Unfinished
Symphony
Strings may do what Einstein finally failed to do: tie together
the two great irreconcilable ideas of 20th century physics
BY J. MADELEINE NASH
I am generally regarded as a sort of petrified object, rendered
deaf and blind by the years," Albert Einstein confided near
the end of his life. He was, alas, correct. During the last three
decades of his remarkable career, Einstein had become obsessed by
the dream of producing a unified field theory, a series of equations
that would establish an underlying link between the seemingly unrelated
forces of gravity and electromagnetism.
In
so doing, Einstein hoped also to resolve the conflict between two
competing visions of the universe: the smooth continuum of space-time,
where stars and planets reign, as described by his general theory
of relativity, and the unseemly jitteriness of the submicroscopic
quantum world, where particles hold sway.
Einstein
worked hard on the problem, but success eluded him. That was no
surprise to his contemporaries, who saw his quest as a quixotic
indulgence. They were sure that the greatest of all their colleagues
was simply wasting his time, relying on a conceptual approach that
was precisely backward. In contrast to just about all other physicists,
Einstein was convinced that in the conflict between quantum mechanics
and general relativity, it was the former that constituted the crux
of the problem. "I must seem like an ostrich who forever buries
its head in the relativistic sand in order not to face the evil
quanta," Einstein reflected in 1954.
We
know now, however, that it is Einstein's theory that ultimately
fails. On extremely fine scales, space-time, and thus reality itself,
becomes grainy and discontinuous, like a badly overmagnified newspaper
photograph. The equations of general relativity simply can't handle
such a situation, where the laws of cause and effect break down
and particles jump from point A to point B without going through
the space in between. In such a world, you can only calculate what
will probably happen next--which is just what quantum theory is
designed to do.
Einstein
could never accept that the universe was at its heart a cosmic crapshoot,
so that today his papers on unified field theory seem hopelessly
archaic. But the puzzle they tried to solve is utterly fundamental.
In simply recognizing the problem, Einstein was so daringly far-sighted
that only now has the rest of physics begun to catch up. A new generation
of physicists has at last taken on the challenge of creating a complete
theory--one capable of explaining, in Einstein's words, "every
element of the physical reality." And judging from the progress
they have made, the next century could usher in an intellectual
revolution even more exciting than the one Einstein helped launch
in the early 1900s.
Already,
in fact, theoretical physicists have succeeded in constructing a
framework that offers the best hope yet of integrating gravity with
nature's other fundamental forces. This framework is popularly known
as string theory because it postulates that the smallest, indivisible
components of the universe are not point-like particles but infinitesimal
loops that resemble tiny vibrating strings. "String theory,"
pioneering theorist Edward Witten of Einstein's own Institute for
Advanced Study has observed, "is a piece of 21st century physics
that fell by chance into the 20th century."
The
trouble is, neither Witten nor anyone else knows how many other
pieces must fall into place before scientists succeed in solving
this greatest of all puzzles. One major reason, observes Columbia
University physicist Brian Greene, is that string theory developed
backward. "In most theories, physicists first see an overarching
idea and then put equations to it." In string theory, says
Greene, "we're still trying to figure out the central nugget
of truth."
Over
the years, enthusiasm for string theory has waxed and waned. It
enjoyed a brief vogue in the early 1970s, but then most physicists
stopped working on it. Theorist John Schwarz of Caltech and his
colleague Joel Scherk of the Ecole Normale Supérieure, however,
persevered, and in 1974 their patience was rewarded. For some time
they had noticed that some of the vibrating strings spilling out
of their equations didn't correspond to the particles they had expected.
At first they viewed these mathematical apparitions as nuisances.
Then they looked at them more closely; the ghosts that haunted their
equations, they decided, were gravitons, the still hypothetical
particles that are believed to carry the gravitational force.
