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![]() by Brianna Smart | Research Associate - University of Hertfordshire Hatfield UK (SPX) Apr 07, 2022
In fiction and in films such as Spiderman: Into the Spider-Verse, parallel universes - also called the multiverse - exist alongside our own, with anything from small differences in events to entirely different rules of physics. It is an exciting and fascinating idea. Physicists have given the question of whether parallel universes could exist a lot of thought - and have come up with quite a few theories. One popular theory relies on something physicists already know about. The universe is expanding. This means galaxies far from Earth are moving away from us. This process is called cosmic inflation. What's more, the further away from Earth you get, the faster the universe is expanding. At some point the universe is expanding too fast for light to ever reach us from some very far away galaxies. This means there is a point in the universe that we cannot see past. That doesn't mean there is nothing there, though. There are still more galaxies beyond this edge - but we will never be able to see them. Some physicists describe the parts of the universe beyond this edge as a separate, parallel universe. This theory is popular, as it doesn't require any special physics or changes in our current understanding of the universe.
Universe bubbles Each bubble is still infinite in size, yet separate from our universe. Physicists find this theory interesting, as it could explain why we haven't found certain things that, scientifically, we would expect to see in our universe. This includes magnetic monopoles - one-sided magnetic fields which only have a negative or positive side. They might exist in another universe bubble instead.
Many worlds But we would only see one of these things happen. So, if saw the particle bounce off the wall, it might have also, at the same time, tunnelled through the wall - just in another universe, not our one. In this parallel universe, everything would be exactly the same as in our universe, except for one tiny change. In that universe, the particle travelled through the wall, instead of bouncing off it. The many worlds theory suggests that this happens every time a quantum mechanical reaction occurs, creating a separate parallel universe each time. Once the parallel universe is created, however, we have no way of interacting with it. So while this theory is exciting, we have no way to test it.
So is there another Earth? Things get trickier in the other theories - of the universe bubbles and the infinite expanse. If there are infinite universe bubbles and infinite space, that means there is a chance that exactly the same kinds of events repeated themselves in another bubble or elsewhere in the expanse of space to create another Earth. When you do the maths, though, it quickly becomes unlikely. For just 1,000 particles to interact in exactly the same way twice, the chance would be 1 in 102477. The number 102477 is a 10 followed by 2477 zeros, which is an incredibly big number. There are far more particles in the universe than 1,000, so the chances for another Earth are not in our favour. Unfortunately, we don't know if these parallel universes exist. Or at least, we don't at the moment. Physicists are trying to find ways to test these theories, but it is very difficult. For now, they remain just theories. But who knows - perhaps scientists in another universe have already figured it out.
![]() ![]() NASA finalizes plans for its next cosmic mapmaker Washington DC (SPX) Mar 25, 2022 NASA's upcoming SPHEREx mission will be able to scan the entire sky every six months and create a map of the cosmos unlike any before. Scheduled to launch no later than April 2025, it will probe what happened within the first second after the big bang, how galaxies form and evolve, and the prevalence of molecules critical to the formation of life, like water, locked away as ice in our galaxy. Achieving these goals will require cutting-edge technology, and NASA has this month approved final plans for all ... read more
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