The universe could be wrapped around, a little bit like a "soccer ball", the volume of which would represent only 80% of the observable universe ! (figure 1) According to the leading cosmologist George Ellis, from Cape Town University (South Africa), who comments this letter in the "News & Views" of the same issue : "If confirmed, it is a major discovery about the nature of the universe".
Primordial fluctuations
Cosmologists study the topology of space by analyzing in great details the temperature fluctuations of the fossil Cosmic Microwave Background [note a]. The standard cosmological model describes the universe as a flat infinite space in eternal, accelerated expansion under the effect of a repulsive "dark energy". The data collected by the NASA satellite WMAP (Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe), which has recently produced a high resolution map of the CMB, allowed to check the validity of such an expansion model. Temperature fluctuations on small and mean scales (i.e. concerning regions of the sky of relatively modest size) are compatible with the infinite flat space hypothesis. However, on angular scales larger than 60 degrees, the observed correlations are notably weaker that those predicted by the standard model. Thus the scientists are looking for an alternative. CMB temperature anisotropies essentially result from density fluctuations of the primordial universe : a photon coming from a denser region will loose a fraction of its energy to compete against gravity, and will reach us cooler. On the contrary, photons emitted from less dense regions will be received hotter. The density fluctuations result from the superposition of acoustic waves which propagated in the primordial plasma - see previous press releases Vibrations of the cosmic drumhead ? (jan 2003) and A small spherical universe after all ? (dec 2001). The franco-american team of scientists has recently developed complex theoretical models to reproduce the amplitude of such fluctuations, which can be considered as vibrations of the universe itself. In particular, they simulated high resolution CMB maps for various space topologies [2] and were able to compare their results with real WMAP data. Depending on the underlying topology, the distribution of the fluctuations differs. For instance, in an infinite "flat" (Euclidean) space, all wavelengths are allowed, and fluctuations must be present at all scales.
Cosmic Harmonics
Like acoustic waves, the CMB temperature fluctuations can be decomposed into a sum of spherical harmonics [note b]. The first observable harmonics is the quadrupole (whose wavenumer is l=2). WMAP has observed a value of the quadrupole 7 times weaker than expected in a flat infinite universe. The probability that such a discrepancy occurs by chance has been estimated to 0.2% only. The octopole (whose wavenumber is l=3) is also weaker (72%) than the expected value. For larger wavenumbers up to l=900 (which correspond to temperature fluctuations at small angular scales), observations are remarkably consistent with the standard cosmological model.
The unusually low quadrupole value means that long wavelengths are missing, may be because space is not big enough to sustain them. Such a situation may be compared to a vibraring string fixed at its two extremities, for which the maximum wavelength of an oscillation is twice the string length. A natural explanation of such a phenomenon relies on a model of finite space whose size constrains the wavelengths below a maximum value. The proposed space is the Poincaré dodecahedral space [note c].
The associated power spectrum, namely the repartition of fluctuations as a function of their wavelengths corresponding to the Poincaré dodecahedral space, strongly depends on the value of the mass-energy density parameter [note d]. There is a small interval of values within which the spectral fit is good, and in agreement with the value of the density parameter deduced from WMAP data (1.02 plus or minus 0.02). The result is quite remarkable because the Poincaré space has no degree of freedom. By contrast, a 3-dimensional torus, constructed by gluing together the opposite faces of a cube and which constitutes a possible topology for a finite Euclidean space, may be deformed into any parallelepiped : therefore its geometrical construction depends on 6 degrees of freedom.
