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In Search of Hidden Dimensions (Photo)
By Geoff Brumfiel, Nature's Washington physical sciences correspondent; reprinted from Nature. Nima Arkani-Hamed, a physicist at Harvard University, believes that the first
results from the Large Hadron Collider, the world's most powerful particle
accelerator, are expected to be released by CERN, the European particle-physics
laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland, by 2008. And if Arkani-Hamed's predictions
are correct, then that is when an experiment will detect the first evidence to
support string theory -- a vision of the cosmos that has never been
experimentally verified. "The field is going to turn on what happens at the
collider." he says. Pacing in his sparse Harvard office, the 32-year-old physicist drank no less
than six cups of espresso during our ninety minute interview, as he tries to
explain why he believes that string theory can now be tested. This is a supposed six dimensional space cast to a two
dimension plane, which is called Calabi-Yau shape. The image shows the twists
and bends inside the space. The twist and bend of space can form a shortcut
between spaces, a worm hole. String theory emerged in the 1980s as a way to answer questions that still
baffle modern physics, such as why gravity is so much weaker than other
fundamental forces? By imagining that everything is composed entirely of strings
ten billion billion times smaller than atomic nuclei, theoretical physicists
were able to create a model of the universe that unifies all fundamental forces
into one, and describes most of the particles we see today. Unfortunately, these
strings are far too small to be detected by even the most powerful particle
accelerators. And so, critics say, they are more philosophy than physics. Arkani-Hamed's ideas have very little to do with strings themselves. Instead,
he is hoping to detect the extra dimensions predicted by the theory, which like
the strings, are thought to be vanishingly small. But in 1998, Arkani-Hamed and
his colleagues published calculations showing that some of these extra
dimensions might be as large as a millimeter (N. Arkani-Hamed, S. Dimopoulos and
G. Dvali Phys. Lett. B 429, 263-272; 1998). Such large
dimensions, they argued, have escaped detection because everything we know --
except for gravity -- is confined to the three dimensions of space, and one of
time. But gravity, they think, might be able to seep into these extra
dimensions. This would explain why it seems so weak to us. And, as a result,
unexpected variations in gravity could allow researchers to detect the hidden
dimensions. Leaking away The son of two Iranian physicists, Arkani-Hamed was born in Houston, Texas,
and grew up in Boston. After the Iranian revolution of 1979, his family returned
to their homeland, but as religious fundamentalists took over the government,
his father was forced to go underground and the family eventually had to flee
across the border to Turkey. By 1982, Nima was living in Toronto, Canada. Recalling his early life, Arkani-Hamed says that his time in Iran was largely
a positive experience. "The strange thing is that I have mostly wonderful
memories," he says. If anything, he adds, it taught him to worry less about
what others thought of him. "Given that so many aspects of my life have
been unusual, I've never had a problem with feeling different or being different
or doing different things." As a child, Arkani-Hamed loved physics, but he initially disliked almost
everything about string theory. "String theory just seemed like abstruse
junk to me," he says. "What I really liked was physics that explained
things about the world around me." That changed when he began studying quantum field theory at the University of
Toronto. At first, this complex theory, which underlies high-energy physics and
much of string theory, seemed too arcane, but as he studied it more carefully,
he found a level of order and explanation far beyond anything he had learned
before. "Clearly, there was something very deep going on," he says. It captivated him, and by the time he finished graduate school in 1997, he
knew he wanted to try to make string theory experimentally verifiable. He found
an ally and mentor in Dimopoulos, who has devoted his career to seeking testable
versions of string theory. "We believe that the only way to make progress
is to take an idea, and push its consequences to find observations,"
Dimopoulos says. These days, in late-night phone calls and frequent e-mails, the two are
thinking about what might emerge at the Large Hadron Collider. Their current
calculations show that some of the energy created by particle collisions in the
machine could escape into extra dimensions, and be carried off by leaking
gravity if those dimensions are large enough. The result would be an apparent
violation of the conservation of energy -- a dramatic sign that string theorists
are on the right track. Then again, they might not be. "You can spend ten years of your life and
have every idea you came up with be proven wrong, and that's gratifying in its
own way," Arkani-Hamed says. But, he adds as he reaches his caffeine-fueled
conclusion: "If this thing turns out to be true, it could be the biggest
discovery in science in, say, 300 years." Source:
http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nature/journal/v433/n7021/full/433010a_fs.html |