws and all made from the same types of atoms, electrons,

protons, quarks, neutrinos that make up you and me.

However, recent theories in physics,

including one called string theory,

are now telling us there could be countless other universes,

built on different types of particles,

with different properties, obeying different laws.

Most of these universes could never support life,

and might flash in and out of existence in a nanosecond,

but nonetheless, combined

they make up a vast multiverse of possible universes.

in up to 11 dimensions, featuring wonders beyond our wildest imagination.

And the leading version of string theory

predicts a multiverse made of up to 10 to the 500 universes.

That’s a one followed by 500 zeroes,

a number so vast that if every atom in our observable universe

had its own universe

and all of the atoms in all of those universes

each had their own universe,

and you repeated that for two more cycles,

you’d still be at a tiny fraction of the total –

namely, one trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillionth.

But even that number is minuscule compared to

another number: infinity.

Some physicists think the space-time continuum

is literally infinite, and that it contains an infinite number

of so-called pocket universes with varying properties.

How’s your brain doing?

But quantum theory adds a whole new wrinkle.

I mean, the theory’s been proven true beyond all doubt,

but interpreting it is baffling.

And some physicists think you can only un-baffle it

if you imagine that huge numbers of parallel universes

are being spawned every moment,

and many of these universes would actually be very like the world we’re in,

would include multiple copies of you.

In one such universe, you’d graduate with honors and marry the person of your dreams.

In another, not so much.

There are still some scientists who would say, hogwash.

The only meaningful answer to the question of how many universes there are is one,

only one universe.

And a few philosophers and mystics

might argue that even our own universe is an illusion.

So, as you can see,

right now there is no agreement on this question,

not even close.

All we know is, the answer is somewhere between zero and infinity.

Well, I guess we know one other thing:

This is a pretty cool time to be studying physics.

We just might be undergoing

the biggest paradigm shift in knowledge that humanity has ever seen.

(音乐)

有时当我在长途飞行时,

我凝视着那些山脉和沙漠

,试图让我的头脑了解我们的地球有多大。

然后我记得有一个我们每天看到的物体

实际上可以容纳一百万个地球。

太阳看起来大得不可思议,

但在伟大的计划中,它是一个针孔,

是银河系中大约 4000 亿颗恒星中的一颗,

在晴朗的夜晚,你可以看到它就

像一团苍白的白雾
在天空中延伸。

而且情况会变得更糟。

我们的望远镜可能可以探测到 1000 亿个星系,

因此,如果每颗恒星只有一粒沙子那么大

,那么银河系中的恒星就足够

用沙子填满 30 英尺乘 30 英尺宽的沙滩。

而且整个地球没有足够的海滩

来代表整个宇宙中的星星。

这样的海滩将持续数亿英里。

圣斯蒂芬霍金,那是很多明星。

但他和其他物理学家现在

相信一个更加难以想象的现实。

我的意思是,首先,我们望远镜范围内的 1000 亿个星系

可能只是总数的一小部分。

空间本身

正在加速扩张。 绝大多数星系

与我们分离的速度如此之快

,以至于来自它们的光可能永远无法到达我们。

尽管如此,我们在地球上的物理现实

与那些遥远的、看不见的星系密切相关。

我们可以将它们视为我们宇宙的一部分。

它们组成了一座单一的巨型大厦,

遵循相同的物理定律,并且全部由构成你我的相同类型的原子、电子、

质子、夸克、中微子构成。

然而,最近的物理学理论,

包括一种称为弦理论的理论,

现在告诉我们可能存在无数其他宇宙,它们

建立在不同类型的粒子上,

具有不同的性质,遵循不同的定律。

这些宇宙中的大多数永远无法支持生命,

并且可能在一纳秒内闪现或消失,

但尽管如此,

它们结合起来构成了一个巨大的可能宇宙的多元宇宙。

多达 11 个维度,呈现超乎我们想象的奇观。

弦理论的领先版本

预测了一个由多达 10 到 500 个宇宙组成的多元宇宙。

那是一个后跟 500 个零

的数字,这个数字如此之大,以至于如果我们可观测宇宙中的每个原子

都有自己的宇宙,

并且所有这些宇宙中的所有原子

都有自己的宇宙,

然后你再重复两个周期,

你 ' 仍然只是总数的一小部分——

即 1 万亿 万亿 万亿 万亿 万亿 万亿 万亿 万亿 万亿 万亿分之一 。

但即使是这个数字与另一个数字相比也是微不足道的

:无穷大。

一些物理学家认为时空连续

体实际上是无限的,并且它包含无限数量

的具有不同属性的所谓口袋宇宙。

你的大脑怎么样了?

但是量子理论增加了一个全新的皱纹。

我的意思是,这个理论毫无疑问地被证明是正确的,

但解释它是令人费解的。

一些物理学家认为,如果你想象每时每刻都在

产生大量的平行宇宙

并且其中许多平行宇宙实际上与我们所处的世界非常相似

,包括你的多个副本,你就可以解开它的困惑。

在这样一个宇宙中,你会以优异的成绩毕业并嫁给你梦寐以求的人。

在另一个,不是那么多。

仍然有一些科学家会说,废话。

对于有多少个宇宙这个问题,唯一有意义的答案是一个,

只有一个宇宙。

一些哲学家和神秘主义者

可能会争辩说,即使是我们自己的宇宙也是一种幻觉。

所以,正如你所看到的

,目前在这个问题上没有达成一致,甚至没有达成一致

我们所知道的是,答案介于零和无穷大之间。

好吧,我想我们知道另一件事:

现在是学习物理的好时机。

我们可能正在经历

人类所见过的最大的知识范式转变。