The Poincaré Dodecahedral Space accounts for the low value of the quadrupole as observed by WMAP in the fluctuation spectrum, and provides a good value of the octopole. To be confirmed, such a "soccer-ball" model of space must satisfy two experimental tests : A finer analysis of WMAP data, or new data from the future European satellite Planck Surveyor (scheduled 2007), will be able to determine the value of the energy density parameter with a precision of 1%. A value lower than 1.01 will discard the Poincaré space as a model for cosmic space, whereas a value greater than 1.01 will confirm its cosmological pertinence. If space has a non trivial topology, there must be particular correlations in the CMB, namely pairs of correlated circles along which temperature fluctuations should be the same [3]. The Poincaré Dodecahedral Space model predicts 6 pairs of circles with an angular radius of 35°. The model is therefore an ideal candidate to test the method of "matched circles" originally devised by the American astrophysicists N. Cornish, D. Spergel and G. Starkman [4]
Notes
[a] The Cosmic Background Radiation, also called Fossil Radiation, is the relics of the radiation emitted soon after the Big Bang (about 400 000 years later), when matter and radiation decoupled. The tiny temperature irregularities of such a radiation allow to measure the density fluctuations of the matter present at this epoch, such fluctuations being the seeds of all galaxies and galaxy clusters.[b] The temperature fluctuations of the Cosmic Background Radiation may be decomposed into a sum of spherical harmonics , much like the sound produced by a music instrument may be decomposed into ordinary harmonics. The "fundamental" fixes the height of the note (as for instance a 440 hertz acouctic frequency fixes the "A" of the pitch), whereas the relative amplitudes of each harmonics determine the tone quality (such as the A played by a piano differs from the A played by a harpsichord). Concerning the relic radiation, the relative amplitudes of each spherical harmonics determine the power spectrum, which is a signature of the geometry of space and of the physical conditions which prevailed at the time of CMB emission.[c] Poincaré space may be represented by a dodecahedron (a regular polyhedron with 12 pentagonal faces) whose opposite faces are glued after a 36 degrees twist ; such a space is positively curved, and is a multiply connected variant of the hypersphere, with a volume 120 times smaller. A rocket going out of the dodecahedron by crossing a given face immediately re-enters by the opposite face. Propagation of light rays is such that any observer whose line-of-sight intercepts one face has the illusion to see inside a copy of his own dodecahedron (since his line-of-sight re-enters the original dodecahedron from the opposite side).[d] The mass-energy density parameter characterizes the contents (matter and all forms of energy) of the universe. The curvature of space depends on the value of this parameter, usually denoted Omega. If Omega is greater than 1, then space curvature is positive and geometry is spherical ; if Omega is smaller than 1 the curvature is negative and the geometry is hyperbolic ; eventually Omega is strictly equal to 1 and space is "flat" (Euclidean geometry).
References
- [1] J.-P. Luminet, LUTH, CNRS-UMR 8102, Observatoire de Paris, France J. Weeks, Canton, USAA. Riazuelo, Service de Physique Théorique, CEA Saclay, FranceR. Lehoucq, Service d’Astrophysique, CEA Saclay, FranceJ.-P. Uzan, Laboratoire de Physique Théorique, Orsay et Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris, France Dodecahedral space topology as an explanation for weak wide-angle temperature correlations in the cosmic microwave backgroundArticle published in Nature, 9 octobre 2003, vol. 425, p. 593-595.
- [2] Simulating cosmic microwave background maps in multi-connected universes, A. Riazuelo, J.-P. Uzan, R. Lehoucq and J. Weeks (e-print astro-ph/0212223).Detecting topology of nearly flat spherical universes, R. Lehoucq, J.-P. Uzan and J. Weeks, Class. Quant. Grav. 20, 1529-1542, 2003, (e-print astro-ph/0209389)Eigenmodes of compact spherical spaces and their applications to cosmology, R. Lehoucq, J.-P. Uzan, J. Weeks, J.-P. Luminet and E. Gausmann, Class. Quantum Grav. 19, 4683-4708, 2002, (e-print gr-qc/0205009)
- [3] L’Univers chiffonné, J.- P. Luminet, Fayard, Paris, 2001, 369 p. ; L’univers... vu d’ailleurs, J.-P. Uzan, Pour la Science vol. 308, p. 56, juin 2003.
- [4] N. Cornish, D. Spergel et G. Starkman, Classical and Quantum Gravity 15, 2657-2670, 1998 (e-print astro-ph/9801212)