Snapshot of Our Roots

Snapshot of Our Roots

Remember that I said Pittsburgh was an underrated city? Well,

my man Al, from Mars, has informed me of the happenings after

the very last Pirate game played in the about-to-be-imploded

Three Rivers Stadium. He tells me that fireworks and other

hoopla accompanied the game but the piece de resistance was

what happened to home plate. It was removed from the ground

and given to a daring guy equipped with jetpack. This guy flew

up and out of Three Rivers and deposited home plate in the new

baseball stadium to be opened next year. Is that class or what?

For those who might question the reliability of someone from

Mars as a news source, I have confirmed Al”s account with our

Lamb creator, who knows someone who actually attended the

game in question.

While I was quite impressed with this bit of space travel, I”m

afraid it pales when compared with the planned insertion of a

NASA spacecraft into an orbit between the earth and the sun a

million miles from earth next year. But it”s not the distance that

impresses me, it”s the mission. Indeed, in the May 2000 issue of

Discover magazine Tim Folger calls it “The Magnificent

Mission”. The spacecraft is called MAP, which stands for

Microwave Anisotropy Probe, a somewhat daunting name. It

might sound a bit less formidable if I tell you that MAP is a

space probe designed simply to measure temperature.

Admittedly, it”s a pretty sensitive thermometer that will be

measuring rather cold temperatures only 2.7 Kelvin, 5 degrees

Fahrenheit above absolute zero. (Absolute zero is the lowest

temperature we can measure, some 460 degrees Fahrenheit

below our Fahrenheit zero.) Actually, MAP”s mission is to

measure temperature differences of one part in a hundred

thousand through sophisticated microwave measurements.

You may think that sounds impressive but not “magnificent”. I

hope you”ll change your mind when you hear some of the

questions MAP may answer. How fast is the universe

expanding? What is the shape of the universe? How did

galaxies first form and when? Will our universe go on

expanding forever or come back together in a Big Crunch? And,

a real far out possibility, are we essentially seeing ourselves a

few billion years ago somewhere out there in the heavens?

What does all this have to do with microwaves? Last week I

mentioned that the long wavelength infrared photons coming

from the sun are felt as heat. Without going into the math (I

wouldn”t want to be accused of fuzzy math!), each wavelength

corresponds to a certain energy or to an equivalent temperature.

It turns out that the wavelengths corresponding to the region of

2.7 degrees Kelvin lie in the millimeter range, out beyond the

infrared in the microwave range.

If you”re into the origin of our universe, you already know that

2.7 degrees Kelvin is the temperature of the radiation or heat left

over from the Big Bang. I have to admit that I have an ulterior

motive when I write about such things as the Big Bang or black

holes. I feel that if I write about them often enough, I”ll convince

myself that I actually understand them and I”ll die a happy man!

So, here I go again. To understand the Bang, you first have to

accept that you can make something out of nothing, or at least

what we think of as nothing. Today, physicists are comfortable

with the idea that in a vacuum, particles are continually blinking

into and out of existence. I try to convince myself that this is

reasonable by realizing that a vacuum is not really nothing, not

even in outer space. There are all kinds of electrical and

magnetic fields, neutrinos, photons, gravity waves and maybe

WIMPs. Probably, none of these sorts of things are involved in

the blinking particles we”re talking about, but it consoles me to

know a vacuum contains energy and stuff I can”t see or feel.

Now that we”ve accepted blinking particles, albeit reluctantly,

let”s go to the Big One. Our universe started out with a

tremendous amount of energy concentrated in a volume smaller

than a proton. Current thinking is that within some ridiculously

small fraction of a second, our teensy little universe inflated like

a balloon to roughly the size of our earth. In the process, zillions

and zillions of particles, especially quarks and gluons, blinked

into existence. This time, however, the energies were so great

they didn”t blink out as particles are doing today. This was

certainly a good thing since we wouldn”t be here today had they

blinked out! Now we have the quark-gluon “soup” that workers

in Switzerland think they duplicated recently, as I discussed in a

recent column.

Well, this quark-gluon soup kept expanding and cooling down

and, before you knew it, the quarks and gluons had gotten

together to form protons and electrons and various charged

particles. There were also lots of photons of light but they kept

bumping into the protons and electrons and were scattered

around, sort of like light is scattered in a cloud of water droplets.

