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Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
#1
Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
Has basic Science now ended?  In other words, are QED (Quantum Electrodynamics), QCD and General Relativity basically complete theories and there really is no hope of anything beyond those?  Or, will String Theory, M Theory, or some successor theory unite all theories into something even greater, something that leads to testable predictions?  Or, as Sean Carroll says, does it even matter:

[Image: Everyday-Equation.jpg]
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#2
RE: Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
Given that, as has been said, 'The universe is not only queerer than we imagine, be queerer than we can imagine', I doubt very much that science is complete. This concern has been voiced before: When Max Planck was trying to decide whether to pursue physics or mathematics as a career, his faculty advisor suggested maths, as, 'Physics is finished - all that remains is the refining of a few measurements.

Boru
‘But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods or no gods. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.’ - Thomas Jefferson
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#3
RE: Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
What we have here is the so-called path integral of the Standard Model of particles physics, embedded in a quantized version of Einstein's General relativity.

There's one symbol hidden in this very formula which indicates that this description is not complete. It's the upper case letter Lambda (looks like an A without the cross bar) right below the first integral sign (the big S).

k < Lambda tells you that we only take into account energies below the so-called cutoff energy scale Lambda, and ignore any goings-on higher than lambda. This is necessary because general relativity is what is called non-renormalizable - it contains infinities as you go to arbitrary large energies which cannot be gotten rid off in a consistent manner unless you introduce an infinite amount of parameters into the theory, which is not done in the above formula.

To a certain extent, the physics that goes on above this energy scale where we cut, can be represented as shifts in the known physical constants (this is made sure by the famed Appelquist-Carazzone-Theorem), but this is not an exact procedure:
strictly speaking, we need to include a whole infinite tail of additional field interaction terms into this formula to really capture the complete physics as observed at low energy processes.

As long as we study processes at energies far below the cutoff energy lambda, these additional terms contribute less and less to the physical goings-on and can be neglected to very good precision. But the necessity to have Lambda at all shows us the incompleteness of quantum gravity which is so often talked about.

If in the above formula you leave out the part labelled "Gravity", there is a consistent procedure to send Lambda to infinity and consistently get rid of this upper limit - this procedure is called renormalization and was introduced among others by Feynman, Schwinger and Tomonaga in the 1940s for the theory of quantum electrodynamics, which got them their Nobel. Gerardus 't Hooft and Martinus Veltman got their Nobel in 1999 for showing that renormalization also works for the full Standard Model of particle physics. Interestingly, they also showed that the Higgs Boson is essential theoretically in order to remove the cutoff energy scale from the theory. For Einsteinian gravity however, the standard renormalization procedure doesn't simply work because of the above-mentioned infinities. There are theorists who try to argue that there are renormalization prescriptions which do indeed work, but this issue is far from settled.
The fool hath said in his heart, There is a God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good.
Psalm 14, KJV revised edition

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#4
RE: Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
(March 4, 2017 at 7:36 am)Alex K Wrote: What we have here is the so-called path integral of the Standard Model of particles physics, embedded in a quantized version of Einstein's General relativity.

There's one symbol hidden in this very formula which indicates that this description is not complete. It's the upper case letter Lambda (looks like an A without the cross bar) right below the first integral sign (the big S).  

k < Lambda tells you that we only take into account energies below the so-called cutoff energy scale Lambda, and ignore any goings-on higher than lambda. This is necessary because general relativity is what is called non-renormalizable - it contains infinities as you go to arbitrary large energies which cannot be gotten rid off in a consistent manner unless you introduce an infinite amount of paramters into the theory.

Strictly speaking, once we have this cutoff scale in the path integral, we need to include a whole infinite tail of additional terms into this formula to really capture the complete physics as observed at low energies.  As long as we study processes at energies far below the cutoff energy lambda, these additional terms contribute less and less to the physical goings-on and can be neglected to very good precision. But the necessity to have Lambda at all shows us the incompleteness of quantum gravity which is so often talked about.

Yeah, that's what I meant. Really it is.

Boru
‘But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods or no gods. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.’ - Thomas Jefferson
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#5
RE: Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
(March 4, 2017 at 7:39 am)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote:
(March 4, 2017 at 7:36 am)Alex K Wrote: What we have here is the so-called path integral of the Standard Model of particles physics, embedded in a quantized version of Einstein's General relativity.

