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Have We Been LIED to About Intelligent Design? | Fred Adams
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The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast

Have We Been LIED to About Intelligent Design? | Fred Adams

BK

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Brian Keating

FA

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Fred Adams

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00:00 "What-If Universes Explored" 03:56 Cosmological Constant's Time Dependence? 08:16 "Cosmological Constant Problem Overview" 10:02 Energy Scale Adjustments in Physics 14:43 Fine-Tuning in Astrophysics 17:06 Cosmological Constant and Universe Formation 21:27 Radio Tuning Requires 1% Accuracy 23:51 "Fine-Tuning Debate in Parameters" 27:02 Nuclear Fusion in Stars Explained 29:58 "Universe Origins…

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“His work matters to you because it explains why our universe seems so perfectly suited for life. And whether or not that's a lucky accident or maybe points to something deeper.”
— Brian Keating
“The Fascination with the Multiverse: "I think that's one of the most fascinating topics in all science.”
— Brian Keating
“Having said all that, the next question is, well, is it really a constant? Is it a constant in time? Does it vary with time? Does it vary with redshift? Does it vary with scale factor? And you could also ask, does it actually vary with position? We have no data that say it does, but you could ask that question.”
— Fred Adams
“So instead of being 120 orders of magnitude off, you're only 30 orders of magnitude off.”
— Fred Adams
“By what percentage can I change G before the sun ceases to shine? Is it 1%? Is it 10%? Is it a factor of two? Is it a factor of a million? How much can I vary G and still have the sun be a star?”
— Fred Adams

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Brian Keating

What if the universe had turned out differently? Fred Adams pioneered the concept of what if universes, calculating what would happen if you changed gravity, electromagnetism, or the strength of the nuclear force. Would stars still form? Could planets exist? Would atoms even exist? And ultimately the most important question of all. Would we be here even to ask such questions? His work matters to you because it explains why our universe seems so perfectly suited for life. And whether or not that's a lucky accident or maybe points to something deeper. It gives scientific weight to the idea of the multiverse as well. Not just science fiction, but as a serious cosmological possibility. It shows that the laws of nature aren't just arbitrary. They might be constrained in surprising, elegant ways.

Brian Keating

Franz doesn't just study the universe. He studies all the universes that could have been, and that helps us understand why we're here at all.

Fred Adams

The other kind of fine tuning would be if you take a parameter and you just vary its value by a little bit, then you get a universe or something that's very different. Both of those fundamentally rely on the idea that if you change the constants a little bit, the universe doesn't work. So I think again, back to what we said earlier. The first step in the chain is to ask the more fundamental question, the starting question. What range of parameters work?

Brian Keating

Fred Adams, welcome. All the way from Michigan, by way of Pasadena. Welcome to back to San Diego. You've been here a few times, and it's the first time sitting on the.

Fred Adams

Podcast, actually, the second time sitting on the podcast.

Brian Keating

Oh, that's right. Yeah, that's true, too.

Fred Adams

But that was like seven years ago.

Brian Keating

That's right. Everything before COVID is a mystery to me now.

Fred Adams

Exactly, exactly.

Brian Keating

Now we'll get to the multiverse. I think that's one of the most fascinating topics in all science. You know, maybe concurrent with the, you know, origin of life on other planets and our planet, etcetera, which you're involved with as well, or you've written about. And not only that, you've gone into forays with past guests and very popular guests. Constantine Petitjian, working on Jupiter's, you know, size the Deep Past. That was a fascinating paper that we got to hear about, but today you're here to talk about fine tuning and all sorts of really cool things that are related to the multiverse. But before we get there, we're speaking in early April, it's after April Fools, so everything's okay. It's after Liberation Day, so we're.

Fred Adams

We're sorry.

Brian Keating

We're liberated. You know, And I like the li. The living.

Fred Adams

And we're no longer fools.

