View Full Version here: : Evidence? Physics laws vary throughout the universe
avandonk
11-09-2010, 12:06 PM
There is some new evidence here
http://www.swinburne.edu.au/chancellery/mediacentre/media-centre/news/2010/09/physics-laws-vary-throughout-the-universe
That shows the fine structure constant varying by about 1 part in 100,000 depending on which direction you look.
Further work is needed to show that it is ideed real.
Bert
renormalised
11-09-2010, 12:16 PM
Yeah, it's a bit of a worry!!!. Going to mean you can't trust your observations of far flung parts based on what you know of the physical laws, because you have no idea what the laws in those parts are going to be like.
Just thought of something funny....here you go cruising along at c out near the boundary of our corner of the universe, when you have to take a detour into the next section because of a "field" of black holes in your way. Then suddenly you find yourself thousands of light years away because the speed of light barrier doesn't apply in this section!!!!:):P
CraigS
11-09-2010, 12:27 PM
I think this one came up a some time back (?) I think the measurements underpinning it came from quasars (?) (Because they're bright and distant ..)
Quasar redshifts also don't show time dilation, right ?
I wonder whether they would come to the same conclusions if their measurements were based on SNs, etc ?
Cheers
PS: .. I'm going by memory ..
:)
renormalised
11-09-2010, 12:37 PM
That's precisely why more study needs to be done on this...to determine what exactly would be causing a variation in alpha. If the quasars are really showing no time dilation in their redshifts, then what is causing that and is it because of a varying alpha, or if there is some other process causing both. Then as you said, what happens when you bring SN's and such into the equation....and then looking at normal galaxies at huge distances. Do they show the same variations or is it something intrinsic with the quasar observations.
What makes this even more interesting is that during the late 80's they thought they detected a change in newton's constant G. If that is the case as well, are they both related....the changes that is. Or if they're not, what are the causative mechanisms and could it also be down to observational effects or the method of analysis of the data.
astroron
11-09-2010, 12:42 PM
I posted this the other day ,in another thread and nobody took any notice of it:shrug:
CraigS
11-09-2010, 12:52 PM
I did !
:)
Cheers
astroron
11-09-2010, 01:04 PM
:thumbsup:Craig
The Person who it was aimed at didn't Register at all, and no one mentioned it:shrug:
CraigS
11-09-2010, 01:22 PM
Oops !
Twasn't your post (http://www.iceinspace.com.au/forum/showthread.php?t=65420) that I replied to, Ron ... Seemed it was posted by "Midee (Mike) Gadget freak".
Apologies for missing your post (same item, though).
Synched up now, though !
:)
Cheers
avandonk
11-09-2010, 08:52 PM
Sorry Ron. Maybe one of the Moderators can meld the two with your initial post first. As any news person will tell you it is all in the headline not the substance!.
Bert
CraigS
22-10-2010, 07:02 AM
In the News yesterday, is a rebuttal of the original article on the Fine Structure Constant varying throughout the Universe:
Taking a second look at evidence for the 'varying' fine-structure constant (http://www.physorg.com/news/2010-10-evidence-varying-fine-structure-constant.html)
Hmm .. worthwhile keeping an eye on this one. "Subtle" differences amongst the different telescope readings, eh ?
Very interesting.
Cheers
CraigS
22-10-2010, 01:18 PM
Oh .. and from the other critic's (Sean Carroll's) web blog:
His approach is to view the Fine Structure Constant as a scalar field (physics-speak for a quantity which takes on a unique numerical value at every point in spacetime).
I expect we'll hear a lot more on this.
Cheers
drsimmo
04-11-2010, 10:25 PM
In my opinion, this result is nonsense. Two different results from two different telescopes? Surely that tells us that there are systematic errors that are not quantified properly.
The idea that physical laws are invariant throughout the Universe (cosmological principle) is really just an assumption on our part. Our observations are limited to but an infinitesimal portion of the Universe if it is effectively infinite. It is convenient and simplistic for us to extrapolate our theoretical knowledge beyond our immediate environment. If indeed, some of our basic constants vary marginally with large scale distance, then our Universe has just become incomprehensible. Any conclusions drawn from local observation just don't necessarily apply somewhere else. Idealistically, we all hope that this is not the case and that further research will produce compatible results.
Regards, Rob
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