The Energy of Empty Space != Zero 362
Raindeer writes "Lawrence Krauss (well-known physicist and author of The Science of Star Trek) invited a group of 21 cosmologists, experimentalists, theorists, and particle physicists and cosmologists. Stephen Hawking came; three Nobel laureates, Gerard 'tHooft, David Gross, Frank Wilczek etc. He wrote about the conclusions of this session in Edge; in short: 'there appears to be energy of empty space that isn't zero! This flies in the face of all conventional wisdom in theoretical particle physics. It is the most profound shift in thinking, perhaps the most profound puzzle, in the latter half of the 20th century. And it may be the first half of the 21st century, or maybe go all the way to the 22nd century. Because, unfortunately, I happen to think we won't be able to rely on experiment to resolve this problem.'"
Empty Spaces (Score:5, Funny)
What shall we use
to fill the empty spaces
where we used to talk?
How shall I fill
The final places?
How can I complete the wall?
Re:Empty Spaces (Score:5, Funny)
Gee, there's good looking ladies in Physics.
But thats just because I read physics articles mostly for the pictures.
Re:Empty Spaces (Score:5, Funny)
- Andrew
Re:Empty Spaces (Score:2)
Re:Empty Spaces (Score:3, Funny)
A real scientist doesn't pay for a hooker. He'll build himself female androids / re-animated constructs / golems, depending on if he's living in high-tech future, victorian times or D&D fantasy realm.
Just why do you think mad scientists and wizards are grinning maniacally all the time ?-)
New news? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:New news? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:New news? (Score:3, Informative)
Casimir forces are extremely sensitive to geometries however, and the solutions are very hard to derive. A sphere was recently found to have a repulsive Casimir force IIRC[2] (ie. the force is expansive rather than contracting as with parallel plates). So while this idea would be cool, I suspect that any non-parallel plates would yield a null result, or perhaps so small as to be useless, even if you had nano or pico-scale manufacturing.
[1] http://en.wikipedia [wikipedia.org]
Re:New news? (Score:5, Interesting)
He then proceeds on to the standard "argument from conditional probability" where the universe has exactly these constants because if it didn't we wouldn't be here to see it. Which is a comfortable thing to believe but isn't predictive science.
I'm guessing this essay is a seed for his next book.
Re:New news? (Score:2)
Most people (Score:3, Funny)
Zero-point energy? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Zero-point energy? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Zero-point energy? (Score:2, Informative)
Debate? What debate? Syndrome clearly demonstrated the practical application of zero-point energy while thrashing Mr. Incredible.
120 orders of magnitude (Score:4, Interesting)
Still, the point of the article isn't about vaccuum energy, but rather the anthropic principle. The concept is that there's a constant in our universe that almost precisely cancels out this vaccuum energy. This is purely by chance and we see it because if it didn't happen, we wouldn't be around to talk about it.
Re:Zero-point energy? (Score:5, Informative)
Here is a this very nice discussion of the zero-point energy [ucr.edu] by mathematical physicist John Baez. You're right, the idea is hardly new, but some of the experimental evidence about the cosmological constant is relatively new.
I think it's fair to say that almost no physicists believe you can extract useful work from the vacuum energy. Most of the people claiming you can are con men trying to swindle people into buying "free energy devices" that supposedly tap the zero-point energy (it's the modern day incarnation of perpetual motion machines). While you may be able to setup a situation where the vacuum does work (i.e. with the Casamir force), I think it is simply less than or equal to the energy it took to put the apparatus together. Essentially, it's equivalent to sitting in a room with uniform atmospheric pressure and trying to use that atmospheric pressure to do work. You can certainly use a vessle with low or high pressure to do work, but you're never going to get out more energy than it took to create that high (or low) pressure. While one can think about this in terms of thermodynamics, that's really litte more than making concrete the common-sense proposition that you can't get something for nothing. Thus far, nature has not given us any good reason to abandon that idea.
Sometimes people do talk about things like pair creation from the vacuum and the energy-time uncertainty relation, but they are speaking about virtual particles rather than actual particles. The bottom line here is that when you make a measurement, what you will find is actual particles and energy will be conserved, even according to quantum field theory.