There's one symbol hidden in this very formula which indicates that this description is not complete. It's the upper case letter Lambda (looks like an A without the cross bar) right below the first integral sign (the big S).  

k < Lambda tells you that we only take into account energies below the so-called cutoff energy scale Lambda, and ignore any goings-on higher than lambda. This is necessary because general relativity is what is called non-renormalizable - it contains infinities as you go to arbitrary large energies which cannot be gotten rid off in a consistent manner unless you introduce an infinite amount of paramters into the theory.

Strictly speaking, once we have this cutoff scale in the path integral, we need to include a whole infinite tail of additional terms into this formula to really capture the complete physics as observed at low energies.  As long as we study processes at energies far below the cutoff energy lambda, these additional terms contribute less and less to the physical goings-on and can be neglected to very good precision. But the necessity to have Lambda at all shows us the incompleteness of quantum gravity which is so often talked about.

Yeah, that's what I meant.  Really it is.

Boru

You are wiser than you are.
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#6
RE: Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
(March 4, 2017 at 7:36 am)Alex K Wrote: What we have here is the so-called path integral of the Standard Model of particles physics, embedded in a quantized version of Einstein's General relativity.

There's one symbol hidden in this very formula which indicates that this description is not complete. It's the upper case letter Lambda (looks like an A without the cross bar) right below the first integral sign (the big S).  

k < Lambda tells you that we only take into account energies below the so-called cutoff energy scale Lambda, and ignore any goings-on higher than lambda. This is necessary because general relativity is what is called non-renormalizable - it contains infinities as you go to arbitrary large energies which cannot be gotten rid off in a consistent manner unless you introduce an infinite amount of parameters into the theory, which is not done in the above formula.

To a certain extent, the physics that goes on above this energy scale where we cut, can be represented as shifts in the known physical constants (this is made sure by the famed Appelquist-Carazzone-Theorem), but this is not an exact procedure:
strictly speaking, we need to include a whole infinite tail of additional field interaction terms into this formula to really capture the complete physics as observed at low energy processes.  

As long as we study processes at energies far below the cutoff energy lambda, these additional terms contribute less and less to the physical goings-on and can be neglected to very good precision. But the necessity to have Lambda at all shows us the incompleteness of quantum gravity which is so often talked about.

If in the above formula you leave out the part labelled "Gravity", there is a consistent procedure to send Lambda to infinity and consistently get rid of this upper limit - this procedure is called renormalization and was introduced among others by Feynman, Schwinger and Tomonaga in the 1940s for the theory of quantum electrodynamics, which got them their Nobel. Gerardus 't Hooft and Martinus Veltman got their Nobel in 1999 for showing that renormalization also works for the full Standard Model of particle physics. Interestingly, they also showed that the Higgs Boson is essential theoretically in order to remove the cutoff energy scale from the theory. For Einsteinian gravity however, the standard renormalization procedure doesn't simply work because of the above-mentioned infinities. There are theorists who try to argue that there are renormalization prescriptions which do indeed work, but this issue is far from settled.

It's not my formula, Alex!  But, thanks (again) for your very wonderful explanation!!  Carroll, by the way, would say that k < lamba is for nearly everything that happens in our World, including, the stuff that is going on in our brains, and so, basically, the so-called Core Theory is, more or less, complete.
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#7
RE: Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
And he's correct. The effects of the cutoff play basically no role in describing the physics behind what goes on around us - it's a Theory of almost everything, as someone put it once.
The fool hath said in his heart, There is a God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good.
Psalm 14, KJV revised edition

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#8
RE: Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
(March 4, 2017 at 9:11 am)Alex K Wrote: And he's correct. The effects of the cutoff play basically no role in describing the physics behind what goes on around us - it's a Theory of almost everything, as someone put it once.

Just not any of everything if one go back close enough to the Big Bang.
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#9
RE: Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
(March 4, 2017 at 9:24 am)Anomalocaris Wrote:
(March 4, 2017 at 9:11 am)Alex K Wrote: And he's correct. The effects of the cutoff play basically no role in describing the physics behind what goes on around us - it's a Theory of almost everything, as someone put it once.

Just not any of everything if one go back close enough to the Big Bang.

That's among other things because the temperatures there will rise above any Lambda if you go back far enough, and setting lambda larger than the planck energy won't work.
The fool hath said in his heart, There is a God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good.
Psalm 14, KJV revised edition

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#10
RE: Does Physics now have a complete description of Nature?
All this understanding of "almost everything," and I still can't understand whether my wife wants me to turn left or right. Tongue
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