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Stephen Hawking’s paper cuts ‘multiverse’ theory down to size

May 06, 2018 09:51 pm | Updated May 07, 2018 07:29 am IST - Paris

The British cosmologist’s report, co-authored with Thomas Hertog, was posthumously published this week

FILE - In this Wednesday, July 21, 1999 file photo Professor Stephen Hawking smiles during a news conference at the University of Potsdam, near Berlin, Germany. Hawking, whose brilliant mind ranged across time and space though his body was paralyzed by disease, has died, a family spokesman said early Wednesday, March 14, 2018.(AP Photo/Markus Schreiber, File)

With a science paper published after his death, Stephen Hawking has revived debate on a deeply divisive question for cosmologists: is the universe just one of many in an infinite, ever-expanding “multiverse”?

According to one school of thought, the cosmos started expanding exponentially after the Big Bang.

In most parts, this expansion or “inflation” continues eternally, except for a few pockets where it stops. These pockets are where universes like ours are formed — multitudes of them that are often likened to “bubbles” in an ever-expanding ocean dubbed the multiverse.

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Many scientists don’t like the idea, including Hawking, who said in an interview last year: “I have never been a fan of the multiverse.”

If we do live in an ever-inflating multiverse, it would mean the laws of physics and chemistry can differ from one universe to another, a concept that scientists struggle to accept. In his last contribution to cosmology, Hawking — with co-author Thomas Hertog from the KU Leuven university in Belgium — does not dismiss the multiverse concept, but proposes dramatically scaling it down.

“We are not down to a single, unique universe,” the University of Cambridge quoted Hawking as saying of the paper submitted before his death on March 14 and published this week in the

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Journal of High Energy Physics .

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The British cosmologist died at the age of 76 after a lifelong battle against motor neurone disease, which paralysed him and left him unable to speak.

However, “our findings simply a significant reduction of the multiverse, to a much smaller range of possible universes.”

The new hypothesis relies on a branch of theoretical physics known as string theory, and concludes that the cosmos is “clearly finite”, Mr. Hertog said.

“It is a debate that touches on the very foundations of cosmology. The underlying question is whether we can achieve a deeper understanding of where the laws of nature come from, and whether they are unique,” Mr. Hertog added.

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