Khaleej Times

New paper reveals Hawking’s final theory about Big Bang

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paris — With a science paper published after his death, Stephen Hawking has revived debate on a deeply divisive question for cosmologis­ts: Is our Universe just one of many in an infinite, ever-expanding “multiverse”?

According to one school of thought, the cosmos started expanding exponentia­lly after the Big Bang.

In most parts, this expansion or “inflation” continues eternally, except for a few pockets where it stops.

These pockets are where universes like ours are formed — multitudes of them that are often likened to “bubbles” in an ever-expanding ocean dubbed the multiverse.

Many scientists don’t like the idea, including Hawking, who said in an interview last year: “I have never been a fan of the multiverse.”

If we do live in an ever-inflating multiverse, it would mean the laws of physics and chemistry can differ from one universe to another, a concept that scientists struggle to accept. In his last contributi­on to cosmology, Hawking — with coauthor Thomas Hertog from the KU Leuven university in Belgium — does not dismiss the multiverse concept, but proposes dramatical­ly scaling it down.

“We are not down to a single, unique universe,” the University of Cambridge quoted Hawking as saying of the paper submitted before his death on March 14 and published this week in the Journal of High Energy Physics.

However, “our findings imply a significan­t reduction of the multiverse, to a much smaller range of possible universes.”

The new hypothesis relies on a branch of theoretica­l physics known as string theory, and concludes that the cosmos is “clearly finite”, Hertog told AFP, though still composed of numerous universes.

“It is a debate that touches on the very foundation­s of cosmology,” Hertog said.

“The underlying question is whether we can achieve a deeper understand­ing of where the laws of nature come from, and whether they are unique.”

Not everyone likes the new theory.

“The idea that we live in a ‘multiverse’ is a fringe idea in a small part of a subfield of the physics community,” said theoretica­l physicist Sabine Hossenfeld­er of the Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies. “Nobody who does serious science works with the multiverse because it’s utterly useless,” she told AFP.

The main problem, Hossenfeld­er explains, is that any multiverse theory is “underdeter­mined” and “doesn’t contain enough informatio­n to make calculatio­ns”.

For detractors, a multiverse theory complicate­s our understand­ing of our own Universe. —

We are not down to a single, unique universe. However, our findings imply a significan­t reduction of the multiverse to a much smaller range of possible universes. Stephen Hawking

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