Brian Keating

So we're liberated, not fools. That's right. Well, some. You know, I can't necessarily say I'm not a fool. But recently in the last few weeks there's been a lot of interesting data coming out that seem to be in conflict with each other if not with the standard model of cosmology. One from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope led by my friends Mark Devlin and Suzanne Staggs, who are also on Simons Observatory co directors. And that seemed to be very consistent with lam so called Lambda cdm. But prior to that, just a week or two before that were the DESI results.

Brian Keating

Those seem to be kind of throwing a wrench into many of the different types of works, including the work about the end of all time and maybe suggesting there won't be eternity to wait or we won't have a big rip or we will have a, you know, heat death. Talk about what is the impact of has these new results that possibly the equation of state parameters changing. And begin by explaining what is the equation of state. Why is it so important and what would it mean if it were changing with time via dark energy not being a constant?

Fred Adams

Well, there's a lot of questions in there.

Brian Keating

That's right. That's my signature move is to.

Fred Adams

So the basic idea is that the universe contains some weird component we'll say called dark energy, cosmological constant, vacuum energy. Lots of names and they can mean slightly different things in different contexts. But the basic idea is that empty space is not empty. It has an energy level associated with it. And that energy is in such a weird form and it has the weird effect that it makes the universe accelerate. And in order to understand the current cosmological data circa the year 2000, so the turn of the century, it seems that our universe is accelerating. And the simplest model that works is a cosmological model that has about 2/3 dark energy, vacuum energy, cosmological constant. Now to zeroth order it's a constant.

Fred Adams

And if you just plug in a constant into the equations, it works pretty well. It's called a cosmological constant because when Einstein wrote down his theory of relativity 100 years ago, ish, more than 100 years ago now he said, well, if I want to change the expansion of the universe, I'm allowed to add a constant which was the cosmological constant. It kind of went in and out of favor with cosmological data over the next century. At the turn of this century, circa 1999, 2000, the data became good, I would say this short version of the story, so that it was a non zero cosmological constant was the best model by far. Having said all that, the next question is, well, is it really a constant? Is it a constant in time? Does it vary with time? Does it vary with redshift? Does it vary with scale factor? And you could also ask, does it actually vary with position? We have no data that say it does, but you could ask that question. And the current cosmological experiments, of which DESI is one of them, are set out in part to answer that question. Does the cosmological constant or vacuum energy, which isn't a constant, necessarily have a time dependence to it? I'm not on the experiment, I'm not an expert on the experiment, but my understanding is that there's a hint that there's a time dependence. It's not a smoking gun, 12 Sigma result.

Fred Adams

They want it to be in the future at the present time. It's more of a hint that there's a possibility that there's a time dependence to it. Now that means that if the error bars are a little bit bigger, all of the data are consistent with it being, it being the vacuum energy being a constant cosmological constant. Now back to the future of the universe. If you have a cosmological constant, the universe is accelerating. The future actually becomes simple. It's actually simpler than what we had to envision before. Because if the cosmological constant stays robust, doesn't even have to stay constant, it just has to stay vacuum dominated, the universe will accelerate enough that it will shut down further structure formation.

Fred Adams

Then if you want to understand the future of the universe, you only have to account for, for the death and destruction of everything that's in our universe today. You don't have to actually calculate what comes in our horizon later and makes new stuff. So it actually makes the whole future of the universe business one step easier. Now, if the cosmological constant is time varying, that means the universe will, could and probably will in the near term continue to accelerate, just not quite as quickly. And if that's the case, then all of the future of the universe stuff remains the same. It does not have virtually any implications to it.

Brian Keating

Where would the energy go? I mean, is it decaying? Is it converting into matter particles?

Fred Adams

Well, that, those are the million dollar questions that people want to answer. It depends what physics is driving the cosmological constant. So we don't know. I mean, if the cosmological constant is just a constant Then all you get is, is one number which is the value of that constant. And the experiments tell you nothing beyond that. So you have to rely on theory and other experiments to tell you. Ideally, what you would like is for something like a string theory or M theory to demand that there's a cosmological constant and then have that same theory predict other things like proton decay or other physical things we could measure and thereby verify said theory. We don't have any of that yet.

