The idea of the universe as a ‘giant brain’ has been proposed by scientists – and science fiction writers – for decades.
But now physicists say there may be some evidence that it’s actually true. In a sense.
According to a study published in Nature’s Scientific Reports, the
universe may be growing in the same way as a giant brain – with the
electrical firing between brain cells ‘mirrored’ by the shape of
expanding galaxies.
The results of a computer simulation suggest that “natural growth
dynamics” – the way that systems evolve – are the same for different
kinds of networks – whether its the internet, the human brain or the
universe as a whole.
A co-author of the study, Dmitri Krioukov from the University of
California San Diego, said that while such systems appear very
different, they have evolved in very similar ways.
The result, they argue, is that the universe really does grow like a brain.
The study raises profound questions about how the universe works, Krioukov said.
“For a physicist it’s an immediate signal that there is some missing understanding of how nature works,” he told Space.com.
The team’s simulation modelled the very early life of the universe,
shortly after the big bang, by looking at how quantum units of
space-time smaller than subatomic particles ‘networked’ with each other
as the universe grew.
They found that the simulation mirrored that of other networks. Some
links between similar nodes resulted in limited growth, while others
acted as junctions for many different connections.
For instance, some connections are limited and similar – like a
person who likes sports visiting many other sports websites – and some
are major and connect to many other parts of the network, like Google
and Yahoo.
No, it doesn’t quite mean that the universe is ‘thinking’ – but as
has been previously pointed out online, it might just mean there’s more
similarity between the very small and the very large than first
appearances suggest.
Source: Huffington Post
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