http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Endless_Universe_Made_Possible_By_New_Model_999.html

A new cosmological model demonstrates the universe can endlessly 
expand and contract, providing a rival to Big Bang theories and 
solving a thorny modern physics problem, according to University of 
North Carolina at Chapel Hill physicists.
The cyclic model proposed by Dr. Paul Frampton, Louis J. Rubin Jr. 
distinguished professor of physics in UNC's College of Arts and 
Sciences, and co-author Lauris Baum, a UNC graduate student in 
physics, has four key parts: expansion, turnaround, contraction and 
bounce.

During expansion, dark energy -- the unknown force causing the 
universe to expand at an accelerating rate -- pushes and pushes until 
all matter fragments into patches so far apart that nothing can bridge 
the gaps. Everything from black holes to atoms disintegrates. This 
point, just a fraction of a second before the end of time, is the 
turnaround.

At the turnaround, each fragmented patch collapses and contracts 
individually instead of pulling back together in a reversal of the Big 
Bang. The patches become an infinite number of independent universes 
that contract and then bounce outward again, reinflating in a manner 
similar to the Big Bang. One patch becomes our universe.

"This cycle happens an infinite number of times, thus eliminating any 
start or end of time," Frampton said. "There is no Big Bang."

An article describing the model is available on the arXiv.org e-print 
archive and will appear in an upcoming issue of Physical Review 
Letters. The work was supported in part by a U.S. Department of Energy 
grant.

Cosmologists first offered an oscillating universe model, with no 
beginning or end, as a Big Bang alternative in the 1930s. The idea was 
abandoned because the oscillations could not be reconciled with the 
rules of physics, including the second law of thermodynamics, Frampton 
said.

The second law says entropy (a measure of disorder) can't be 
destroyed. But if entropy increases from one oscillation to the next, 
the universe becomes larger with each cycle. "The universe would grow 
like a runaway snowball," Frampton said. Each oscillation will also 
become successively longer. "Extrapolating backwards in time, this 
implies that the oscillations before our present one were shorter and 
shorter. This leads inevitably to a Big Bang," he said.

Frampton and Baum circumvent the Big Bang by postulating that, at the 
turnaround, any remaining entropy is in patches too remote for 
interaction. Having each "causal patch" become a separate universe 
allows each universe to contract essentially empty of matter and 
entropy. "The presence of any matter creates insuperable difficulties 
with contraction," Frampton said. "The idea of coming back empty is 
the most important ingredient of this new cyclic model."

This concept jolted Frampton when it popped into his head last 
October.

"I suddenly saw there was a new way of solving this seemingly 
impossible problem," he said. "I was sitting with my feet on my desk, 
half-asleep and puzzled, and I almost fell out of my chair when I 
realized there was a much, much simpler possibility."

Also key to Frampton and Baum's model is an assumption about dark 
energy's equation of state -- the mathematical description of its 
pressure and density. Frampton and Baum assume dark energy's equation 
of state is always less than -1. This distinguishes their work from a 
similar cyclic model proposed in 2002 by physicists Paul Steinhardt 
and Neil Turok, who assumed the equation of state is never less 
than -1.

A negative equation of state gives Frampton and Baum a way to stop the 
universe from blowing itself apart irreversibly, an end physicists 
call the "Big Rip." The pair found that in their model, the density of 
dark energy becomes equal to the density of the universe and expansion 
stops just before the Big Rip.

New satellites currently under construction, such as the European 
Space Agency's Planck satellite, could gather enough information to 
determine dark energy's equation of state, Frampton said.

A copy of the paper may be downloaded here. ( 
http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0610213 )



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