Fred Adams

That's the hope. That's the dream. We'd love to have enough data to have a high energy theory and have that high energy theory give us information on the cosmological.

Brian Keating

Are we closer than we were? I mean, it's supposedly the greatest mismatch in the physical sciences or in the history of humanity. The so called deviation from first principles analysis of vacuum energy density, what it could be in quantum mechanical terms versus what we observe it to be cosmologically. As a practicing and eminent theorist, do you really believe that that's something to be embarrassed about or is it just some other mystery that, you know, we didn't know the mass of the neutrino or we still don't know it or the mass of the electron for many years. But the fact that it's so low compared to say the Z boson, it's not embarrassing, it's just the way nature is. Where do you rank this? Is it, Is it the greatest embarrassment, as we often teach our, our children and our students?

Fred Adams

Well, I don't think it's my own personal feeling, and I should preface this by saying I'm not a relativist, so I don't work on, and I'm not a string theorist, I don't work on the cosmological constant problem for a living. So I'm one step. Although I am a theorist, I'm one step removed from being an expert on the question that you're asking me to be an expert on. Having said that, from that one step outside, I would say it's an issue. I wouldn't say that it's an embarrassment. Just to put the problem on the table, the problem is this. If you make a back of the envelope calculation about what the vacuum energy density should be, you get basically energy density, which is the Planck mass to the fourth power. The argument is simply that the only scale we have is gravity.

Fred Adams

Gravity is given by the Planck mass. Energy density is a mass to the fourth power. The that gives you a number. Then you say, well, let's look at the data. The universe is accelerating. What energy density do I need to make it accelerate? You get another number. Those two numbers are different by 120 orders of magnitude. That's the embarrassment you're talking about.

Fred Adams

And it is a sign. It's a big neon sign saying, hey, something's wrong here. Clearly. And no one I would think, would dispute that there's something interesting going on there. One thing that's clear, I think, is that if you make a calculation and it's wrong by 120 orders of magnitude, I'm going to say something controversial here.

Brian Keating

Please.

Fred Adams

The calculation is wrong. Now, how it goes wrong is where the interesting thing comes in. But clearly, if you make a calculation and you're off by 120 orders of magnitude, you probably miss something, right?

Brian Keating

One would think.

Fred Adams

One would think. Now, you can fudge this a little bit in the following way. We're talking about the energy density. If you talk about the energy scale, you get to take that number to the fourth root. So instead of being 120 orders of magnitude off, you're only 30 orders of magnitude off. Second, you could also argue that instead of using the Planck mass as the magic mass scale, you can use a lower mass scale, a grand unified mass scale, or maybe even something lower, depending on which mass version of the physics you want. We know that quantum field theory is a good theory up to and including the standard model, right? So it would be a very sensible argument to say we need that energy scale to be at least bigger than what we see in accelerators, because we have seen no breakdown of it yet. That will buy you more orders of magnitude, but you still have a number of order magnitudes off.

Fred Adams

So there's still, as you call it, an embarrassment, as I call it an interesting issue that we need to study and exactly how big it is, I don't know. I think that once we resolve it, then it will become clear. If you look at the, the, the example you described, if you just look at the masses of the leptons, we got six quarks and we got neutrinos and electrons. If you just plot them just as little delta function spikes, they're kind of logarithmically distributed. That's actually numbers. That's actually in the review article that I'm going to talk about as the colloquium this afternoon, which we are.

Brian Keating

You're graciously allowing us to broadcast as a part two of this episode, although.

Fred Adams

I won't get into that issue Time. Nonetheless, if you just look at the masses of the particles and Squint your eyes enough, they're kind of logarithmically distributed. So you can ask the question, well, why is one so much lower than the other? Why aren't they all the same? Or you could ask the question, well, why are they logarithmically distributed? And of course, they're not perfectly logarithmically distributed, but if you work in log mass instead of mass as your variable, they look kind of normal by comparison. So what's the right thing to do? Answer, we do not know. So this is where physics is working. This is the frontier of physics. People are working on it. But I don't think the questions you're answering, asking have great answers at the moment.

