Subscribe to New Scientist magazine
ARTICLE PREVIEW
This article is only available to subscribers of New Scientist magazine. Subscribe now for full-text access to all content on this site.

The shape of universes to come

  • 30 July 2005
  • Davide Castelvecchi
  • Magazine issue 2510

COUNTLESS times each day inside the world's atom smashers, subatomic particles collide head-on and then break up in elaborate dances. A zillionth of a second later they reach more stable states, and then fly away, eventually reaching detectors.

It doesn't only happen in experiments. This is also the story of the universe. Particles created in the big bang flew apart, eventually combining into larger particles, atoms, planets, trees and people as the universe expanded. It's like what goes on inside an atom-smashing particle accelerator, only the universe is a huge, slow-motion experiment, playing out over billions of years.

Or is it? For years, physicists have used this analogy between atom smashers and the universe as a guiding principle towards the elusive theory of everything. The main reason for this is that the atom smasher idea happens to fit well with string theory - the theory that replaces subatomic particles with ...

The complete article is 2201 words long.
Password Login
username:
password:
 help
Athens Login
Athens users ONLY
help
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
New Scientist Full Access is available free to magazine subscribers

Subscribe today at only USD $5.95 for your first 4 issues and get New Scientist, the world's leading science & technology news magazine delivered direct to your door every week

As a magazine subscriber you will benefit from instant access to:

  • the full text of this article
  • all Full Access content on newscientist.com
  • 15 years of past issues of New Scientist via the online Archive
Subscribe now