Re:Zero-point energy? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not saying that a 'zpm' could be built and generate free power, but to remind that laws of balance only hold over closed systems. For example if the room you postulate is connected to the atmosphere you can harness the 'uniform pressure' as it changes over time as low/high pressure systems pass by. Thus, you are getting 'free energy' from outside the system, drawing from the global heat. From the perspective of the room this is energy out of nowhere or free energy.
Re:Zero-point energy? (Score:2)
Re:Zero-point energy? (Score:3, Informative)
Consider an energy trap which did not follow this rule, but rather continued to collect energy forever, such that the total energy does not converge to any finite limit (i.e. you can get
Re:Zero-point energy? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Zero-point energy? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Zero-point energy? (Score:3, Informative)
a differential (your bug trap) requires energy to work, in that case the bugs provide a lot of energy flying into the trap under their own power and operating nervous systems that intelligently differentiate inside-the-trap and outside-the-trap. a bug trap can be passive because the bugs are active.
it might be the case that zero-point energy, like ambient heat, is incapable of being translated into other forms of energy in nature, but then so
This fact has been observed (Score:5, Funny)
What a babe (Score:5, Funny)
I know, as a scientist I should be objective. But..
Lisa Randall is a babe!!
Ho hum, back to the numbers.
Re:What a babe (Score:4, Funny)
Lisa Randall is a babe!!
I do not think that word means what you think it means... [harvard.edu]
Re:What a babe (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What a babe (Score:2)
this is a little hotter [harvard.edu]... especially if brains gets you hot.
Re:What a babe (Score:3, Funny)
let's see here... (Score:5, Funny)
Guys, it's early Monday morning here. When I see a fragment like that, my very-tired brain makes be go back and read it again until it makes sense. Then, because I'm not awake, I don't catch that the only thing wrong is that there are two "cosmologists" in there. Then I have to go back and read it again... then, because I'm not awake, I don't catch that there's two "cosmologists" in there and I have to go back and read it again...
You get the picture. I was going to make a point or say something a little more witty, but it's early Monday morning here.
Monday morning retards... (Score:2)
Some of us get caught up in simple things, like badly edited sentences in the slashdot blurbs. Heh, nothing wrong with that.
Some of us get high and mighty and start criticizing the observations of theoretical physicists with crackpot and at best amateur comments that such things are obvious or inconsequential.
Honestly, between this ar
Texas sharpshooter fallacy (Score:5, Interesting)
This sounds like a classic setup. A star trek "scientist" wants to find a favorable answer to reconcile the real world with his fantasy, so he:
And the end result - a nice juicy "yeah..sure.. align the phase.. inverters" answer that he sought in the first place. Call me a skeptic, but that sounds like the classic T.S.F. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_sharpshooter_fa llacy [wikipedia.org] . By tampering with the normal course of the scientific method, a non-scientific answer was produced. Anyone else see a problem here?
I love imagination as much as the next guy..but c'mon...
Re:Texas sharpshooter fallacy (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't think anyone expected that a weekend conference would bring about the final answer to the quantum gravity problem. But getting great minds together to discuss wacky ideas is a good thing as far as I am concerned. Physics conferences are common occurances. I just wish they all took place on exotic tropical islands..
My main problem, being a physicist myself, was that the essay mostly read like mindless gibberish, repeating the same sentences over and over again, as if the repetition would somehow
Editor! (Score:2, Funny)
Still, this doesn't explain why the editors always miss the obvious goofs when posting.
Re:Editor! (Score:2)
It looks right.
From [1] [google.com]: Definitions of cosmologist on the Web:
I think you were thinking of cosmetologists:
Science Fluxion (Score:5, Interesting)
Fact: what you know that you have proven to yourself
Belief: what you know that you could prove to yourself but have not
Faith: what you know that you can not prove to yourself
Is there a distinction between faith you can't prove to yourself because it's not proveable (metaphysics), and faith you're too dumb to prove?
