ICTP 2018 Salam Distinguished Lecture Series: "Inflationary
Cosmology: Is Our Universe Part of a Multiverse? ".
ICTP is pleased to announce that Professor Alan Guth, will
deliver this year’s Salam Distinguished Lecture Series on 29,
30 and 31 January in the Budinich Lecture Hall, ICTP, at
17:00.
Biosketch: Alan Guth is the Victor F.
Weisskopf Professor of Physics and a Margaret MacVicar Faculty
Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Trained in
particle theory at MIT, Guth held postdoc positions at
Princeton, Columbia, Cornell, and SLAC (the Stanford Linear
Accelerator Center) before returning to MIT as a faculty member
in 1980. His work in cosmology began at Cornell, when fellow
postdoc Henry Tye persuaded him to study the production of
magnetic monopoles in the early universe. Using standard
assumptions, they found that far too many would be produced.
Continuing this work at SLAC, Guth discovered that the magnetic
monopole glut could be avoided by a new proposal which he called
the inflationary universe. Guth's honors include ICTP's Dirac
Prize, the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics, and the
2014 Kavli Prize in Astrophysics. Guth is still busy exploring
the consequences of inflation. He has also written a
popular-level book called "The Inflationary Universe: The Quest
for a New Theory of Cosmic Origins" (Addison-Wesley/Perseus
Books, 1997)
There will be 3 lectures, on 29, 30 and 31 January 2018, start
time: 17.00 hrs.
TODAY, Lecture I: "Inflationary Cosmology: Is Our Universe
Part of a Multiverse?" Abstract: Inflationary cosmology gives a
plausible explanation for many observed features of the
universe, including its uniformity, its mass density, and the
patterns of the ripples that are observed in the cosmic
microwave background. Beyond what we can observe, most versions
of inflation imply that our universe is not unique, but is part
of a possibly infinite multiverse. I will describe the workings
of inflation, the evidence for inflation, and why I believe that
the possibility of a multiverse should be taken seriously.
Lecture II: "Eternal Inflation and its Implications"
Abstract: This lecture will further explore the connection
between inflation and the multiverse. I will describe the
mechanism of inflation in more detail, showing why most versions
lead to eternal inflation: once inflation starts, it never
completely stops, but instead the inflating region grows
forever, producing "pocket universes" ad infinitum. Eternal
inflation is in some ways very attractive, because, for example,
it offers a possible explanation for why the energy density of
the vacuum is so incredibly small. But it also leads to the
"measure problem": how does one define probabilities in an
infinite system in which any allowed event is expected to occur
an infinite number of times?
Lecture III: "Infinite Phase Space and the Two-Headed
Arrow of Time" Abstract: One of the unsolved mysteries of
physics is the arrow of time: the laws of physics make no
distinction between the future and the past, but in our
experience they are entirely different. The arrow of time can be
identified with the growth of entropy, but what caused the
entropy to be lower in the past? I will describe a speculative
picture which shows how an arrow of time can develop naturally,
provided that the available phase space is infinite, even in a
system with time-reversible laws of physics, and with no special
initial conditions. I will also discuss the alternative
possibility that the phase space available to the universe is
finite, arguing that this assumption leads to serious
cosmological problems.
The ICTP Salam Distinguished Lecture Series is
sponsored by the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of
Sciences.
The lecture series will also be livestreamed from the ICTP
website at: http://video.ictp.it/livestream
For more information, see also: http://indico.ictp.it/event/8289/
You are all warmly invited to attend. Light refreshments will
be served after the lectures.
Kind regards,
Fernando Quevedo
Director