THE
INFINITE FRACTAL UNIVERSE
Robert L. Oldershaw
Amherst College
Amherst, MA 01002
rloldershaw@amherst.edu
With regard to cosmology,
we live at a very privileged time. When we read about exciting and revolutionary
paradigm changes, in which our most fundamental ideas about nature undergo
radical revisions, the drama usually has taken place well before we were
born. Today,
however, we have the rare opportunity of witnessing at first hand a profound
transformation in our understanding of how the Universe is structured. This ongoing change of cosmological paradigms
from a “small” finite cosmos to an infinite fractal cosmos began
about two decades ago and is in full swing at present.
The
short version of what is happening goes like this. For
about 50 years the Big Bang model of the Universe has provided an excellent
explanation for the basic cosmological observations: a very large-scale
expansion, an approximately uniform background of microwave radiation and a
unique set of abundances for the atomic elements. However, there were some technical problems
with this model, such as an acausal beginning of spacetime, a lack of magnetic
monopoles, an unexpectedly high degree of uniformity, and an enigmatic
knife-edge balance between the open and closed states. Then in the early 1980s Alan Guth showed
how these and other problems with the Big Bang model could be solved in
one fell swoop with the Inflationary Scenario1, which postulated
a very brief period of ultra-rapid expansion shortly after the Big Bang. The theory of Inflation gained analytical
and observational support over time and is now fully accepted by cosmologists
as a cornerstone of the Big Bang paradigm. But,
an ironic thing has happened. Although
the Inflationary Scenario was developed to rescue the Big Bang model, the
most logical consequence of pursuing the concept of Inflation is the replacement
the Big Bang paradigm with a much grander and more encompassing paradigm. According
to Guth2 and a growing number of leading cosmologists, the most
natural version of Inflation theory is Eternal Inflation, in which Inflation
is, was and always will be occurring on an infinite number of size scales. The new paradigm that cosmologists have
arrived at by several routes is an infinite fractal hierarchy that has “universes” within “universes” without
end. The astronomer Carl Sagan3 once
referred to the general idea of an infinite fractal universe as “strange,
haunting, evocative – one of the most exquisite conjectures in science
or religion.”
That is the basic story, but because of the
profound changes the fractal paradigm will have on
our understanding of the Universe and the place of humans within that Universe,
it is important to explore the implications of this new vision. Firstly, there is no edge or boundary
of the Universe; space is infinite in all directions. What
we used to refer to as “The Universe” can be more appropriately
called the “observable universe” (note the small “u”)
or the “Hubble Volume,” and it is only a tiny part of what one
might call our “metagalaxy” or “level 1 universe”. We
currently have no way of determining the size of our metagalaxy or the
number of galaxies it contains, but we could reasonably assume that both
figures would be vastly beyond anything previously contemplated. There
would be an infinite number of these level 1 universes, and on an unimaginably
large scale they too would be organized into level 2 universes, and so
on without limit. Secondly, time
is also infinite in the unbounded fractal Universe. Whereas
our Hubble Volume may have come into being and began to expand approximately
13.7 billion years ago, the Universe has always existed and always will. Parts
of the Universe may be created or annihilated, may undergo expansion or
contraction, but the infinite fractal hierarchy remains unchanged overall,
and thus is without any temporal limits. Thirdly,
there is no limit to size scales. In
the infinite fractal paradigm there is no class of largest objects that
would cap off the cosmological hierarchy; the hierarchy is infinite in
scale. This fact removes one of the more suspect
aspects of the old paradigm. Natural
philosophers had long noted the unusual fact that within the Big Bang paradigm
humans found themselves roughly in the middle of nature’s hierarchy of
size scales. This anthropocentric
state of affairs seemed to violate the Copernican concept that when humans
appear to be at the center of your cosmos, you should suspect that a bias
is leading you astray. In an infinite
fractal hierarchy there is no center of the Universe, nor any preferred
reference frame.
Some interesting
questions immediately arise. Why
are fractal hierarchies so ubiquitous in nature? By
studying empirical phenomena within the observable universe, how
much will we be able to learn scientifically about the parts of the Universe
that lie beyond our observational limits? Does
the infinite cosmological hierarchy have a bottom-most scale of sub-atomic
particles as is currently thought, or is this another artificial
limit to an infinite fractal Universe that actually extends without limits
to ever-smaller scales?
Centuries ago Immanuel
Kant, J.H. Lambert and a few others proposed an infinite hierarchical model
of nature based largely on natural philosophy arguments. This
general hierarchical paradigm never garnered a large following, but it
was kept alive by numerous rediscoveries. In
the 1800s and 1900s quite a few scientists, including E.E. Fournier d’Albe,
F. Selety, C.V.L. Charlier and G. de Vaucouleurs, argued for hierarchical
cosmological models based on the hierarchical organization within the observable
universe. Then
towards the end of the 1970s, the mathematician B. B. Mandelbrot4 gave
the hierarchical paradigm new life and widespread exposure by developing
the mathematics of fractal geometry and demonstrating that fractal phenomena
based on hierarchical self-similarity are ubiquitous in nature. In this way natural
philosophers, empirical scientists, mathematicians and now theoretical
physicists have all found their way, slowly but surely, to the infinite
fractal paradigm. There
are many routes to this paradigm, and certainly there are a large number
of distinct versions5,6,7 of the basic paradigm that have their own unique
theoretical explanations for why nature is organized in this manner, but
the general paradigm that nature is an infinite hierarchy of worlds within
worlds has fully arrived, and will probably be our dominant cosmological
paradigm for the foreseeable future
References
- Guth, A.H. and Steinhardt, P.J., “The
Inflationary Universe”, Scientific
American, 250(5), 116-128 (1984).
- Guth, A.H., The Inflationary Universe, Addison-Wesley, New
York (1997).
- Sagan, C., Cosmos, Random House, New York (1980).
- Mandelbrot, B.B., Fractals, W.H. Freeman, San
Francisco (1977),
and The Fractal Geometry of Nature,
W.H. Freeman, New York (1983).
- The present author’s ideas on fractal cosmology are reviewed at this
website.
- Tegmark, M., “Parallel Universes”, Scientific
American, 288(5), 41-51 (2003).
- Baryshev, Y. and Teerikorpi, P., The Discovery
of Cosmic Fractals, World Scientific, Singapore (2002).