Fred Adams

Right. We would love to have them. You know, if I actually had a great answer to your question, I would ditch this podcast and go write a paper on it. No offense, but no, I would.

Brian Keating

I would join you. I'd be the path to the door.

Fred Adams

I think we just turn off the bikes and get to work. Right?

Brian Keating

So one of the things that we often hear about is that the value of the cosmological constant is somehow related to us having this conversation, that we're able to exist. And I often hear if it was changed by just one part and, you know, choose your favorite, you know, large number, it would actually be impossible for us, in fact, to have this conversation. This brings up the topic of fine tuning, which you are, or, you know, I associate you Mr. Fine Tuning. There's this guy, James Clear. He's Mr. Habits. There's friends of mine that do productivity, Cal Newport, other productivity people, deep work.

Brian Keating

I call you Mr. Fine Tuning. But tell me, what is fine tuning and how can it be used as a physical tool rather than just a philosophical. Interesting coincidence, but nothing that we can use as physicists to test hypotheses, make predictions, and make measurements. What is fine tuning?

Fred Adams

There's at least two important kinds of fine tuning that is important to. They're both important, but they're different. The first kind of fine tuning, which some people call fine tuning, is what you alluded to earlier, namely that if you look at the value of the cosmological constant we see in cosmological data, and you look at the value of the cosmological constant we calculate by taking the Planck mass to the fourth power. We get a hierarchy. We're. The two numbers are different by 120 orders of magnitude. That's not exactly tuning, because it's just. You're just way off the hierarchy is just wrong.

Fred Adams

It's A hierarchy problem. Now, one of the reasons it's called a fine tuning problem is that when you actually get into not just the order of magnitude version of that calculation, but a more careful calculation where you try to do a quantum field theory calculation of what should be. You can take large values of vacuum energy, these large numbers to the fourth power, and then you can add other large numbers to the fourth power to cancel them. And if you take two large numbers with opposite sign and cancel them, and you're left with something small, in order to get something small, you have to tune that calculation carefully. So there could be tuning involved in explaining the hierarchy, if you will. But it's a different thing than the other kind of fine tuning.

Brian Keating

Can you give me an example?

Fred Adams

And now I'm going to give you an example of the other kind of fine tuning. The other kind of fine tuning would be if you take a parameter and you just vary its value by a little bit, then you get a universe or something that's very different. Let me give you a concrete example. Take the sun or a main sequence star and take a number that you like, like the strength of gravity, the gravitational constant, what we in physics call big G. Also whatever the Planck mass squared, if you like, that depends on what brand of physicist you are. But nonetheless, you take G and you ask a question, by what percentage can I change G before the sun ceases to shine? Is it 1%? Is it 10%? Is it a factor of two? Is it a factor of a million? How much can I vary G and still have the sun be a star? And then you have to define what you mean by a star. You might want it to be a hydrostatically supported nuclear burning long lived entity. That's what I think the stars.

Fred Adams

And operationally that means there are solutions to the stellar structure equations that give you a hydrostatically supported long lived nuclear burning entity. So then you can say, well, is it fine tuned or not? Then there's another question, well, but how sensitive does the answer have to be to G before you call it fine tuning? Is a factor of two fine tuning or do you need to be 1% fine tuning? Now in that particular case, you can vary G by about a factor of a million and you're still good. So it's not really fine tuned. In that instance, the sun is not super dependent on the value of G. Now the exact luminosity depends on G, but you can still have a working star with varying values of G. And if you're worried about habitability and you say, well, If I change G, the Sun gets brighter. Well then I can, you know, Earth still live. There's stars of different masses that will play the role, and planets of different distances plus at different distances.

Fred Adams

So you can vary other parameters. To cap, there's two issues of tuning. One is a hierarchical thing, you know, where you have one parameter that's many orders of magnitude different than what you think you see. But we might not be that sensitive to the small value. Suppose the cosmological constant were half as big, would we care? No, no. Suppose it's ten times smaller, would we care?

