Friday, October 26, 2012

Totally cosmic

  • There are more stars in the visible universe than all the are grains of sand on all the beaches on Earth.
  • The number of synapses in a single human cerebral cortex, about 125 trillion, is the amount of stars that would fill 1,500 Milky Way-type galaxies.
-- Amazing facts to blow your mind

Monday, October 08, 2012

Plato's universe

 John Wheeler said that the "basis of all mathematics is 0 = 0". All mathematical structures can be derived from something called "the empty set", the set that contains no elements. Say this set corresponds to zero; you can then define the number 1 as the set that contains only the empty set, 2 as the set containing the sets corresponding to 0 and 1, and so on. Keep nesting the nothingness like invisible Russian dolls and eventually all of mathematics appears...

...Reality may come down to mathematics, but mathematics comes down to nothing at all.
That may be the ultimate clue to existence - after all, a universe made of nothing doesn't require an explanation. Indeed, mathematical structures don't seem to require a physical origin at all. "A dodecahedron was never created," says Max Tegmark.

"To be created, something first has to not exist in space or time and then exist." A dodecahedron doesn't exist in space or time at all, he says - it exists independently of them. "Space and time themselves are contained within larger mathematical structures," he adds. These structures just exist; they can't be created or destroyed.

That raises a big question: why is the universe only made of some of the available mathematics? "There's a lot of math out there,"  says Brian Greene. "Today only a tiny sliver of it has a realisation in the physical world...

..."I believe that physical existence and mathematical existence are the same, so any structure that exists mathematically is also real," says Tegmark.

So what about the mathematics our universe doesn't use? "Other mathematical structures correspond to other universes," Tegmark says. He calls this the "level 4 multiverse", and it is far stranger than the multiverses that cosmologists often discuss. Their common-or-garden multiverses are governed by the same basic mathematical rules as our universe, but Tegmark's level 4 multiverse operates with completely different mathematics.
-- from Reality: Is Everything Made of Numbers? by Amanda Gefter