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Mercury,
March/April 2006 Table of Contents

by
Chad A. Middleton
Imagine
by crude illustration that our universe is a slice of bread, one
particular slice from a larger loaf. This odd imagining is not too
far removed from how some cosmologists have begun to picture the
Universe.
Now,
in the parlance of cosmology, let us imagine our universe, the "slice,"
is a four-dimensional hypersurface-referred to as a 3-brane, "brane"
being short for membrane-that resides in a higher dimensional "bulk"
space, the "loaf." Further, consider that all forces and
all matter (you, me, electrons, your iPod, etc.) are embedded in
this 3-brane. Except for gravity, that is, which may be unique among
the four fundamental forces in that it may roam freely both on the
brane hypersurface and in the bulk space.
This
general picture describes several braneworld models that physicists
are studying in an attempt to understand the Universe, its origins,
and its characteristics. For example, back in 1998 astronomers discovered
that the rate of expansion of the Universe is increasing; since
then a number of scientists have considered what might drive this
acceleration—possibly an unseen though ever-present dark energy?
One particular braneworld model, referred to in the scientific literature
as the DGP model, stands alone in that it appears to offer an alternative
explanation to dark energy as the cause of the universal acceleration.
Sounds more like science fiction than science, right?
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