Monday, January 13, 2014

On inflation and the multiverse

[Note: in the following, and in the title, I have used the word multiverse a lot. When I do I am exclusively referring to this type of multiverse, which has, for example, been used to try to explain why the cosmological constant it so small. If you have any questions then please do ask them.]

About a week ago, Peter Coles, another cosmology blogger (who also happens to be my boss' boss' boss - or something), wrote a post expressing confusion about the association of inflation with the multiverse. His post was a reaction to a copy of a set of lectures posted on the arXiv by Alan Guth, one of the inventors of inflation (and discoverer of the name). Guth's lectures claimed, in title and abstract, that there is a very obvious link between inflation and a multiverse. Peter had some strong comments to make about this, including the assertion that at some points he's inclined to believe that any association between inflation and a multiverse is no different to a thought pattern of: quantum physics ---> woo ---> a multiverse!

I have some sympathy for Peter's frustration when people over-sell their articles/papers, and I would agree that inflation does not require a multiverse to exist, nor does inflation itself necessarily make a multiverse seem particularly likely/obvious. However, it is also true that, in a certain context, inflation and a multiverse are related. Put simply, through "eternal inflation", inflation provides a mechanism to create many Big Bangs. To get the sort of multiverse this post is about, these different Big Bangs need to have different laws of physics, which is not generic. However it can occur if the laws of physics depend on how inflation ends, in a way which I will describe below.

As with Peter though, I am unaware of any complete inflationary model that will generate a multiverse. We could both have a blindspot on this, but my understanding is that the situation is that people expect (or hope?) that complete models of inflation derived from string theory are likely to generate a multiverse for reasons that I will describe below.

Before that, you're probably wondering what this inflation thing is...

Inflation

The inflationary epoch is a (proposed - although the evidence for it is reasonably convincing) period in the past where the energy density of the universe was almost exactly constant and homogeneous (i.e. the same everywhere) and the expansion of the universe was accelerating. After this inflationary epoch ended, the expansion was decelerating (which isn't surprising given that gravity is normally attractive) and the universe gradually became less and less homogeneous, until it looked like it does today. We like inflation for all sorts of reasons, but for the purpose of this post, the preceding two sentences are all you need to know.

This is the "potential energy density" stored by a hypothetical inflationary field, \(\phi\). The x-axis is the value of \(\phi\). The y-axis is the energy density. The hatched region is where the conditions for "eternal inflation" would be satisfied.


This whole paradigm is depicted in the figure above, which is showing the potential energy density stored by the inflationary field, \(\phi\), as a function of its value. When the field, \( \phi \), has a value less than \( \phi_e \) (i.e. its value is on the left in the figure) inflation is occurring, when \(\phi>\phi_e\) inflation will end. This occurs because the potential function is flat enough that this potential energy dominates kinetic energy, and therefore it also dominates the gravitational effects in the universe. And, when a constant potential energy dominates in the universe, the expansion of the universe accelerates. Then, when the field has a value greater than \(\phi_e\) the expansion stops accelerating, starts decelerating, and the universe begins to do the stuff we know of as the Hot Big Bang. The reason inflation is interesting is that \(\phi\) inevitably has small, quantum, fluctuations in its value. Thus inflation ends at slightly different times in different parts of the universe, and, also thus, the Hot Big Bang starts at slightly different times in different parts of the universe. As a result, there are very small fluctuations in the density of the post-inflationary universe - and it is these small fluctuations that then grow to become temperature anisotropies, galaxies, solar systems and bloggers. We can predict the statistical properties of these density perturbations because we can predict the statistical properties of the fluctuations in \(\phi\).

This is all fine and good and this inflationary paradigm now has a lot of observational weight behind it. I won't go into any discussion about whether it actually is the way our universe got started or not, except to mention that it definitely seems possible and is the leading paradigm amongst cosmologists today, even if there hasn't yet been a way to know conclusively if it's right or not.

