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Tufts Institute of Cosmology
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Department of Physics and Astronomy, Tufts University
574 Boston Avenue, Medford, MA 02155
Telephone: 617.627.5363
  
Fax: 617.627.3878
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Research
  
Overview:
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The Tufts Institute of Cosmology investigates a wide range of topics in theoretical
physics and cosmology, ranging from high-energy cosmic rays, cosmic strings and other
topological defects, energy conditions in general relativity, negative energies and
closed timelike curves, quantum fluctuations in the presence of gravitation,
cosmological inflation, eternal inflation and the multiverse, dark energy, anthropic
selection, quantum cosmology, and string cosmology, to name some areas of concentration.
Aspects of these topics are described below. To see a list of papers by Institute of
Cosmology members, click
here.
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Cosmic
  
Defects:
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Unified theories of particle interactions permit stable solutions referred to as "defects."
If big bang evolution cooled the universe through a phase transition breaking such unified
symmetries, then it is possible that cosmological defects were formed. These could leave
signatures in the form of gravity waves, cosmic microwave background anisotropies,
high-energy cosmic rays, etc., thus informing us of details of high-energy physics
otherwise inaccessible to experiment. Recent research has included studying the evolution and
observational effects of cosmic string and superstring networks.
The image to the left shows loops being emitted
from a fast-moving piece of cosmic string. For a larger image
and more information click
here.
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Inflation:
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The initial conditions for hot big bang evolution were probably established during a period
of false-vacuum energy domination in the very early universe, called "inflation." Aside
from establishing the homogeneity and isotropy of the universe, inflation leaves tell-tale
signatures in the cosmic microwave background, some of which have already been observed.
Yet, a particle-physics motivated model of inflation remains elusive. Recent work at the
Institute has included studying string-theory inspired models of inflation.
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The Multiverse:
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Cosmological inflation is generically eternal: although inflation ends in some regions of
spacetime, it persists indefinitely elsewhere. In this picture, our "universe" is one
thermalized pocket among an infinite set of others, collectively referred to as the
"multiverse." If the fundamental theory permits a set of vacuum solutions -- as occurs for
example in the string landscape -- then different pocket universes may have different
low-energy laws of physics. This picture has tantalizing consequences for cosmology. For
example, it offers perhaps the most plausible explanation for the observed non-zero
cosmological constant (dark energy). This explanation involves anthropic selection: the
string landscape contains vacua with a wide range of effective cosmological constants, but
galaxies -- and hence observers like us -- can only arise when the cosmological constant is
very small. Recent work has focused on how to define a probability measure over the
diverging spacetime volume of an eternally inflating multiverse, and on what predictions can
be made for the values of observable cosmological parameters.
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Negative
  
Energies:
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Is it possible to create a stable wormhole, or to travel faster than
light or backward in time? General relativity could produce
spacetimes with such exotic possibilities, if given the right
distribution of matter and energy to act as a source. But all such
exotic phenomena depend on sources with negative energy density.
Negative energies can arise in quantum mechanics, for example in the
Casimir effect, but their properties are strongly constrained. Recent
research has included quantum inequalities, which restrict the duration and
magnitude of negative energy densities, and studying the validity of certain
"energy conditions" which, if always obeyed, would imply that
necessary sources for such exotic phenomena can never arise.
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Quantum
  
Cosmology:
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Even though inflation may be eternal to the future, it cannot be eternal
to the past. A theorem, proved by Vilenkin in collaboration with Arvind
Borde and Alan Guth, shows that eternally inflating spacetimes are
incomplete to the past, indicating that inflation must have had
a beginning. What kind of a beginning could it be? A very intriguing
possibility is that a small closed universe filled with a high-energy
false vacuum could spontaneously materialize by tunneling
quantum-mechanically from "nothing" -- a state with no classical space and
time. The newly born universe immediately starts to inflate,
and its subsequent evolution is along the lines of the
inflationary scenario.
Quantum nucleation of the universe is illustrated in the picture on the
left. This picture also appears in the logo of the Tufts Institute of
Cosmology.
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Philsophy of
  
Cosmology:
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To make sense of probabilities in a very large or infinite universe
requires assuming that we are typical among all observers. Otherwise
we could belong to a very unusual civilization whose observations
have, by chance, given us incorrect information about the real world.
But such anthropic reasoning gives rise to a host of philosophical
issues. For example, the same ideas might allow one to infer that our
race will soon be extinct so that we ourselves live at a typical time
in human history instead of near the beginning, the
so-called "doomsday argument".
In an infinite universe, everything happens an infinite number of
times, so what does it mean to say that one thing is more likely than
another? Such problems are addressed by the use of a measure, but how
do we decide which measure to pick? Many measures have been proposed,
but all have counterintuitive properties.
Members of the Institute sometimes work on these issues, which lie on
the boundary between physics and philosophy.
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