Thursday, July 3, 2025

Mysterious Particles

Some physicists sometimes act as if the hypotheses they propose to explain the mysteries of the universe are always true. But a hypothesis is nothing more than a proposal to explain a natural phenomenon, and it cannot be considered a confirmed theory until it has provided one or more surprisingly accurate predictions. This last detail, which is essential, is usually omitted.

In 2020, I read two popular books on cosmology and particle physics (the two branches of physics are closely related):

  • The Big Bang, by Joseph Silk (2000). This book was recommended to me as a good popularization of the Big Bang theory. The problem is that it discusses several strange theories, and several particles whose existence has been proposed, as if they had been confirmed. Thus, reading the book could confuse uninformed people, contrary to the primary objective of popularization: to make those people know more about cosmology and the history of the universe. Among the hypotheses accepted as valid are string theory, currently in question, and cosmic inflation, which so far has not been confirmed.
  • The Dark Universe, by Catherine Heymans (2017). A good summary of the current status of the standard cosmological model, focusing primarily on the supposed existence of dark matter and dark energy, where the word dark should be understood to mean that we have no idea what it is. In this book, the author makes a typical mistake: sometimes (not always) she confuses model predictions with model adjustments. Predictions are made when the model is used to predict something we didn't know. As I said in the first paragraph of this article, confirmed predictions validate the model. On the other hand, when a model is developed, known data are used to adjust its parameters, but that doesn't validate the model. Heymans correctly describes the use of baryon acoustic oscillations to adjust the parameters of the ΛCDM model, but she is wrong in considering that the model has been validated by studying the RCFM thermal power spectrum, which was not a prediction, but an adjustment.

There are many particles whose existence has been proposed to solve the mysteries of the many things we don't know about cosmological theories. Some are very imaginative. The trouble is that their existence is almost never confirmed, although authors of popular books often speak as if they are real, and not mere hypotheses. Here are a few examples:

  • Magnetic monopoles, about which Silk's book says this: searches have found that monopoles are few and far between in our galaxy. The truth is that not a single monopole has ever been detected. Silk's statement gives the impression that they really exist, as if the existence of theoretical particles were proven by the fact that there is a theory that predicts them.
  • The photino: This particle, predicted by supersymmetry theories, has never been found. However, Silk says this: We know precisely how frequently [the photino] annihilation process occurs, because once, long ago in the very early universe, it occurred very frequently. How do we know, if it's quite possible that the photino does not exist?
  • Silk also mentions the chargino. About this hypothetical particle, he says this: Experiments have shown that the actual chargino abundance in terrestrial rocks and seawater is far less than the predicted upper limit. This way of expressing it gives the false impression that the existence of the chargino has been proved. To prevent misunderstanding, the paragraph should be rephrased thus: As the chargino has not been detected in rocks or seawater, its abundance, if it actually existed, would be much lower than theoretical predictions.

Curiously, in Chapter 17 Silk jokes about this supposed abundance of undetectable theoretical particles, when he says this: ...the exotic weakly interacting particle candidates, of which there must exist a number about equal to the square root of the number of particle physicists. In other words, Silk is aware of the current precarious state of the predictions about the existence of exotic particles that would explain dark matter, but sometimes he is carried away by the optimism of other physicists.

As an example of the precariousness of these theories, which often fail when subjected to experimentation, let's look at this news article published in PhysicsWorld on March 27, 2025:

Atomic anomaly explained without recourse to a hypothetical ‘dark force’

To summarize the news: in 2020, a team from MIT detected a deviation in the theoretical predictions of the energy levels of the ytterbium atom, a rare earth, which they immediately attributed to the existence of a previously unknown dark force, which would naturally imply the existence of new particles. As usual, when a prediction fails, physicists immediately propose the existence of dark matter or dark energy and the corresponding mysterious particles.

Fortunately, this time things didn't go very far. In 2025, a team of German physicists confirmed the anomaly, but managed to explain it without resorting to dark forces or hypothetical particles, by studying the interaction between the neutrons in the nucleus and the electrons in the ytterbium shell.

But I have no hope that this success of current theories over speculation will curb the imagination of those physicists who, rather than science, seem to be doing science fiction.

The same post in Spanish

Thematic Thread about Standard Cosmology: Previous Next

Manuel Alfonseca

See you by mid-August

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Can density be infinite?

First photo
of a black hole

Einstein’s general theory of relativity allows for the existence of objects with infinite density (singularities). There are two types:

1.      Black holes, accumulations of matter in a null volume, either at the center of a galaxy, or as the result of a supernova explosion.