Eternal inflation

There is a curious feature that can arise in these models. As I explained above, in the inflating universe, \(\phi\) has different values at different points in the universe. Inflation will end where \(\phi > \phi_e \) and continue where \(\phi < \phi_e \). As time proceeds more and more of the universe leaves inflation and enters the Big Bang. Because the field is always rolling down that potential energy function, one would ordinarily expect that, after a sufficient length of time, the entire universe has stopped "inflating" and entered the Big Bang. However, if the rate at which \(\phi \) increases, and thus takes some volume of the universe out of inflation, is sufficiently slow, compared to the rate of accelerated expansion, it can actually occur that the total volume of the universe that is still inflating also continues to increase. If \(\phi \) can get close enough to the top of the hill in the above figure (i.e. enter the hashed region), then this is exactly what happens. When it does, although some of the universe undergoes a Big Bang, in other regions, inflation continues eternally.

In detail, for this to occur eternally, the initial distribution of \(\phi\) needs to be wide enough that there is always some small part of it that started arbitrarily close to the very top of that hill. In reality, because of those intrinsic quantum fluctuations, \(\phi\) cannot get arbitrarily close to the hilltop. The question then becomes whether or not the quantum fluctuations are large enough that they will ever dominate over the tendency for the field to roll down the potential. The quantum fluctuations in the field relate to the total energy density of the universe (the height of the curve in the figure above), and the evolution downward of the field depends on this and the slope of the potential energy function. For any model that looks like the figure above, this eternal inflation condition will be satisfied near the top of the hill, because there the slope tends to zero. For models that arise in regions that aren't hill tops, whether inflation continues eternally, will depend on the nature of the model. So, this eternal inflation scenario is actually quite generic for inflationary models, even if not all pervasive.

This is meant to show, in two dimensions, what is happening during eternal inflation. The red area is still "inflating". The yellow/white areas have entered Big Bangs. These Big Bangs will never collide, because the red, inflating region between them will push them apart.

But, what does this mean? It means that, although some region of the universe will escape this eternal inflation scenario and \(\phi\) will evolve downwards to a value where inflation ends and a Big Bang occurs, in most of the rest of the universe \(\phi\) has a value such that inflation continues. This Big Bang that occurs is then essentially an isolated bubble, surrounded by more inflation. Then, as time proceeds, some other region of the inflating universe will eventually roll to where \(\phi>\phi_e\) and another Big Bang will occur there, but, again, most of the rest of the universe will continue inflating. And so, as time goes on, you always have most of the universe inflating, with bubble Big Bangs coming off of it. This is meant to be depicted in the figure immediately above. The two white blobs would be bubble Big Bangs, and the rest of the red area is still inflating. Note that the size of each bubble Big Bang will grow with time (faster than light); however the bubbles will never meet, because the volume of the inflating red area is increasing even faster (thus the growing bubbles are pushed apart).

So what does this mean? Is it interesting? Well, in this scenario, not particularly. Every single one of these Big Bang bubbles will leave the eternally inflating patch in exactly the same way, which means that they all end up looking the same. It is true that the precise fluctuations in \(\phi\), from point-to-point, in each bubble universe, will be different, so the precise locations and history of the galaxies, solar systems and bloggers, in each bubble will be different, but the statistical properties of those fluctuations will be the same, and crucially, so will all the laws of physics.

Where does the multiverse come from?

I haven't yet shown you a multiverse (at least not of the kind that I promised at the beginning). I've shown you a way that inflation, reasonably generically, will create lots and lots of Big Bangs, each of which is separated from all the others. However a multiverse would want those different Big Bangs to have different physical laws as well.

The beginnings of a multiverse. Eternal inflation could happen in both "a" and "b", and the resulting Big Bangs can occur in either A or B, meaning that the Big Bangs would have different vacuum energies and potentially even different laws of physics


To see how a multiverse can come from this needs a slightly different function for the potential energy density. Consider the potential function shown above. Now there are two minima, A and B. If I chose an initial value for the field, entirely at random, it could "roll" to either minimum/vacuum. Now, remember all the lessons about inflation from the previous sections of this post. So long as both of the regions "a" and "b", support eternal inflation, this potential will generate bubble Big Bangs that are sometimes occurring in vacuum A and sometimes in vacuum B.