For 300,000 years you had this expanding, very hot foggy mix of

photons, protons and electrons. After 300,000 years, however,

the mix had cooled down to the point that the electrons and

protons started sticking together, forming hydrogen (1 electron

and 1 proton). But hydrogen is transparent to light and suddenly

everything changed. Those scattered photons were now free to

spread throughout the universe at, what else, the speed of light.

Over time, those hot photons have cooled down as the universe

kept expanding. Those 2.7 degree Kelvin microwave photons

are the remnants of that time 300,000 years after the Big Bang

when the universe really followed the “Let there be light”

scenario. It was the discovery of this cosmic background

radiation in 1965 that won Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson of

Bell Labs the Nobel Prize.

After this discovery, there was naturally a huge amount of

interest in the properties of this window to our universe as it was

some 13 billion years ago. One problem that worried scientists

was how the stars and galaxies came into being if conditions

were uniform in the proton-electron soup and the resulting

hydrogen universe. It seemed that no matter where in the sky

one looked, the temperature of the background radiation was the

same. Then, in 1992, NASA”s COBE (Cosmic Background

Explorer) satellite reported tiny fluctuations (anisotropy) in the

cosmic microwave background. One area of the sky, for

example, had a temperature of 2.7281 Kelvin, another 2.7280

Kelvin. This difference of only 0.0001 degree doesn”t seem like

much but cosmological types were ecstatic. One of the mission

scientists, George Smoot, even proclaimed that finding these

little heat differences was “like looking at God”.

Why the excitement? The temperature differences, though small,

showed that at the time the universe lit up, everything wasn”t

uniform. There were regions in which the densities of hydrogen

were larger and than in surrounding regions. Our own Milky

Way would have been one of those denser regions. What

depends on density? Gravity. The dense region, through its

larger mass, attracts more hydrogen and grows and grows and

grows. Finally, there”s enough hydrogen to form clouds of gas

and then stars and galaxies. How did the fluctuations arise? Go

back to the beginning when those particles blinked into being. In

that soupy mix, the effect of more particles coming into the

picture was like tossing stones into a lake. Ripples are formed

and pressure waves spread out. Pressure waves through a gas are

sound waves and according to Folger”s article, the whole

universe rang like a bell! When the photons were free to travel

the pressure waves stopped. It was sort of like freezing a pond or

ocean instantaneously to preserve the wave patterns. In this case

what was frozen was the pattern of the photons in the cosmic

microwave background.

So where does MAP come into the picture? COBE was a pretty

crude instrument, “a real pile of crap by today”s standards”,

according to David Wilkinson, who”s worked on both MAP and

COBE. COBE had no telescopes and could only resolve a region

of the sky 14 times as large as the moon”s apparent size. MAP

has telescopes and state-of-the-art detection equipment that

wasn”t available when COBE was built. COBE was in a low

earth orbit while MAP will be placed a million miles out, at a

point where the sun”s and earth”s gravity are the same. This will

reduce the background microwave noise from the earth.

MAP”s increased resolution (35 times better than COBE”s) should

result in a much more detailed map of the temperatures in the

cosmic microwave radiation over the complete sky. Hopefully,

this map will show the patterns of those sound waves in the

primordial soup. Although I find it hard to believe, one of the

mission scientists, Charles Bennett, is quoted as saying that the

early universe is relatively easy to describe. He says freshman

physics and a knowledge of the properties of sound waves in

different mediums is enough to model the hoped-for results from

MAP. The frozen patterns in the microwave background would

then permit a calculation of the amount of matter in the universe.

That number would immediately answer the question of whether

our ultimate fate is a fiery crunch or a frigid expansion forever.

The data could also answer the other profound questions posed

above. One question is really a weird one. This concerns the

possibility that if the universe is of a certain type, light that

starts out into space will follow a curved path. The ridiculous

conclusion is that what we think is another distant galaxy may

actually be our own Milky Way as it was billions of years ago. Or

if the light made two circuits, there could even be another view

of us a few billion years before that!

If you”d like more detail on MAP, log on to the NASA Web site

nasa.gov. Incidentally, the Discover article cited a November

launch date; the NASA site now says April. Perhaps you would

like to detect some of the cosmic background yourself. Actually,

if you”re of my vintage, before the advent of cable TV, you”ve

already done so. With an antenna, part of the “snow” on your

screen means you”ve picked up some of those 13 billion year old

cosmic microwave photons.

Allen F. Bortrum