Replacing
particles with strings eliminated at least one problem that had
bedeviled scientists trying to meld general relativity and quantum
mechanics. This difficulty arose because space lacks smoothness
below subatomic scales. When distances become unimaginably small,
space bubbles and churns frenetically, an effect sometimes referred
to as quantum foam. Pointlike particles, including the graviton,
are likely to be tossed about by quantum foam, like Lilliputian
boats to which ripples in the ocean loom as large waves. Strings,
by contrast, are miniature ocean liners whose greater size lets
them span many waves at once, making them impervious to such disturbances.
Nature
rarely bestows gifts on scientists, however, without exacting a
price, and the price, in this case, takes the form of additional
complications. Among other things, string theory requires the existence
of up to seven dimensions in addition to the by now familiar four
(height, width, length and time). It also requires the existence
of an entirely new class of subatomic particles, known as supersymmetric
particles, or "sparticles." Moreover, there isn't just
one string theory but five. Although scientists could rule out none
of them, it seemed impossible that all of them could be right.
But
that, in fact, has turned out to be the case. In 1995, Witten, perhaps
the most brilliant theorist working in physics today, declared that
all five supersymmetric string theories represented different approximations
of a deeper, underlying theory. He called it M theory. The insight
electrified his colleagues and inspired a flurry of productive activity
that has now convinced many that string theory is, in fact, on the
right track. "It smells right and it feels right," declares
Caltech's Kip Thorne, an expert on black holes and general relativity.
"At this early stage in the development of a theory, you have
to go on smell and feel."
The
M in M theory stands for many things, says Witten, including matrix,
mystery and magic. But now he has added murky to the list. Why?
Not even Witten, it turns out, has been able to write down the full
set of mathematical equations that describe exactly what M theory
is, for it has added still more layers of complexity to an already
enormous problem. Witten appears reconciled to the possibility that
decades may pass before M matures into a theory with real predictive
power. "It's like when you're hiking in the mountains,"
he muses, "and occasionally you reach the top of a pass and
get a completely new view. You enjoy the view for a bit, until eventually
the truth sinks in. You're still a long way from your destination."
Einstein
was brilliant, of course, but he was also lucky. When he developed
the general theory of relativity, he dealt with a world that had
just three spatial dimensions plus time. As a result, he could use
off-the-shelf mathematics to develop and solve his equations. M
theorists can't: their science resides in an 11-dimensional world
that is filled with weird objects called branes. Strings, in this
nomenclature, are one-dimensional branes; membranes are two-dimensional
branes. But there are also higher-dimensional branes that no one,
including Witten, quite knows how to deal with. For these branes
can fold and curl into any number of bewildering shapes.
Which
shapes represent the fundamental structures in our universe? On
this point, string theorists are currently clueless. For the world
conjured into existence by M theory is so exotic that scientists
are being forced to work not just at the frontier of physics but
at the frontier of mathematics as well. Indeed, it may be that they
lack some absolutely essential tool and will have to develop it,
just as Isaac Newton was pushed by his investigations of the laws
of motion to develop the calculus. As if that weren't hard enough,
there is yet another major impediment to progress: unlike quantum
mechanics, string theory and its offshoots have developed in the
virtual absence of experimental evidence that could help steer theorists
in productive directions.
Over
the next decade, this situation could change. Hopes are running
high that upcoming experiments at giant particle colliders in the
U.S. and Europe will provide the first tantalizing glimpses of supersymmetry.
More speculatively, these experiments could also detect the first
subtle signs of additional dimensions.
What
would Einstein have made of such wild imaginings? Columbia's Greene,
for one, thinks he would have loved them. After all, Greene notes
in his recently published book, "The Elegant Universe,"
Einstein played around with the idea of extra dimensions as a strategy
for producing a unified field theory.
In
fact, Greene believes a young Einstein, starting his professional
career now rather than at the turn of the past century, would have
overcome his deep distrust of quantum mechanics and enthusiastically
embraced branes and sparticles and superstrings. And given his almost
superhuman ability to transcend conventional thinking and visualize
the world in unprecedented ways, he might have been the one to crack
the ultimate theory. It may in the end take an Einstein to complete
Einstein's unfinished intellectual symphony.
-END
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