And here we have the beginnings of a multiverse. Firstly, the way I've drawn the potential you can see that the two minima have different potential energies. It is precisely this "vacuum" energy that would be responsible, today, for the effects labelled as "dark energy". Therefore, the bubble Big Bangs that end up in vacuum A would measure a different dark energy density to those that ended up in vacuum B. Moreover, suppose that some aspect of fundamental physics depends on the value of the field. Note that this is not particularly far-fetched at all. For example, the masses of many of the fundamental particles in the universe almost certainly depend on the value of the Higgs field. If some fundamental parameters did depend on the value of the inflationary field then the very nature of chemistry, atoms, biology, galaxies, bloggers, etc, in the bubbles that land in A would be completely different from those which land in B.

We're almost there, but this is still not quite the "multiverse" people are trying to motivate nowadays in fundamental physics. In that multiverse there are not just two types of bubbles, there are many. So how can that happen?

Now there are two field dimensions and eight potential vacuum energies/laws of physics. The hypothetical multiverse we're in would have many more field dimensions and many more potential vacua/minima. I would like to thank Stephen Wolfram for personally making this image for me after I entered the instructions at this http URL 

To see that, we need more than one inflationary field. Suppose that instead we were descended from a universe with just two field dimensions. In this universe, the potential energy function could look like the figure above, where \(x\) and \(y\) represent the values of the two inflationary fields. Now, you can see many different possible minima/vacua. So, lets follow the logic of the earlier sections of this post. If this potential energy function is flat enough near the centre to support eternal inflation, then there would be an infinite number of Big Bang's that would bubble off from the inflating patch. When these Big Bang's bubble off, they could roll to any one of the eight minima/vacua and thus the vacuum energy and physical laws could take up to eight different values and behaviours. This particular toy-toy-model has only eight vacua, but even in two dimensions, it is easy to imagine as many vacua as one wants, just by adding additional ripples in the potential.

And this, generalised to many more fields, is what people imagine when talking about the "inflationary multiverse". That is, an eternally inflating patch, with Big Bangs bubbling off from it, and descending into one of many different possible minima/vacua, each of which has a different vacuum energy and set of fundamental constants/laws.

[There is a very small part two here...]

Twitter: @just_shaun

12 comments:

  1. I don’t know if you still track these comments, but I had a quick question about terminology.

    It was my understanding that when people speak generically about an inflationary multiverse they are referring to generally Type I multiverses with identical vacuum states, or to the whole general category of inflationary multiverses independent of the question of various vacuum states.

    Usually when I read or hear someone speak of Type II multiverses they use phrases such as “anthropic landscape,” “string multiverse,” “anthropic multiverse,” etc.

    Am I wrong to use it in this more conservative capacity, and if so, what would be a more appropriate term for eternally inflating pocket universes which share a similar minimum vacuum state?

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    1. Unfortunately I don't think there is consistent usage of the word multiverse, or even the phrase "inflationary multiverse". Many times people would be talking about Type I, as you suggest, and many other times they'd be referring to Type II.

      This is perhaps quite a big problem, because many, if not "almost all" models of inflation do end up with a Type I multiverse. Therefore, in some sense, people are justified to say that inflation inevitably leads to a multiverse. However, I think most people in cosmology, when they hear the word multiverse think of that second kind, which isn't anywhere near as inevitable.

      Personally, I wouldn't have created this type I-IV distinction and was somewhat reluctant to use it. I'm not sure I even understand what a Type IV multiverse is, or at least how it is supposed to come about. And Type I isn't even really what I would call a multiverse, as it is indistinguishable from just an infinite universe. The interesting thing about a "multiverse" is precisely the anthropic possibilities of the Type II multiverse, so almost any time I mention multiverse (here or in the waking world) I'll be referring to Type II.

