Mercury,
September/October 2006 Table of Contents
by
Paul Higgins
Everyone
looks up at the stars in awe, but only a few wonder how they got
there. Fewer still actually apply themselves to study of the stars
and heavens. And while numerous books for enthusiastic non-scientists
are written each year about cosmology, this grand branch of astronomy
remains one of mystery and a source of almost passive intimidation
for non-scientists.
Cosmology,
the study of the structure, dynamics, and evolution of the Universe,
is a field of intellectual endeavor supported by concepts that are
very abstract. Indeed, much of what we know about the Universe is
due primarily to observation and then a back-application or even
development of theory to explain or understand those observations.
The observations inform the theory, for the most part—observation
generates questions, which lead to scientists' formulated hypotheses
in response to those questions, which, when tested, eventually lead
to theory. And a theory, then, can inform subsequent observations.
Sort of a cosmological Ouroboros.
In
essence, cosmologists are describing structures that often we cannot
even see, and comparing the indirect experimental data to theoretical
calculations. Studying cosmology is akin to rattling a sealed box
and describing what is inside based on the sounds. For example,
understanding concepts such as curved, four-dimensional space is
for most people a huge mental leap into the seeming nothingness
of spacetime fabric—considering we cannot draw a true picture
or graph of it (see for example, "Using
a Brane to Probe the Bulk," March/April, p. 18)—yet
cosmologists routinely gird themselves in such ethereal cloth.
This
inevitably leads to the question of why society should fund cosmology
programs, especially when so few people apparently "get it."
This is a hard question to answer because physicists are competing
against requests for funding for humanitarian programs, such as
universal health care and building homes for the poor. A common
answer to the question of the value of cosmology research is, "Well,
we don’t know why it’s important now, but give us a
few years and maybe we’ll be able to say."
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