UNIVERSE BEFORE TIME
All About Space UK|Issue 157
Could the existence of a mirror-image cosmos before the Big Bang solve some of the biggest mysteries in astronomy?
Giles Sparrow
UNIVERSE BEFORE TIME

Our universe encompasses everything around us. Its laws of physics control every possible interaction, from the gravitational attraction that keeps planets in orbit around the Sun to the complex chemistry that gives rise to life. But for astronomers and physicists there are still some big questions about why the universe is the way it is. One of the most famous is the mystery of dark matter, which only makes its presence felt through the influence of its gravity. Another is the dominance of a certain set of subatomic particles - the familiar ones such as electrons, protons and neutrons that we call 'matter' when there was nothing in the Big Bang itself to prevent the formation of equal amounts of 'antimatter.

A new theory developed by two Canadian physicists suggests a radical new way of looking at the universe, along the way offering solutions to these and other major questions. According to Neil Turok and Latham Boyle of the Higgs Centre for Theoretical Physics, we may be looking at one aspect of a universe of two halves. Boyle and Turok's theory, developed with Kieran Finn of the University of Manchester, originates from questions of symmetry. In physics, a symmetric process is one that produces the same result if the values of one or more properties involved are flipped or reversed. A process such as a simple interaction between particles may be symmetric under different transformations of this kind, and as a broad rule of thumb, as structures become more complex they become less symmetric.

This story is from the Issue 157 edition of All About Space UK.

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This story is from the Issue 157 edition of All About Space UK.

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