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes. The latter has a hope of being successfully challenged, and the former does not. That distinction is what distinguishes a scientific question (even if not currently testable) from a religious one (a certain state's school system's habit of redefining words nonwithstanding).
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:2)
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:2, Insightful)
How can you possibly know that you could prove something to yourself if you haven't gone to the trouble of actually proving it to yourself? Unless you take it on faith of course. Your definitions are silly.
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:2)
I know that 23234.4324 * 154.32323 is a number, even before I do the math. That's my belief in math at work. It can be proven - it has been proven to me that it can be proven, even before it it has been proven.
Your failure to understand something so simple and common, Anonymous obtuse Coward, makes my final question about faiths and incompetence even more intere
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:2)
You don't really need to prove this to anybody, your beliefs don't need to be justified by this silly sort of logic.
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:2)
Belief is knowledge without proof. Faith is a special case of belief, that can be known without proof even being possible. Just to help you get this a little more, remember that knowledge does not have to be correct, just known.
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:2)
"If it has been "proven" that the proof would show it to be true then it proves that it is true" is gibberish.
You've demonstrated nothing but ignorance of proofs, reason and how knowledge works. Come back when you've got something worth reading.
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:2)
It's not that metaphysics are unproveable, just that there's not currently an accepted theoretical framework that allows for the phenomena observed.
For example, MythBusters tested Paul H. Smith & his claim to be able to teach "remote viewing". Materialist scientists scoff at the notion that a human could get information about a distant location with hokey 'psychic' skills, because there's no allowa
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:2)
Re:Science Fluxion (Score:2)
I'd distinguish it this way.
Axioms: a fact simply because we say it's so. (i.e. set theory)
Proven Fact: what you know that you have proven to yourself
Accepted Fact: what you've been taught (i.e. most of what you've learnt in school that you didn't derive yourself, i.e. most people haven't derived the real numbers from set theory)
Belief: what you have a high degree of confidence that you could prove
Is it usable enegry? (Score:2)
Bearden (Score:2)
Well, duh. (Score:5, Funny)
Pfft! Stupid scientists.
Thank You, Slashdot (Score:5, Funny)
In which other web page do you think you will ever find a phrase like that? I really love Slashdot today. Talking about "conventional wisdom" in "theoretical particle physics".
Re:Thank You, Slashdot (Score:2)
Wrong Book Title (Score:4, Informative)
oops.. (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think this is a discovery of any sort.. I think it is just a guy bragging that he had a nice audience at some conference for which he gave a presentation regarding the non-zero energy of empty space.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but this has been known for some time and is even explained our current models.
His presentation seemed to be very anecdotal, I don't think he's claiming to have discovered anything - in fact, I don't think he is claiming to even understand what he is talking about, he's just providing some anecdotal perspective on it.
P.S. I don't claim to understand it myself..
Re:oops.. (Score:3, Funny)
Count yourself lucky. He said it all over again in the second half. That makes this "news", like, 140 years old, instead of just 70.
Come One, Come All! (Score:5, Funny)
I can't show you how it works - that's a secret I want to keep until things cool off enough for me to patent it. But rest assured, it works. You can drop by and see the spinning plates attached to it. They've been spinning for eight months with no added power.
Yes, I did build it entirely on my own, using the vast knowledge I gleaned by sitting in on engineering classes two or three times a month.
In this house, we obey the laws of thermodynamics! (Score:2)
Homer: [scoffs] I know. And this perpetual motion machine she made today is a joke! It just keeps going faster and faster.
Marge: And Bart isn't doing very well either. He needs boundaries and structure. There's something about flying a kite at night that's so unwholesome. [looks out window]
Bart: [creepy voice] Hello, Mother dear.
Marge: [closing the curtains] That's it
The Casimir effect (Score:5, Interesting)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casimir_effect [wikipedia.org]
Re:The Casimir effect (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:The Casimir effect (Score:2)
It's shaken my faith in science... (Score:2)
Re:It's shaken my faith in science... (Score:2)
Nonsense. If it were faith, he would have complete confidence that his belief was correct even in the face of obvious contraevidence, and no amount of persuasion could convince him otherwise.
I've argued with people that have faith in ridiculous pseudosciences like psychic predictions. I can explain the effects in terms of cold reading, confirmation bias
Vacuum energy (Score:4, Informative)
This is related to what may be the biggest open question in cosmology, the cosmological constant problem. The energy of space is intimately related to the "cosmological constant". We now know from the accelerating expansion of the universe that there appears to be a nonzero cosmological constant, implying a nonzero vacuum energy. Its experimentally measured value is many orders of magnitude smaller than a naive calculation of zero-point energy based on the Planck scale, however. Another possibility is that the cosmological constant is actually zero, and the accelerating expansion is actually due to the energy/pressure content of some kind of dynamical "dark energy" field (as opposed to the static cosmological-constant form of dark energy).
More on vacuum energy [ucr.edu] and the cosmological constant [ucr.edu], plus a tutorial [ucla.edu].
P.S. Contrary to some science fiction applications (cough-StargateAtlantis-cough) and crank physics (cough-Puthoff-cough), you can't extract free energy as work from the zero-point energy. The zero-point energy is by definition the lowest energy state that a system can have; to extract usable energy, you'd have to decrease the energy of the rest of the system below that minimum value, which is by definition impossible.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Vacuum energy (Score:2)
ah, but perhaps the definitions need to be changed.
I've personally met someone you would call a "crank physicist" (a doctoral candidate at a conventional university) who is working in the zero-point energy fi
Confused... (Score:2)
We thought that there was nothing in water - then they found minerals and all other kinds of stuff... we thought there was nothing smaller than an atom - we were proven wrong... So why is everyone so surprised that we found yet another thing that we didn't know existed? Why does it have to conflict with physics? If the particles are so small we jus
Re:Confused... (Score:2)
It's not the same as water having other stuff in it that we didn't realize before.
This is really that if you take everything away that you can take away, you still have some energy density left, which you can't get rid of. It's a quantum effect that is ultimately the result of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.
If there really is a non-zero vacu
Re:Confused... (Score:2)
If the particles are so small we just didn't see them before
If you read the article you might realise they aren't talking about that at all, the particles in question are positrons and electrons.
They are talking about actually empty space having sufficient energy that sometimes it turns into matter, an electron and a positron, that usually then wipe each other out and become energy, but can have an effect on things.
However the energy doesn't fit with other observations and theories in physics. So ou
Re:Confused... (Score:2)
To some degree that's true, but at this point it's really just splitting semantic hairs about the definition of empty. One way to view the concept of zero-point energy is that there's no such thing as empty space, even in a theoretical sense. Since it doesn't make sense to talk about "truly" empty space anymore, for convenience people then generally view the term empty as shorthand for "as empty as
Zero Point... (Score:2)
at last! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:at last! (Score:2)
I wish I could... (Score:2, Funny)
Doctor Who (Score:2)
Oh come on! (Score:2)
Dark matter found at last? (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, it seems to me that if space itself has a nonzero energy, you may be able to stop looking for that extra matter/energy that is missing from the big bang. Most of the universe is...well, space. That might account for that missing 90%, right?
Your Energy Bill . . . (Score:5, Funny)
THIS IS YOUR FINAL BILL FROM INTERGALATIC EDISON
PLEASE PAY
$100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.29
FOR THE VACUUM PACKAGED ENERGY WE PROVIDED FOR YOU OVER THE PAST 100,000 YEARS
FAILURE TO PAY THIS BILL MAY RESULT IN YOUR SUN BEING TURNED OFF FOR NON PAYMENT
REGARDS,
INTERGALACTIC EDISON
A BIG BANG COMPANY
Morons... (Score:5, Funny)
Albert: Well, it may be cold and wet here, but at least we can't get any lower! I guess that is some sort of consolation.
Crackpot: What are you talking about? We're still filled with potential energy! If we could harvest the potential energy we could get from going a foot lower, we could use it to boost our way out of here!
Albert: Um... no.
Crackpot: What do you mean? Do you work for the oil companies or something?!
