Unsolved Problems in Mainly Astrophysics
Unsolved Problems in Mainly Astrophysics
Unsolved Problems in Mainly Astrophysics
1.
2.
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
2.5
2.6
2.7
2.8
2.9
2.10
2.11
2.12
2.13
2.14
2.15
2.16
2.17
2.18
2.19
2.20
3.
4.
5.
Abstract
Introduction
The Problems Today
Supersymmetry and Zero-Point Fields
The Electromagnetic Zero-Point Field
The Cosmological Constant Problem
The Hierarchy Problem
Grand Unification
Quantum Gravity
Neutrinos
The Identity of Dark Matter
The Microwave Background Horizon Problem
Particle Properties and Causality
Fundamental Constants
Are There Problems with the Big Bang?
The Topology of Space
The Dimensionality of the World
Machs Principle
Negative Mass
The Origin of Galaxies and Other Structure
The Origin of the Spins of Galaxies
The Angular Momentum/Mass Relation
Life and the Fermi-Hart Paradox
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
Abstract
There is given a list and discussion of what are arguably the top 20
unsolved problems in physics and astrophysics today. The list ranges from
particle physics to cosmology. Possible resolutions are noted, but without
judgement. Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of the discussed problems
is that they are closely interrelated. This opens the prospect that a solution
to one or a few may lead to a significantly better understanding of modern
physics.
Introduction
Problems in physics arise in different ways, of which the two main categories are technical and conceptual. An example in the former class is the
solution of the N-body problem in Newtonian mechanics as applied, for example, to the solar system. Such problems can in principle be solved, given
new techniques and/or computational methods. An example of a conceptual
problem is Olbers paradox, wherein apparently obvious assumptions about
the electromagnetic spectrum and the cosmological density of sources leads
to conflict with observation. These problems are often solved by a reformulation of the underlying assumptions. At the present time, physics and
astrophysics appears to be plagued with a large number of problems of both
types. However, one should be aware that science today is an intellectual industry which necessarily throws up more questions than in historical times;
and problems offer the opportunity, given resolution, of breakthroughs into
new areas with a general broadening of the scope of research.
In what follows, there is given a discussion of what are arguably the
20 most pressing unsolved problems in physics and astrophysics. The tone
of the discussion, following from what was stated above, is not negative:
formulating a problem succinctly is essential to a solution. Perhaps the
most remarkable aspect of what follows is that many of the problems are
interrelated, so the solution of one or a few opens the prospect of widespread
advancement.
2.1
(1996); and in the books by West (1986) and Green, Schwarz and Witten
(1987). The preceding comments apply in the Kaluza-Klein context (Kaluza
1921; Klein 1926; Overduin and Wesson 1997a). In this, extra dimensions
are added to spacetime to extend its physical consequences, beyond the 4D
of special relativity as a theory of photons and the 4D of general relativity
as a theory of gravitons.
This is also the idea behind supersymmetric strings or superstrings. Strings
replace a point particle by an extended structure, and if supersymmetry is
imposed then the zpf situation can be avoided. However, superstrings are naturally 10D. This leads to certain technical problems. These can be avoided,
though most effectively by removing the distinction between 11D supergravity and 10D superstrings in favour of the more general concept of M-theory
(for Membrane). As far as superstrings are concerned, the unique property
of 10D is that any solution of curved 4D general relativity can be embedded
in a flat 10D manifold.
We will return to supersymmetry and particles below, in a discussion of
the nature of dark matter (Section 2.8). Here, we note two major questions
about supersymmetry: Is it a valid theoretical concept? If so, why is it
(apparently) badly broken in the real world?
2.2
2.3
by Weinberg (1989) and Ng (1992) and the book by Wesson (1999). One
group of ideas, due to Hawking, is that quantum processes with their appropriate expectation values effectively force the mean or observed value of to
zero, perhaps in a space with a changeable topology (see Section 2.13). This
is theoretically possible, but there is increasing evidence from QSO lensing
and other astrophysical observations that while may be small it is not
zero. Another group of ideas to resolve the problem involves the reduction
of a higher-dimensional Kaluza-Klein type space to a 4D one, which can yield
an effective 4D that is small. For example, in the so-called canonical frame
of 5D relativity whose interval is dS 2 = (`2/L2 ) g (x , `) dx dx d`2 , there
is an extra coordinate x4 = ` and a cosmological length L. When g ` = 0
as in general relativity, the field equations of the latter theory are recovered
as R Rg /2 = 3g L2 (Wesson 1999, p. 159). Thus = 3L2 and
because L is large then is small.