Brian Keating

I think this is, it was much bigger, right?

Fred Adams

Big bang, I mean, infinite consideration, much, much bigger. Then you would run into trouble. That leads us to the vignette that you alluded to earlier. Namely in the late 80s, if I remember my history right, Steven Weinberg famously was working on the cosmological constant problem and he realized that, well, if the cosmological constant is too big, you'll shut down structure formation early. So he did a calculation, and his calculation showed that if you keep everything in the universe the same and you make the cosmological constant larger, if you make it too large, then you'll shut down structure formation and we won't have a universe like our own. And if I remember right, the value that he got in his original paper was something like 500 times larger than the then current limit, which was order of magnitude the same as our current value. So it's not a 1% bigger. No, it's not a tune thing.

Fred Adams

But you can't make it too big, and you can only make it, let's say, a factor of 100 bigger. If you want to be an order of magnitude land, not 120 orders of magnitude bigger. So two orders of magnitude versus 120, you're still have this hierarchy problem, right? But in terms of tuning and sensitivity, you can make it 10 times larger and still have a universe that works. But you can make it 10 times smaller or a million times smaller and have the universe. But then there's more. You can also ask the question, why is that? Why is the universe sensitive to a large value of the cosmological constant? And the fundamental reason is something called the microwave background, which you know lots.

Brian Keating

About, brought it here with us today.

Fred Adams

It's right, right down, right here on the scope. So these fluctuations, our little vigil aid, are one part in 10 to the 5ish, right? And you guys worry about how they vary with angular scale, but on broad brush terms, they're one part 10 to the 5.

Brian Keating

That's right.

Fred Adams

So that means that density fluctuations in the early universe start small and then have to grow. But let's say that you had a different universe with a different cosmological constant, but you had different micro background fluctuations. Suppose they were larger. Well, it turns out the limit goes like that, amplitude cubed. So if I make the fluctuations 1 part in 10 to the 4 instead of 1 part 10 to the 5, my limit goes up by a factor of a thousand. If I go up to 10 to the minus 3, then my limit goes up by a factor of a million. It's already a factor of 100 larger than what we see. I can make it a million times weaker and still have a viable universe if I'm allowed to turn the knob of making the fluctuations larger.

Fred Adams

Now, for those of us who've played with inflationary models, it's actually a whole lot easier to make a universe inflate if you only have to make the fluctuations as small as 10 to the minus 3 versus 10 to the minus 5. You have to work much harder to get the small fluctuations that we see in the micro background, which would suggest, although we don't know how, probabilities. It would suggest that randomly more universes would have larger fluctuations than ours, in which case they could get away with larger cosmological constant values than ours. So that leads to a question that you're going to ask later in this talk. Namely, how do you actually do the accounting of what's fine tuning or not? It depends on what you assume is given and what you are allowed to vary. If I'm allowed to only vary the cosmological constant, energy density.

Brian Keating

Many of you are watching this on a television. And I know that if you love the cosmos as much as I do, you'll want to subscribe now. It's a little more tricky on tv, but it's well worth your time. Click down below and don't forget to leave a thumbs up. More minds, more mysteries, more multiverse awaits you.

Brian Keating

When we have the degree of fine tuning is sort of phenomenon dependent, right? I mean, if we look at your classic example I always associate with you is you're tuning a radio. Old fashioned tuning. Kids today, they don't know how to tune a radio because how do you tune in? YouTube, right? How do you analogize this in, in terms of a radio station? Because someone say yes, you need to get it within a few kilohertz on a megahertz scale. So is that part in a million or is I part of a thousand or Is it really from zero to infinity and everywhere in between? And actually, you picked out this one band that's. Anyway, can you give your analogy? What does it mean to be fine tuned in a way that the audience can understand if they're not familiar with?

