
LEADING PHYSICISTS CONVENE IN TUCSON FOR CONFERENCE ON GRAVITY
Date: Sunday, January 14, 2007 @ 12:46:39 UTC Topic: Science
More than three dozen leading physicists and astrophysicists
will convene in Tucson for the conference, "Rethinking Gravity: from
the Planck scale to the size of the Universe," Jan. 22 - 24, 2007.
Scientists will meet at the Tucson Marriott
University Park, 880 E. Second St., to discuss their common goal -- to
probe and test gravity at all scales, from the subatomic level to the
entire universe. It's believed to be the first meeting on the topic to
draw scientists from so many diverse research fields.
"Scientists have understood for several decades that Einstein's
theory of gravity, which describes our universe at astronomical scales,
is incompatible with quantum field theories, which describe phenomena
at atomic scales," physicist Dimitrios Psaltis of The University of
Arizona, a conference organizer, said. "Despite numerous efforts,
scientists have yet to come up with a satisfactory quantum theory of
gravity.
"But our quest has become intensely exciting for two reasons," Psaltis said.
"First, new ideas are challenging our previous notions of how the
gravitational force works and pervades spacetime itself. And second, it
is astonishing to realize that even though most of these ideas were
unheard of a mere decade ago, they can be tested using present-day
astronomical and cosmological observations," Psaltis said. "It is this
exciting interplay of new theoretical ideas and new experimental tests
that has ignited new interest in this field."
Perhaps the most exciting new concept about gravity to emerge in
the past decade is that the universe contains extra dimensions that can
be detected only by gravitational force, Psaltis said. Other new ideas
aim to explain the single most unexpected result of modern cosmological
observations: the existence of a mysterious energy field that permeates
the entire universe and accounts for three-quarters of all its energy
-- so-called "dark energy." Another new line of theory attempts to
explain "one of the deep mysteries of physics," Psaltis said: "Namely,
why the gravitational force is so much weaker than the other
fundamental forces, including the electromagnetic force which holds
atoms and molecules together, or the strong force which holds nuclei
together."
Conference participants will discuss how modern technologies have
opened the way to test the predictions of Einstein's theory in
different contexts:
- Astronomers are using the Hubble Space Telescope and powerful
new ground-based telescopes to study supernovae in distant galaxies for
a more accurate grasp of the "cosmological constant." Einstein added
this term to his equations for general relativity, and scientists now
believe that it describes the energy density of empty space. Nicholas
Suntzeff of Texas A & M University will talk about dark energy with
supernovae. The WMAP satellite (Wilkinson Microwave Anistropy Probe)
has allowed astronomers to map the cosmic microwave background for
stunning evidence that most of the universe is made up of mysterious
dark energy. Eiichiro Komatsu of the University of Texas will talk
about WMAP.
- Modern ideas of gravity that go beyond general relativity
predict deviations from Newtonian gravitational law at sub-millimeter
distances. (A millimeter is 1/25 of an inch). Eric Adelberger of the
University of Washington will present the latest findings from
experiments on gravity at these miniscule distances.
- Several current and planned NASA missions
aim to test Einstein's theories in regimes that have never been
observed before. Stanford University's Francis Everitt will discuss
what to expect when scientists get first results from Gravity Probe B
in a few months. Craig Hogan of the University of Washington will brief
participants on the status of LISA, a planned space mission that will
detect gravitational waves from supermassive blackholes. Nicholas
White, director of the Astrophysics Science Division at NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center, will discuss NASA's "Beyond Einstein" initiative
for the next two decades. The program involves building and launching
several space missions that will test Einstein's theory of gravity in
different astrophysical settings.
- Recent results from several high-precision experiments
that are testing the most fundamental aspects of Einstein's theory.
Alan Kostelecky of Indiana University and Tom Murphy of the University
of California-San Diego will discuss current limits on violations of
such axioms as the Lorenz symmetry and the Equivalence Principle.
Professor James Peebles of Princeton University will give a public
talk for the UA Steward Observatory Evening Lecture Series at 7:30 p.m.
Monday, Jan. 22. Peebles' talk, "The Expanding Universe," will be in
the Steward Observatory lecture hall, room N210.
"We have convincing evidence that our universe is expanding from a
much hotter, denser state," Peebles said. "I will describe what is
meant by the expansion of the universe, how people arrived at the
evidence that this expansion really is happening, and some of the open
questions still to be solved, notably the natures of the dark matter
and dark energy that dominate the mass of the universe."
Others to attend the conference include Clifford Will of Washington
University, St. Louis, and Cliff Burgess of the Perimeter Institute,
McMaster University. Will has led an international effort to test
Einstein's theory of general relativity for the past three decades, and
his book on the subject, "Theory and Experiments in Gravitational
Physics," is the bible in the field. Burgess, one of the leading
theorists studying the idea that the universe may contain extra
dimensions that can be sensed only by gravity, is noted for his ability
to explain the ideas in non-technical terms.
"The most important aspect of this conference is that it brings
together, for the first time, all these researchers from many
difference research fields," Psaltis said. "New ideas born from
different branches of physics -- high energy physics and cosmology, for
example -- and many new experiments that involve very different
physical systems and techniques that include table-top experiments,
laser ranging with the moon, and gravity wave and other cosmological
observations provide an unprecedented opportunity to test and
understand the fundamental aspects of Einstein's theory of gravity."
Source: University of Arizona Story from: http://www.physorg.com/news87832863.html Conference site: http://www.physics.arizona.edu/gravity/
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