Albert: The amount of potential energy you have depends on where you define your lowest point. Typically we set the "zero" point to be the point where you can't fall any further. Since you can't obtain any energy by any means at that point, that means there is no potential energy left.
Crackpot: But what if we dig down another foot?
Albert: Do you have any idea how much energy that would require to do that?
Crackpot: Fine, we'll dig down 20 feet to extract more energy, and that will pay for the energy expense of digging.
Albert looks confused. He thinks he might be missing a subtle joke. He decides that he isn't deficient in humor -- his companion is deficient in brainpower. Albert unfurrows his brow and tries to talk some sense into his friend.
Albert: Ok. Let's consider two situations. We've got our situation right now -- we're at the bottom of a well with no way out -- and another situation. In the other situation an evil man is dangling two jet-packs on a fishing line right above our heads. The man will always pull the jet packs out of our reach whenever we try to grab them. The man will never get tired and he will never let us have the jet packs no matter what we do. No matter how long or hard we try, we won't get the jet packs. Question: is it easier to get out of the well in the first situation, or in the second situation?
Crackpot: What does this have to do with getting access to our latent potential energy?
Albert: (sighs)
Crackpot: I have a shovel and some rubber bands. You try to talk to the guy with the jet packs while I dig.
Albert drowns himself. Fin.
Polarity (Score:3, Interesting)
A gravitational well possesses some energy, which at minimum depends on its mass, the gravitational pull towards the center of that mass can be seen as one pole of a gravitational 'magnet', if that were the case, where would be the opposite pole of that mass? It could be that the entire space/time in the universe has to stretch to accomodate the difference in gravitational potential. So it stretches enough to counterbalance the energy of the gravitational well. There must be some sort of communication between the opposite poles, either by 'gravitational waves' or some gravitational particles (gravitons?) or maybe both. If it were waves, it would have looked as if ripples on the surface of a pond were moving out in 2 dimensional space from the center of the gravity well, and the further these ripples move away from the center of the well, the more they subside.
But these ripples have to be absorbed by something, this something is the normal space, and the more mass there is in the universe, the more of this 'normal empty' space there must be to balance out that mass.
Based upon all of these assumptions, which I admit are nothing more than speculations at this point, I could even introduce some ideas on the creation of the universe:
Imagine a totally empty space. Suddenly there was an influx of mass at one point in this space. This influx created a gravitational imbalance in the space and forced the space to balance out this potential by 'creating' more empty space. If any of the above makes sense, I would say that appearence of 'empty space' is actual property of non-empty space, but it takes much more of this 'empty space' to balance any small amount of non-empty space. So while the amount of non-empty space was not very large, the amount of 'empty space' had to be astronomically greater.
So the more of the non-empty space appears in the universe, the more empty space is provided as a balancer.
-
This is all my own conjectures and should not be taken too seriously. yet
Please get his name correctly - it is 't Hooft (Score:2)
- webpage how to spell his name: http://www.phys.uu.nl/~thooft/ap.html [phys.uu.nl]
Mark
Two questions (Score:2)
They used Pentium FDIV to compute it (Score:2, Funny)
Mass-energy equivalence also wasn't measurable... (Score:5, Interesting)
which expands to the approximation
and recovers the classical kinetic energy equation (that second term) from the Lorenz contraction formulae.
Einstein is reputed to have worked for a while to try to explain away the mc^2 constant term on the front (which doesn't affect classical motion since it is constant), but it was not measurable until nuclear decay was characterized. Chemical reactions don't release enough energy for the binding-energy mass loss to be measurable, but nuclear reactions due. Every (non-failing) chemistry student is familiar with the mass deficit in bound nuclei (the atomic mass of hydrogen is more than 1/12 the atomic mass of C-12, because the C-12 nucleus is tightly bound and lost some mass/energy when it stuck together).
My point is that the mere fact that something is not measurable today does not make it completely senseless. The fact that nuclear mass deficits and corresponding energy loss during radioactive decay agreed with Einstein's relation was a major early win for Einsteinian relativity.