2.      The universe, at its initial moment (the Big Bang).

A star like the sun is in equilibrium because the gravitational attraction, which tends to make it contract, is equal to the expansion caused by the nuclear reactions taking place inside the star. When a star much larger than the sun exhausts its nuclear fuel (first hydrogen, then helium, then other elements), as there are no longer nuclear reactions to stop the contraction, the star implodes. When the implosion rebounds, the star throws large quantities of matter into space: a supernova explosion, which for some time makes the star brighter than a whole galaxy. But there is always a remainder of matter, which gives rise to a new type of object.

Thursday, June 19, 2025

Is time infinite?

S.Augustin, by Louis Comfort Tiffany
Lightner Museum

Since ancient times, man has been interested in the enigma of time. Even though we all experience time, time is an enigma. As St. Augustine said in his Confessions (B.XI C.XIV): What is time? If no one asks me, I know; if I want to explain it to a questioner, I don’t know.

As I said in another post, the explanations devised to solve the enigma of time are of two types: those that consider it cyclical, with or without multiple repetitions, which would allow the passage of time to be represented geometrically by a circle, and those that consider it linear, which represent it by a straight line. In turn, this last case is divided into several: one can accept, or not, that time had a beginning; and one can accept, or not, that there will be a final moment of time. Combining these two alternatives, we have four different cases. So in total there are six possibilities, which we will analyze next in the light of modern cosmology:

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Is space infinite?

Georg Cantor

According to Georg Cantor, one of the first to study the concept of infinity in depth, there is not just one concept of infinity, but three different ones. Let's see how he expresses it:

The actual infinite arises in three contexts: first when it is realized in the most complete form, in a fully independent other-worldly being, in Deo, where I call it the Absolute Infinite or simply Absolute; second when it occurs in the contingent, created world; third when the mind grasps it in abstracto as a mathematical magnitude, number, or order type. I wish to make a sharp contrast between the Absolute and what I call the Transfinite, that is, the actual infinities of the last two sorts, which are clearly limited, subject to further increase, and thus related to the finite. (Georg Cantor, Gesammelte Abhandlungen, Springer, 1980. Translation taken from Rudy Rucker, Infinity and the Mind, Princeton University Press, 2004).

Thursday, June 5, 2025

The origin of eukaryotes

John Maynard Smith

As I have said several times in this blog, the theory of evolution is now well established. However, it is far from explaining everything. Many mysteries still remain. I listed some of them in a previous post. A book by J. Maynard Smith and E. Szathmáry, The Major Transitions in Evolution (Oxford University Press, 1995), describes them in more detail.

One of these problems refers to the changes of level that have taken place in the history of life, which I made the central idea of ​​my book The Fifth Level of Evolution. As its title implies, during evolution, things have not happened in an orderly or stable manner. At various points, there were changes of state (similar to those in physics) where evolution passed a critical point that made it possible to reach higher levels and opened up huge new fields in the configuration space. These points are the following:

Thursday, May 29, 2025

Paul Davies, popularizer of science

Paul Davies

Paul Davies came to the fore among scientists who devote time to popular science with his 1992 book The Mind of God, written in response to Stephen Hawking’s final words in his popular best-seller A Brief History of Time. In another post I talked about another of his popular books, The Eerie Silence. Here I am going to discuss two other books he has written.

The Last Three Minutes (1994): This book on popular science is a little behind the times, as it predates the standard cosmological model, but explains well the state of cosmology when the book was published, and many of the things it says are still valid. It says something very interesting: that the Big Bang theory by Lemaître (whom Davies does not name) should have been accepted long before its two surprisingly accurate predictions gave it a boost in the sixties, because there is another argument supporting it, that scientists of the 19th century should have noticed, but didn’t: If the universe were infinitely old, it would have died by now. It is evident that something that moves to a stop at a finite rate cannot have existed from all eternity. By the way, there is an error in this paragraph: Davies ignores the difference between what is eternal and everlasting, which was solved fifteen centuries ago by Boethius. And there is a major flaw when he says that the radius of the visible universe is 15 billion light-years, because he does not take into account the expansion of the universe. The correct radius is about 43 billion light-years.

Thursday, May 22, 2025

Science Cannot Prove That God Does Not Exist

In several posts, I have pointed out that it is impossible for science to prove that God exists, just as it is impossible to prove that God does not exist. The reason is that the object of scientific inquiry is the material world, and God is not part of that world and is therefore beyond the reach of science.

In a previous post, I criticized a book that attempted to do the former, from the perspective of believers. In this post, I will criticize another book that attempts to do the latter, from the atheist perspective. It is M-E: The God Within, by Joseph R. Abrahamson.

Although the author claims to rely on the principles of logic and the scientific method, he makes significant errors that indicate his lack of in-depth knowledge of these disciplines. The argument he presents as proof that God does not exist, although not explicitly stated in the book, can be deduced from reading it and can be summarized as follows: