The Elegant Universe
Brian Greene, NOVA, 120 minutes
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Part I: “The Edge of Knowledge”
Introduces the central
problem of modern physics: the incompatibility of Einstein’s theory of
general relativity with quantum mechanics. He then lists the physical
curiosities—properties of the motion of light, gravity, and the behavior of
particles at the subatomic level—that have prevented physicists from
establishing a single coherent theory for how the universe works. For most
of the twentieth century, physicists contented themselves with describing
either the most small-scale or the most large-scale workings of the cosmos,
but never both simultaneously. At the end of this section, Greene describes
both the objectives and the promise of superstring theory, which attempts to
merge the laws of general relativity with those of quantum mechanics.
Without dismissing the importance of electrons and quarks,
which are the basis of quantum mechanics, superstring theory depicts the
smallest particles in the universe not as dots but as tiny strings of
energy. These strings are one hundred billion billion (a quintillion) times
smaller than a single atomic nucleus. They vibrate in different patterns,
which in turn produce different particle properties. But because these
strings are too tiny to locate with current scientific tools, superstring
theory is not yet predictable or testable. Therefore, physicists like Greene
must work with approximations of equations until more information has been
verified. Still, the promise of string theory is tremendous. Only string
theory’s conceptual framework offers any possibility of unifying general
relativity and quantum mechanics into one complete understanding of how the
universe works.
Part II, “The Dilemma of Space, Time, and the Quanta"
Reviews he basic precepts of the two competing theories—first, Einstein’s special and general relativity, and then |
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the “microscopic weirdness” of
quantum mechanics. General relativity presupposes a smooth surface of space,but at an ultramicroscopic level (which quantum
mechanics has helped unveil), the spatial fabric is subject to violent
undulations known as “quantum foam.” Greene also discusses the basic
principle of quantum mechanics: the uncertainty principle. The uncertainty
principle predicts the impossibility of knowing both the exact location and
the velocity of a particle at any given time. Greene goes over the four
fundamental forces—the strong force, the weak force, electromagnetism, and
gravity—and he describes the complexity of incorporating gravity into the
standard model of the first three. In the last chapter of this section,
Greene stresses the necessity of finding a new theory that revises both
general relativity and quantum mechanics. Like many of his colleagues,
Greene simply cannot accept that the universe is, at its core, divided into
two contradictory theoretical frameworks.
Part III, “The Cosmic Symphony"
Discusses
in detail how superstring theory works.
He employs many musical metaphors to suggest how strings “harmonize” or
bring together the most puzzling aspects of the cosmos. After praising the
elegance and economy of the theory, Greene gives a brief history of its
first incarnation in the 1970s, when it was referred to as the bosonic
string theory. He also explains the subsequent revisions the theory
underwent during the first superstring revolution in 1984. Greene then
describes how supersymmetry— a concept that predicts the existence of
superpartners that correspond with all known particles—transformed string
theory into superstring theory.