Symposium Outline
Space-Time and the Cosmos
Date: Saturday, December 17, 2005
Time: 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Speakers: Professor Gary T. Horowitz, Professor Anthony Aguirre and Professor
John Terning
Location: Skirball Cultural Center, Los Angeles
The Nature of Space and Time
Professor Gary T. Horowitz
University of California, Santa Barbara
In honor of the hundredth anniversary of Einstein's "miraculous year" of
1905, the modern view of space and time will be discussed. The discussion starts
with special relativity and then follows by how space and time are modified in
Einstein's general theory of relativity. The discussion ends with some recent
ideas including black holes in higher dimensions. In all cases, the view of space
and time arising from modern physics is radically different from our everyday
experience, yet many of their strange properties have already been confirmed
by experiment.
Finding a Home in the Multiverse
Professor Anthony Aguirre
University of California, Santa Cruz
The history of cosmology over the past millennium has been that of an ever-widening
view of the universe, from Earth surrounded by planets and "crystal spheres" of
stars, to a solar system surrounded by thousands of distant stars, then to
millions of stars, then to the realization that these millions comprise but
one galaxy of millions in the observable universe. Over the past 20 years,
several lines of thought have emerged suggesting that the universe may, in
fact, be vastly larger yet -- it may in fact be a "Multiverse" of
uncountable regions as large as all that we can observe, yet potentially with
very different properties.
Several lines of reasoning will be discussed -- from quantum mechanics, string
theory, and observational and theoretical cosmology -- that both individually
and in conjunction lead us to suspect that we may inhabit some sort of multiverse.
Also, the following questions will be addressed: How likely are these different
scenarios? How do we describe a mulitverse and what is its structure? Are other
universes observable? Are multiverse theories testable, and how can they be
tested if we only observe one universe?
Extra Dimensions
Professor John Terning
University of California, Davis
There has been a revolution in our thinking about extra dimensions. A new
understanding of the feasibility of localizing four dimensional gauge theories
in higher dimensional spacetimes has led to a variety of phenomenologically
viable models, and even to the possibility of localizing gravity. Unlike older
theories of extra dimensions, much of the focus now is on extra dimensions
with sizes on the order of one thousandth of a proton width or larger! Thus,
there is a potential for discovery at current and soon-to-be-completed colliders,
and in some cases table-top experiments. In addition there are tremendous implications
for cosmology. The following topics will be covered:
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Einstein and the Fourth Dimension
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Waves in a Fifth Dimension
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String Theory and Branes
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Experimental Tests of Extra Dimensions