      I'm not sure what advice I would give regarding your last question. I would probably just use the word Universe and if the "many eternally inflating pocket universe" idea needed to be described, then the description you've written seems adequate.

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    2. Indeed. Tegmark's Level I is just the normal universe. (It doesn't have to be infinite. If it is larger than the observable universe, for Max it is a Level I multiverse.) I think he is the first to use the word multiverse for this.

      My guess is that this is something which people accept (i.e. there are real things which are not in our observable universe) so calling it a multiverse might make the other types more palatable.

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  2. I think inflation does need a multiverse to be able to explain the extreme uniformity. It doesn't come close on the original definition.

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    1. Hi Chris, thanks for the comment, but I'm not sure I understand it. How is an eternally inflating multiverse related to the uniformity of the big-bang bubbles that come out of it?

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  3. Hi this is Chris Mannering
    Yeah...it basically comes from Guth himself and someone on youtube video. I'll try to find and link for you, because I can't guarantee my own understanding.
    But the upshot is that if you look at the uniformity as we now know it, with galactic correlates, Quasars, and so on, it's just vastly more so than anyone thought in 1980 when Inflation came out.
    I'll try to locate...it'll take several days

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  4. Hi Chris Mannering here...I haven't been able to substantiate the claim I made. Guth doesn't respond, I can't remember anything to lead me back to the video, because my brain associates the scene in which the facilitator mentions the inflation theory as it originally was, cannot even by making it longer running, explain the uniformity. Galaxies correlate, AGN point the same way. Redshift goes up and down in multiples of 72 km/s. The truth is, if we'd known all of that in 1980, inflation wouldn't have been a viable idea, because it has no components that can approach these more problematic components of uniformity. In the other direction, we don't actually get uniformity even at the largest scale. It isn't uniform on that scale. It's density filaments, in parallel, galaxies all aligned with the filament and to eachother.
    Then in between voids. The uniformity is more striking than ever, but it is completely different....it has shifted onto different turf, and the turf it was on, it isn't on very much any more.
    The cosmos is immensely uniform viewed from Earth, but we know from other observations and analysis, that actually it isn't, it's clusters, voids, etc.
    So for those reasons I'm sticking with my assertion. But I couldn't substantiate it, and got mocked not a little also. So I guess I'll withdraw it.
    If someone understands the way I'm wrong about uniformity I'd like to know if possible. I obviously understand I'm rolling instances and varieties of uniformity, that wasn't or isn't regarded as components of uniformity in context of inflation. But this isn't one of those things that convention and precedence should decide. Uniformity is anything I can see looking in one direction with my telescope, that going around to the other side of the planet and looking the opposite way, I see going on there as well, is inflation-turf?

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    1. Hmm, well, I still don't see where the problem is. Using inflation (or a specific inflationary model) I can come up with a prediction for the statistical properties of the early universe.

      I can use this prediction and evolve it through the radiation dominated era of the universe to make a prediction for what the CMB looks like. There are inflationary models that fit the CMB very well.

      I can then use the state of the universe when the CMB formed to set the initial conditions for an N-body simulation of the structures of the universe. I can evolve these initial conditions forward using General Relativity and make predictions for how much or little clustering should be visible today. Again, I get results that are statistically close to what we do see.

      I do need to add dark matter and a cosmological constant to get such matching results, but I can describe the combination of these two effects with just one new number, so it is still a highly predictive model.

      Without you giving specific examples of measurements made I can't know what is/isn't too uniform for you. In 2015 inflation is still taken very seriously by the vast majority of practising cosmologists. Many of us would say it is far from proven to be definitely correct, but we do now know everything from 2015 and it is still a viable idea.

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    2. Guth might have been referring to "old" inflation vs "new" inflation. But this is terminology that dates back to the 1980s. When people say inflation in 2015 they're *always* referring to what in the 1980s was called new inflation.

