Markus Schwarz wrote:neufer wrote:Ron-Astro Pharmacist wrote:
If the
Big Bang initiated a
Calabi–Yau space which later expanded to our known cosmology could it still be reflected in our smallest known dimensions?
(It is also reflected in the values for our fundamental physical constants.)
The problem is that there are about 10^500 different possible ways how Ron's idea might work, each leading to a different set of fundamental constants (for comparison, my back-of-the-envelope calculations estimates the number of atoms in the observable universe to be "only" about 10^79). And no one has found a way to select the correct Calami-Yau space.
The universe is a puzzling place. What if we used puzzles to explain it?
It would be a challenge but one could come up with a
Rubik's Cube version based on the Standard Model of Particle Physics.
One side would represent fermions with the colors of the matter, force, and dimension side of red, green, and blue while the anti-colors Cyan, Magenta, and Yellow are on the anti-matter, super symmetry, and energy sides. (There needs to be a fourth generation family of quarks and leptons though. We haven't found them yet because they're
dark matter)
The integer spin bosons would be on an opposing face photons, gluons, Z bosons, and W bosons with their supersymmetric partners' (photinos, gluinos, zinos, and winos being the opposite face)
The last two faces should be our universe's geometry represented by lines, planes, cubes, and spheres opposed with energy, momentum, pressure, and Dark Energy.
Hmmm. Wonder what mixing up the cubes would get you? From a Big Bang starting at its center surely a strange mix of particles, forces, and dimensions that yielded 10^50 different choices would need a scale - time? Guess we may need a few more boxes Markus - Rubik's
HYPER cube ??
Though probably not perfect (yet) - see how much fun solving the universe's puzzles can be.
And even more strange – if the universe works this way
at our time consciousness may be playing the game remotely.