2.4
There have been numerous approaches to calculating the observed spectrum of particle masses from theory, but they have not been successful. The
usual result from grand-unified theories (see Section 2.5) is a tower of states
with little resemblance to the masses seen in nature and accelerators. This
hiearchy problem is particularly acute in Kaluza-Klein type theories (see
Weinberg 1989 and Wesson 1999). The fact is that the mass of a particle becomes ill-defined on the smallest scales. One possibility is to use a
5D space with particle masses related not primarily to the extra or scalar
potential but to the size of the extra coordinate. But while this works in
the canonical frame mentioned in Section 2.3 above, it becomes ill-defined in
other frames because 4D physics is not in general invariant under changes of
5D coordinates. The same comment applies to the latest version of brane
theory (Youm 2000), which while elegant introduces extra forces into the 4D
world which have not been observed.
2.5
Grand Unification
magnetism and a scalar field, whose quantum modes (particles) are the spin-2
graviton, the spin-1 photon and the spin-0 scalaron. Extending this approach
raises the appealing possibility of unifying all of the 4 known interactions of
physics in one formalism (see Section 2.1). However, the coupling constants in these theories are energy or range-dependent (see Griffiths 1987
and also Section 2.11). And the energy at which unification occurs is unknown. It could be as large as the Planck mass, (
hcG)1/2 = 2.2 105 gm,
but it could be orders of magnitude less. Ignorance of the grand-unification
scale is a major hindrance to progress in this field.
2.6
Quantum Gravity
2.7
Neutrinos
can be mentioned here that most work has been done in the cosmological
context on the model of Sciama. In this model, massive neutrinos with the
critical density decay, producing the energy source for various astrophysical
processes. Unfortunately, the photons produced in this model appear to be
too numerous to match observations of the intergalactic radiation field at
ultraviolet wavelengths (Overduin and Wesson 1992, 1997b). This problem
is generic to models with massive neutrinos, about which we clearly need
more information.
2.8
The fact that the dynamics of galaxies and clusters of galaxies do not
match standard gravitational theory with the observed or luminous matter
can in principle be explained in 2 different ways: we are using the wrong
theory of gravity, or we are not seeing all the matter. The latter is the more
common view (though see Section 2.18 below). However, there is no clear
consensus about what the dark matter may be. It could be astrophysical in
nature, such as massive compact objects or brown-dwarf stars. Or it could
be particles, which can be classified as hot or cold depending on their
kinetic energies. There has in recent years been considerable work done
on constraining candidates predicted by particle physics using observations
of cosmological background radiation in certain wavebands. The method,
which was outlined above for neutrinos, consists basically in looking for the
decay photons from unseen dark matter as compared to those from known
sources such as stars and galaxies. This method is effective, and comes close
to ruling out neutrinos, axions and the possibility that the vacuum may
have a finite energy density but be unstable (see Section 2.3 and Overduin
and Wesson 1992, 1997 b,c). It does, however, leave open the possibility
that the dark matter may be supersymmetric weakly interacting massive
particles, such as gravitinos or neutralinos. Supersymmetry was discussed
in Section 2.1, and there is clearly a direct link between that concept and
the identity of the dark matter which should be vigorously investigated.
2.9
2.10
(say) inside the visible universe, there is in fact only one. By dint of being
able to move at apparently superluminal speeds by virtue of moving through
a multiply-connected universe, this one particle could manifest itself as many.
Another, and less speculative mechanism, involves modifications to the usual
laws of causality in 4D by virtue of the influence of extra Kaluza-Klein type
dimensions (Davidson and Owen 1986; Wesson 1999). This idea might work,
since the size of the horizon depends on the dimensionality, but needs careful
investigation.
2.11
Fundamental Constants
2.12
2.13
Einsteins field equations, and others like them, are second order partial differential equations that in nature are local. A full solution normally
requires the assumption of boundary conditions, which in cosmology are in
most cases unknown. One could argue, with Einstein and Wheeler, that
the universe should therefore have no boundary. For example, in a k = +1
standard cosmology, the space has the shape of a sphere, so light can travel
around it (Misner, Thorne and Wheeler 1973). This can be tested astrophysically, for example by looking for multiple images of the same galaxy. A
similar argument applies to connectivity. Parts of one space may in principle
be connected to the same space or another by wormholes; and it is possible
to construct cosmological models where the universe consists of juxtaposed
cells, a periodicity which can be looked for using astronomical data (Hayward
and Twamley 1990). This is in 4D. In N 5D, the possibilities are even
more extensive, and there was mentioned in the preceding Section the case
of a flat 5D space that can contain curved 4D spaces.
