If we accept that the Big Bank was the event that gave birth to the Universe. We must also be cognisant of the possibility that something occupied the emptiness of space beforehand. Michio Kaku joins a team of eminent scientists to consider the possibilities.

For thousands of years, science has tried to understand the mysteries of the night sky. It is an awe-inspiring achievement that a certain kind of ape has discovered that it is living on a planet, that the planet is flying around a star in the galaxy. And that that galaxy is just one of a vast sea of galaxies in the near-infinite universe. How did all this start? What was the beginning, the turning point? Did anything exist before the Big Bang?

Is Our Universe Alone?

But now it seems, science is about to go one step further with an idea that will make previous breakthroughs in cosmology pale into insignificance. It is the grandest concept imaginable, yet it has its roots in a notion that we are all familiar with.

Planetary Model

Cause. And effect.

It’s a simple, yet powerful idea. Because one thing follows another, we can stray from the present. We can boldly stride into the future, and confidently travel back in time.

It’s this idea that allowed American astronomer Edwin Hubble to draw a far-reaching conclusion to what he saw in the movement of galaxies.

Portsmouth University Professor Bob Nichol

Professor Bob Nichol, University of Portsmouth “The discovery of the century had to be Edwin Hubble making his Hubble diagram. And what he did is he just plotted distance versus velocity, or speed, of the galaxy.

Professor Bob Nichol

You imagine one day making that plot and you discovered things further away moving faster away from you? And this is the famous Hubble diagram which told us that the universe is expanding. This revolutionised our review of the universe. Not only was there a universe out there but now there was a universe that was expanding and it was getting bigger and bigger with time. And it didn’t take long for someone to figure out, that if it’s getting bigger with time, surely it started from somewhere. And this really brought out the first idea that there was a moment of creation i.e. the big bang.”

Professor Neil Turok, The Perimeter Institute “I think the discovery that the universe was expanding was one of the most significant in science. It’s only similar level to Darwin’s discovery of evolution. It tells us the universe wasn’t always the way it is today, it tells us we came from something, something violent, something extraordinary.”

The big bang is an elegant answer to the biggest question that science can ever ask. It’s a startling idea. It gives us a sense of origin. And how ever odd the notion sounds, it’s a comfort to know exactly where we came from.

Science assures us that our universe exploded into existence 13.7 billion years ago. And thanks to cause and effect, science knows what happened right from the very beginning of the bang itself. Well, almost.

Dr Param Singh

From the Perimeter Institute is Param Singh “So, in the standard picture, if this is the history of our universe, then this is where the big bang is. At t = 0. This is when the baby was born. And when the universe is somewhere here. Where this is 10 to the power of -34th of this one second.”

Param Singh

Class “So we know about the universe up until 0.0000341 seconds before it started. That’s a pretty small number, isn’t it?”

Param Singh “At this point, the classical theory would fail.”

The thing is, Big Bang doesn’t quite work. So much so, that people are now starting to think the unthinkable – that Big Bang wasn’t the beginning at all.

Lecturer “How many people think that there was something before the big bang?” Many of the students raise their hand.

10 years ago, this would never have happened. Then, there was no doubt that “before the Big Bang” made no sense. But today, the certainty has gone.

There is no escaping the inconvenient truth that Hubble’s graph, work of genius though it is, contains a huge problem. It tells us that everything we see in the universe today – us, trees, galaxies, zebras, emerged in an instant from nothing.

And that’s a problem. It’s all effect, and no cause. The idea of “Everything from nothing” is something that has occupied physicist Michio Kaku for much of his professional life.

Professor Michio Kaku

Michio Kaku “You know, the idea sounds impossible. Preposterous. I mean, think about it – everything from nothing! The galaxy, the stars in the heavens coming from a pinpoint. I mean how can it be? How can it be that everything comes from nothing? But you know, if you think about it for a while, you begin to realise it all depends on how you define ‘nothing’.”

Professor Michio Kaku

In a sandy dusty, Ohio, is Plum Brook Station. It is here that NASA recreates the conditions of space on Earth, and part of that means generating nothing… in vast quantities. What science thinks was the beginning of everything.

What is “nothing”?

This is the biggest vacuum chamber in the world.

It’s eight-feet-thick walls are made from 2,000 tons of solid aluminium. It takes two days of pumping out the air, and another week of freezing out the remaining molecules to create a near-perfect vacuum. A cathedral-sized volume of nothing.

Michio Kaku “When they switch this place on, this is as close as we can get to a state of nothingness. Everywhere we look we see something. We see atoms, we see trees, we see forests, we see water. But hey, right here, you can pump all the atoms out, and this is probably the arena out of which genesis took place. So, in the beginning, if you really understand the state of nothing, you understand everything about the origin of the universe.”

Biggest Vacuum Chamber

Except, of course, it isn’t quite that straightforward. For a start, the “nothing” created by NASA still has dimensions – this is nothing in 3-D. The tests carried out within the chamber can, of course, be viewed. This is nothing through which light can travel.

NASA’s “nothing” has properties. This “nothing” is, in fact, something.

Michio Kaku “I think there are two kinds of nothing. First there is what I call absolute ‘nothing’, no equations, no space, no time, absence of anything that the human mind can conceive of, just nothing, but then I think, there is the vacuum, which is nothing but the absence of matter.”

External Links

Stephen Hawking discusses The Time Scale of the Universe

The Big Bang Theory Gift Mens Bazinga Lounge Pants

The Big Bang Theory Season 8 [DVD] [2015]

Physics of the Future: The Inventions That Will Transform Our Lives

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