Fred Adams

Well, if you want to tune a radio, you need to specify the frequency of the, of the tuner, because each radio station has a different frequency. Now, the FCC tells you what the allowed spacing of those frequencies are because they only give licenses for so many radio stations. So in very rough orders of magnitude terms, frequencies are spaced sort of 1% of the frequency apart. So if you change your frequency by more than about 1%, you go from one station to the next, or one allowed station to the next. Not every part of the country has their radio band saturated, but if you're in a big city, you change your frequency by 1%, you go from one station to the next. So if you actually want to tune in a radio, you have to know the frequency, or the radio has to know the frequency to about 1% accuracy, less accuracy. So bigger error bars will not get you your radio station. So tuning, not fine tuning, but just tuning a radio requires 1% accuracy.

Fred Adams

So the analogy for cosmology would be, or astrophysics would be if you change the value of a cosmological parameter or a fundamental physics parameter, like the strength of gravity, by 1%, you would go from one universe to another, from stars that work to stars that don't work. But in the case of G and stars, we just saw that, you know, you can change G by a factor of a million and still have stars. That's not 1%.

Brian Keating

No, that's right. Often the objection I hear we've had people like Luke Barnes and others that you're familiar with, and they'll say, well, you know, that's fine if you want one station, but actually, a functioning radio means I want, you know, as many stations as, as are available thanks to the, you know, courtesy of the fcc, while they still are putting out radio broadcasting licenses. So it's not really one for, you know, it's the combined probability of being able to tune every single radio station to that 1%. And isn't that now getting into, you know, we have to look at now the joint probability distribution of tuning in, let's say, 30 radio stations at the 0.1%, at the 0.1% that now seems to be. Or 1% that now is that factor to the 30th power, right?

Fred Adams

Yes. If you had to tune 30 parameters, all at the 1% level, then the chances of getting them all right would be a small probability. A couple things are important here. One is that it's probably not the case that we need 30 parameters to have the right values, although we probably need maybe 10. And we can talk about that if you'd like.

Brian Keating

Yeah, just like the joint probability for, for multiple ones is analogized to multiple constants. So if they're 10, those 10, you know, Martin Reese says five, you say, are you. So six, you say five. You know, is it, is it essentially, you know, dependent on the most finely tuned amongst all those parameters, or is it somehow, you know, a more complicated. Yeah, I'm trying to, first of all get you to make the steel, man. For the case against, you know, for the fine tuning argument as being, as being an issue for these types of calculations, do we really need to tune in that many parameters? What's the minimal set of parameters that would have to be finely tuned and which one is the most finely tuned? If you had to say it's fine. We already said that G is not one of them. Right.

Brian Keating

It's not the most stringent one. Okay, what is the most stringent?

Fred Adams

So let's back up and let's talk about what values of the constants could vary. Okay. So one way to start is if you look at the center model of particle physics. It famously has 26 free parameters in it. That includes kind of everything. The coupling classes that turn determine the masses of all the particles, like the mass of the bottom quark and such. But if you look at your solar structure equations, there's not really a place for you to plug in the mass of the bottom quark. All those quarks kind of do their thing early in the early universe and are pretty much gone by the time you are working on stars that we care about.

Fred Adams

So if you actually care about the working things in our universe today, what do you care about? Well, one way to phrase it would be this. We need the four forces of nature.

Brian Keating

Yes.

Fred Adams

So there has to be a coupling constant which sets the strength of gravity, sets the strength of electromagnetic force. We call that the fine structure constant alpha, and analogous things that somehow specify the force of the strong force and the weak force. The story is a little bit complicated because those coupling constants run, as they say, which means they're functions of energy and variable constants.

Brian Keating

It always drives me crazy.

Fred Adams

Yeah, so variable constants is a thing, but nonetheless, you have to specify somehow the strength of the four forces. So we'll start there. You need Those. Now you also have to say something about the masses of particles. I would say minimally, you need to specify the mass of the electron, the mass of the up quark, and the mass of the down quark, because the mass of the up and down quark, to remind your listeners, determines the masses of protons and neutrons, and those are important. The other quarks are no offense to the other quarks, but they're less important for the discussion of today.

Brian Keating

Every other galaxy but the Milky Way.