Re: (Score:2)
Of course empty space energy is not zero (Score:5, Interesting)
The Casimir Effect is also an experiment that is touted as ultra-precise proof of the phenomenon.
And there are a number of tantalizing theories that are built on its existence and have been published in the usual top ranking physics journals. Some suggesting that vacuum energy is responsible for the very structure (and hence stability) of the physical universe.
For example: http://www.calphysics.org/ [calphysics.org] explores the possibility that vacuum energy fluctuations account for mass (even particle mass!), inertial forces and [through an elegant corrolary] gravity. This opens up possibilities that go well beyond star trek.
Elementary (Score:2)
1 + 2 + 3 + 4
So getting energy out of empty space should be a snap!
This is a textbook example of Krauss (Score:5, Interesting)
In Rockefeller 301, the main lecture room, there are maybe a hundred old uncomfortable desks bolted to the floor. One night, some students from his class came in, unbolted all the desks, turned them around, then bolted them back down. One of them wrote on the chalkboard in big letters, "Krauss's big head turns students away!" They had to cancel several classes early the next day, as maintenance rushed in to turn all the desks back around. The funny thing is that the comment remained on the chalkboard for a week or so after the incident--apparently everyone was in agreement about it.
Another interesting incident... at the Stephen Hawking lecture a few years ago, when the school randomly decided to give him the Michelson Morley award (basically because they would never get another person so esteemed to talk at the school), the interim president (Hundert) of the school was giving a lecture, holding the award, and getting ready to present it. As he was about to bring the award over to Hawking, Krauss does some sort of stunt in grabbing the award away from Hundert without looking weird, and takes it over to Hawking. He then gets his photo opportunity with Hawking.
I also recall earlier that day, during Krauss's lecture, and later quoted in the school paper, him mentioning that he was one of the key figures behind dark matter research, which is total nonsense.
One final example that I remember way back as a freshman: I was sitting outside the professors' offices waiting for someone, and heard some yelling, then saw Krauss's secretary run out in a total fit, tears streaming from her eyes, face bright red. She's still around today though, so they must be paying her a lot. I don't think anyone could handle him on a daily basis for less than $60k a year.
Re:This is a textbook example of Krauss (Score:3, Funny)
What, you think the desks were comfortable?
Re:This is a textbook example of Krauss (Score:3, Interesting)
I heard it second-hand. I can't help if you say I heard it wrong, although yours is hearsay just as much as mine. At least I am logged in. You could be anybody.
"Prof. Krauss chaired the Michelson-Morley Prize committee that
The most interesting tidbit from the long article. (Score:3, Interesting)
The thing I found most interesting out of the whole TFA, though, was this last bit:
"That is, we live in one universe, so we're a sample of one. With a sample of one, you have what is called a large sample variance. And maybe this just means we're lucky, that we just happen to live in a universe where the number's smaller than you'd predict. But when you look at CMB map, you also see that the structure that is observed, is in fact, in a weird way, correlated with the plane of the earth around the sun. Is this Copernicus coming back to haunt us? That's crazy. We're looking out at the whole universe. There's no way there should be a correlation of structure with our motion of the earth around the sun -- the plane of the earth around the sun -- the ecliptic. That would say we are truly the center of the universe."
Wow. What if we really
Steve
Re:Energy Explained (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Energy Explained (Score:2)
The egg was born by something that wasn't quite yet a chicken.
Just because it has energy... (Score:5, Insightful)
The exciting thing here is that empty space has **some** energy potential. Less energy potential than a lump of mass just sitting on a desk or a burning coal in a fire, but **some** energy potential.
Re:Just because it has energy... (Score:2)
Pens? How quaint.
Re:How do we use it? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I call it a...... (Score:2)
Re:I call it a...... (Score:2)
Re:Does empty space even exist? (Score:2)
No they aren't, for the same reason squares and quadrilaterals aren't the same thing. Matter is a type of energy. Not all energy is matter.
That is all.
Re:This is old news, (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Space-energy relationship (Score:2)
Re:Crackpot Theory (Score:2)