THE MULTIVERSE MAKES SENSE
Have you ever asked yourself if the multiverse
could even makes sense. The physicist Brian Cox gives us the answer:
“The presenter and physicist Brian Cox says he supports the idea that
many universes can exist at the same time.
The idea may sound
far-fetched but the "many worlds" concept is the subject of serious
debate among physicists. It is a particular interpretation of quantum mechanics
- which describes the often counter-intuitive behaviour of energy and matter at
small scales.
Prof Cox made the
comments during an interview with Radio 4's The Life Scientific programme. In a famous thought
experiment devised by the Austrian physicist Erwin Schrodinger, a cat sealed
inside a box can be both alive and dead at the same time. Or any combination of
different probabilities of being both dead and alive. This is at odds with most
common perceptions of the way the world is. And Schrodinger's experiment was
designed to illustrate the problems presented by one version of quantum
mechanics known as the Copenhagen interpretation. This proposes that when we
observe a system, we force it to make a choice. So, for example, when you open
the box with Schrodinger's cat inside, it emerges dead or alive, not both.
But Prof Cox says the
many worlds idea offers a sensible alternative. "That there's an infinite
number of universes sounds more complicated than there being one," Prof
Cox told the programme. "But actually, it's a simpler version of quantum
mechanics. It's quantum mechanics without wave function collapse... the idea
that by observing something you force a system to make a choice."
Accepting the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics means also having
to accept that things can exist in several states a the same time.
But this leads to a
another question: Why do we perceive only one world, not many? A single digital
photograph can be made from many different images superimposed on one another.
Perhaps the single reality that we perceive is also multi-layered. The laws of
quantum mechanics describe what happens inside the nucleus of every atom, right
down at the level of elementary particles such as quarks, neutrinos, gluons,
muons. The weird and wonderful world of quantum mechanics reveals that nature
is at heart probabilistic. Nothing can be predicted with any certainty.
"Everybody agrees about
that" says Prof Cox. But where physicists don't agree is about how these
facts should be interpreted. For decades, the Copenhagen interpretation of
quantum mechanics, which allows for only one universe, dominated particle
physics. But Brian Cox supports the many worlds interpretation and, he
believes, more and more physicists are now subscribing to this view.”
(BBC News, 2014)
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