Fred Adams

Yeah. So I think that from the physics point of view, you need four coupling constants for four forces and at least three masses. Then if you look on the cosmological realm, we need to specify the baryon content, which cosmologists call eta. It's famously six times ten to the minus ten in our universe. We need to specify the dark matter content, which is the dark matter per baryon ratio, which will be analogous to that happens to be six times bigger in mass than Eta in our universe, but could be different. We have to specify the cosmological constant one way or another, which we've already talked about. We have to specify the fluctuations in the microwave background, which are 10 to the minus 5 in our universe, which we already talked about. And there could be others, but those are the fundamental ones.

Fred Adams

And I think that another parameter I would put on the table is that when you look at how nuclear fusion actually occurs in stars, it doesn't occur directly. It certainly fundamentally depends on the strength of the strong force and the weak force. But when you do nuclear fusion in the sun, you turn four protons into a helium nucleus. Two of those protons are turned into neutrons, which means you're using the weak force to turn protons into neutrons, and you're using the strong force to hold the thing together. There's a net rate that the sun uses to do that whole thing. It happens in steps. But nonetheless, there are nuclear physics considerations that give you composite parameters that are some complicated function of this strong and weak forces. And we don't actually have a simple theory that gives us nuclear action rates in the sun based on those parameters.

Fred Adams

So you can use a nuclear action constant as another free parameter. But if you add up everything I just said, there's something on the order of 10 of them, or maybe 12, depending on which. How you do your. But there's not 100 and there's not two. Okay. So I would say that you need something like that many knobs, and if you vary any one of them too much, you could imagine the universe would not work, at least not the way it does in our universe. Right. And life would not thrive the way it does in our universe.

Fred Adams

Now, let me say one more thing. If we had a fundamental understanding of physics, which we don't yet, and we're working on it, we might be able to calculate the abundance of baryons from a fundamental theory. We might be able to calculate the value of the cosmological constant from a fundamental theory of gravity. So some of those cosmological parameters I put on the table could, in principle, in the future be calculable. And again, we would love to be able to do that, but we can't today. So we're only going to talk about it.

Brian Keating

Have you written two books? I have one of them. I haven't yet got the other one, but I'll surely pick it up after this conversation. You're here to give our colloquium today in the physics department. And I wonder if we could do the thing you're never supposed to do, which is to judge a book by its cover. Hey, book lovers, we're judging books by the covers. We know we're not supposed to do it better into the impossible. There's nothing to it.

Fred Adams

Let's take a look and judge some books.

Brian Keating

So I have a copy signed twice by you. The first time seven years ago, undoubtedly, and then you were kind enough to do it again. So take us away in this first book and then we'll talk about your other book as well.

Fred Adams

Well, I think the story actually begins with the first book rather than the second book. So the first book was called the Five Ages of the Universe, and it was about the future of the universe. There's lots of cosmology books, including one you've written. Most of them talk about the story of the birth of everything in the universe. So the Five Ages talks about the death of everything in the universe. Universe. So that was kind of the. We'd written a review article for physics reports on, not physics reports, some reviews of modern physics on that.

Fred Adams

And it led to some interest which led to the book after that, talking about the death of everything in the universe. The natural sequel was to write a book on the birth of everything in the universe, which is what this book here is about. Well, there's actually more to this story. The first book on the birth of everything in the universe was called Origins of Existence, but that was the hardback title when they put it out in paperback. They changed the title from Origins of Existence to Our Living Multiverse, and they decided to do that simply because of something called marketing. They thought they would sell more books that way. And at the end of the book I talk about a little bit about how there could be more than one universe and hence the idea of a multiverse. So they, the book people decided that was a great thing to like, uses a hook.

Fred Adams

So they put a picture of the multiverse on the COVID which is what you asked about, and they changed the title to Our Living Multiverse.

Brian Keating

You could show the COVID to the camera. The COVID and it's a subtitle. A book of Genesis in zero plus seven chapters. I've never seen something described like that. There's got to be a story behind the subtitle. It's more interesting than the story behind my subtitles.

