Showing posts with label Garrett Lisi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garrett Lisi. Show all posts

2007-11-21

More about the New 'Theory of Everything'

A computer-generated illustration is of the E8 root system, an arrangement of 240 vectors in an eight-dimensional space. The image is a two-dimensional projection of that eight-dimensional arrangement. [Technology Review: Simplified Complexity]

A few more interesting facts about the New 'Theory of Everything', as discussed in
The model based on the E8 Lie Group seems to extend the standard model of nuclear physics to include gravity.

Lie groups are continuous groups such as the group of rotations of a sphere or a torus.

E8 is known as the exceptional simple Lie group and is the largest of this category possible. Anything larger has infinite dimensions.

The full structure of E8 was only revealed in March 2007 after hours of computation on a Super Computer.

The new theory could be complementary to String Theory because string theorists were already looking at E8

At first glance this model might appear to be similar to String Theory because it involves an eight dimensional manifold, but a deeper analysis reveals that it will lead to physics quite unlike String Theory.

Extending Quantum Field theory into the E8 structure envisaged by Lisi would lead to a new physics very different to string theory.
related: Lie group - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
LinkNotes: A New 'Theory of Everything'

2007-11-16

A New 'Theory of Everything'

A new unified theory all particles and forces of the cosmos


NewScientist.com

Is mathematical pattern the theory of everything?

GARRETT LISI is an unlikely individual to be staking a claim for a theory of everything. He has no university affiliation and spends most of the year surfing in Hawaii. In winter, he heads to the mountains near Lake Tahoe, California, to teach snowboarding. Until recently, physics was not much more than a hobby.

That hasn't stopped some leading physicists sitting up and taking notice after Lisi made his theory public on the physics pre-print archive this week (www.arxiv.org/abs/0711.0770). By analysing the most elegant and intricate pattern known to mathematics, Lisi has uncovered a relationship underlying all the universe's particles and forces, including gravity - or so he hopes. Lee Smolin at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics (PI) in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, describes Lisi's work as "fabulous". "It is one of the most compelling unification models I've seen in many, many years," he says.


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[...] Despite this unusual career path, his proposal is remarkable because, by the arcane standards of particle physics, it does not require highly complex mathematics.

Even better, it does not require more than one dimension of time and three of space, when some rival theories need ten or even more spatial dimensions and other bizarre concepts. And it may even be possible to test his theory, which predicts a host of new particles, perhaps even using the new Large Hadron Collider atom smasher that will go into action near Geneva next year.

[...]

The reason for the excitement is that Lisi's model also takes account of gravity, a force that has only successfully been included by a rival and highly fashionable idea called string theory, one that proposes particles are made up of minute strings, which is highly complex and elegant but has lacked predictions by which to do experiments to see if it works.

[...]

Lisi's inspiration lies in the most elegant and intricate shape known to mathematics, called E8 - a complex, eight-dimensional mathematical pattern with 248 points first found in 1887, but only fully understood by mathematicians this year after workings, that, if written out in tiny print, would cover an area the size of Manhattan.

E8 encapsulates the symmetries of a geometric object that is 57-dimensional and is itself is 248-dimensional. Lisi says "I think our universe is this beautiful shape."


via: How a Surfer Dude Stunned the World of Science With the 'Theory of Everything' | The Daily Galaxy: News from Planet Earth & Beyond
related:
[0711.0770] An Exceptionally Simple Theory of Everything
Is mathematical pattern the theory of everything? - fundamentals - 17 November 2007 - New Scientist