      Old inflation was quickly realised, in the 1980s, not to work and was promptly replaced by new (slow-roll) inflation.

      Wikipedia has a write up of this in the history part of the inflation article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflation_(cosmology)#History

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  5. Hi Shaun, Chris Mannering here, I think you made a good showing there, for inflationary theory. I'm thinking I might be wrong, or too negative. A no-brainer for everyone else, tentative me.
    May I question some elements of what you say?

    "Using inflation (or a specific inflationary model) I can come up with a prediction for the statistical properties of the early universe. "

    Is it a prediction or an explanation? An explanation is when a theory is constructed with a specific problem/s in mind, which it predicts once constructed. There are variants of that, as there are of prediction. But a scientific prediction of the high order, is when a theory tells us something new and unexpected about the world, and where we can go see for ourselves. That's a prediction. Something unexpected, somewhere no ever thought to look before. Does inflation have something like that?

    It is impressive if you can take inflation and derive core attributes of the early universe. But that's really only in the situation you can only but derive inflation in the one singular way, and cannot but get the early universe attributes precisely as you get them, with no possibility of variants. THAT is astonishingly world changingly impressive. There are close variants of that, not really all that impressive at all. Is that how it is when you derive that stuff from inflation? I'm not saying it isn't...I think I don't know. Or do you not share the criteria itself, as a view?

    "I can use this prediction and evolve it through the radiation dominated era of the universe to make a prediction for what the CMB looks like. There are inflationary models that fit the CMB very well."

    So many empirical discoveries have occurred over the same period since inception of inflationary theory. Many with direct relevance to the structure of the CMB. Which components, say, of the large scale structure did inflationary theory anticipate before it was observed or suspected?
    I see a large number of opportunities to have done this, and another with each next revelation. But they seem all to have come as a total shock. If inflationary theory has noted exceptions to that rule, I will seriously consider throwing my prejudice out the window and starting again.

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  6. contd....
    "I can then use the state of the universe when the CMB formed to set the initial conditions for an N-body simulation of the structures of the universe. I can evolve these initial conditions forward using General Relativity and make predictions for how much or little clustering should be visible today. Again, I get results that are statistically close to what we do see"

    An N-body simulation is not a solution to the N-body problem. It's a super-computer run-through that rediscovers variants on the most typical solutions according to user defined criteria (like characteristics of large scale structure). All or most configuration inputted will have a corresponding variant of the most typical solutions.

    The N-body problem has been solving for the same set of most typical solutions throughout a period that has seen the universe go through radical change.

    "I can then use the state of the universe when the CMB formed to set the initial conditions for an N-body simulation of the structures of the universe. I can evolve these initial conditions forward using General Relativity and make predictions for how much or little clustering should be visible today. Again, I get results that are statistically close to what we do see."

    All or most of the clustering came as total shocks...or is that wrong? What aspect was anticipated before becoming an issue due to better telescopes and computer revolution?

    "I do need to add dark matter and a cosmological constant to get such matching results, but I can describe the combination of these two effects with just one new number, so it is still a highly predictive model."

    Dark matter and energy and the other things can be added, as you say they have to be; or they can be predicted. But not both. A single parameter to capture it all, is impressive, but how much so is decided in the details.

    "Without you giving specific examples of measurements made I can't know what is/isn't too uniform for you. In 2015 inflation is still taken very seriously by the vast majority of practising cosmologists. Many of us would say it is far from proven to be definitely correct, but we do now know everything from 2015 and it is still a viable idea"

    It's about what inflation can't do, but what it can. A radical plethora of boltons have bulked and reshaped the standard model over the last 30 years. Inflation didn't anticipate very much of that. But it was flexible enough to accommodate. Some feel that is a prediction. I wish I felt something the same. Maybe I could lose the nick name people have for me "laughing boy"


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    1. Hi Chris,

      Thanks for the honest effort to change your mind on this and the thoughtful responses. I won't have time to reply to this for a little while, and might even reply with a top level post, but I will reply eventually.

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