There is hardly any information on the topology, and connectivity, of
space.
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2.14
This also is unknown. Above, there has been discussion of 5D KaluzaKlein theory, 10D superstrings and 11D supergravity. But there is nothing
sacrosanct about dimensionality, either from the historical perspective or the
mathematical one. Minkowski added time to the 3 dimensions of ordinary
space by the simple but powerful device of inventing x0 = ct. The next
simplest extension involves a coordinate x4 = ` which via the scalar field of
Kaluza-Klein theory can be related to mass. From the mathematical side,
lower-dimensional Riemannian spaces suffer from certain algebraic pathologies that make them unsuitable to use in physics. For example, for N = 3
the Riemann-Christoffel tensor can be expressed in terms of the Ricci tensor,
so the field equations for the latter result in rather trivial physics from the
former (Weinberg 1972, p. 144). The choice of the dimensionality depends
on how we wish to describe the physics. Thus the 4D Schwarzschild solution
can be embedded in a flat space with N 6; and as mentioned in Section
2.1, any 4D Einstein solution can be embedded in a flat space with N 10.
This raises the question of whether there is any unique choice for the dimensionality of the world. As long as physics progresses, the answer may be
No.
2.15
Machs Principle
The idea that the mass of a particle locally may be dependent on the
distribution of matter globally has a long tradition. Formulated by Mach
and admired by Einstein, it is a perennial subject of investigation. Machian
theories of gravity have been developed by Hoyle and Narlikar, Liu, Mashhoon, Wesson and others. Reviews of the principle and related questions
like the nature of mass, may be found in the books by Rindler (1977), Barbour and Pfister (1995), Wesson (1999) and Jammer (2000). It is certainly
possible to construct such theories in both N = 4 and N 5 that are in reasonable agreement with observations. For example, the N = 5 Kaluza-Klein
extension of N = 4 Einstein theory is Machian in nature, but agrees with
all the classical tests of relativity in the solar system (Kalligas, Wesson and
Everitt 1995). The question that awaits an answer is not so much if such
theories can be constructed as whether or not they are needed.
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2.16
Negative Mass
2.17
2.18
2.19
Objects other than galaxies have spins, and it has been known for a
long time that when the angular momenta J are plotted against the masses
M in a log/log plot, the result is a straight line with a slope close to 2 (for
15
a review see Wesson 1981). This holds for asteroids, planets, stars and
galaxies. There have been many mechanisms proposed to account for this,
but none has gained widespread acceptance. That is, there is a relation
which numerically reads GM 2 /J c ' 1/300, but no explanation.
2.20
Fermi is reported to have mused over lunch that there could not be
intelligent life forms elsewhere than Earth because they would have colonized
space and already be here. Conversely, the presence of life on the Earth
implies its presence elsewhere. This problem, though it originated with
Fermi, has been worked on by many people, most notably Hart (see Wesson
1990 for a review). It is really a question about the density of life in the
universe.
There are numerous possible resolutions of what has become known as
the Fermi-Hart paradox. Consider two examples at somewhat opposite ends
of the scientific spectrum. The cosmic zoo hypothesis says life is abundant
in the universe, but shuns humankind as not being advanced enough either
psychologically or technologically to warrant contact. The cosmic horizon
hypothesis says life is sparse in the universe, but that the nearest civilization
is beyond the particle horizon, and so out of contact.
The Fermi-Hart paradox may turn out to be like Olbers paradox mentioned in Section 1. That is, a problem whose origin lies in faulty premises.
(Editors Note: For possible evidence relevant to the extraterrestrial visitation question see the recent books The UFO Enigma: New Review of the
Physical Evidence by Peter Sturrock and Close Encounters of the Fifth
Kind by Richard Haines. Also the 3-part Report on a Survey of the Membership of the American Astronomical Society Concerning the UFO Problem, Peter Sturrock, J. Scientific Exploration, 1994, vol. 8, pp. 146; vol.
8, pp. 153196; vol. 8, pp. 309346. [B. Haisch])
Conclusion
Acknowledgement
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A Banff Summer
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