Fred Adams

Well, the basic idea was simply that instead of just talking about cosmology, which is great, the origins of existence, or this living multiverse book was supposed to have a chapter on physics, a chapter on cosmology, chapter on galaxies, a capture on stars and star formation, chapter on planets and planet formation, a chapter on life, and then sort of a kind of wrap up big picture kind of. And that adds up to seven. And if you have a little introduction, you get the 0 at 1. So it was just sort of a cute way to go. Was not as profound as your. Is probably what you're looking for. So.

Brian Keating

And what about the other book? The other book have a subtitle that's worthy of discussion as well or.

Fred Adams

Yeah, it was called the Five Edges of the Universe Inside the Physics of Eternity because the physics of eternity has some poetic ring to it, according to the book people. And I don't know if it's changed, but back in the day we had relatively little say over either the title or the COVID That's right. So we wrote the book. So Greg Loffitter and I wrote the first book and then I wrote the second book just on my own. But we wrote the book and then they say, well, you can't have the title you want, you can't have the COVID you want. This is what you get. So. And that's fine.

Fred Adams

They think they know marketing. I don't know marketing. So what am I going to say exactly? And you know, they have to make their money. I guess that's right. Spoiler alert. We didn't make much money.

Brian Keating

But yeah, if you ever figure out, you want to get depressed, figure out how much you were paid by the hour for writing a book. It's square root of minimum wage at best.

Fred Adams

If you're lucky, it's not lucrative.

Brian Keating

That's right. Don't go into that field or, you know, really being a professor, I would say, well, one of those processes that you talked about and I think you alluded to in the PPE cyc, and so I often hear it's a miracle, right? The Hoyle miracle that allows this, you know, metastable state of beryllium, I believe, to catalyze the eventual construction of two helium nuclei. What is that? How finely tuned is that process? Because I've always heard that's a picosecond lasting lifetime on average. And that's one of the pieces of evidence. And even, you know, it's called the Hoyle miracle, Right? Is it a miracle?

Fred Adams

No. Let's explain that. To start with, we're confusing two things here. There's the PP chain, which is one of the ways in which the sun produces helium. Sorry, you take four protons and turn them into helium and you get helium out. What you're talking about with the Hoyle resonance, carbon is the carbon cycle, not the CNO cycle, but rather the carbon production cycle. And there the idea is that if you had two alpha particles, alpha particles are helium nuclei. So we call it the triple alpha process.

Fred Adams

The problem is that if you had a logical universe, the sun would take it, burn hydrogen into helium, then it would have all helium in the core. It would condense, heat up, and then the helium would burn. But the logical way to do it would be helium 4 would combine with another helium 4 to make beryllium 8. And then the beryllium 8 would do something later. But the problem is beryllium 8 is unstable. It has a half life of 10 to the minus 16 seconds or so. That's the short number you are referring to. That's a problem.

Fred Adams

Now, it's not a complete problem because 10 to the minus 16 seconds is short, but it's not zero. So if you imagine that the sun is burning helium into beryllium 8 and then the beryllium 8 is decaying in 10 to the minus 16 seconds, the sun's going to keep taking those heliums and making them back into beryllium 8. So it's like juggling. There's always going to be somebody in the air. There's always going to be a standing population of Beryllium 8, even though its population is small, because its half life is so small. So that Beryllium 8, during its brief moments of existence, can interact with another helium nucleus and make carbon. Because carbon is carbon 12, it's basically three alpha particles, three helium nuclei glued together. And once you've got carbon, it's stable.

Fred Adams

We need carbon for life. We're good. Right. So the problem is, do you get enough carbon? Now, historically, Saul Peter realized that this standing population of Beryllium 8 would be enough to give you carbon, but there wasn't enough. And then Fred Hoyle said, well, wait a minute, I will just make the reaction rates big enough to give me enough carbon. He just said it. Then he said afterwards, well, I wasn't around at the time, but this is the after the fact telling of the story that I'll come up with a reason to have this large value. And the reason is there's a resonance.

Fred Adams

And if you put the resonance at the right level, right energy level, resonance is just an excited state of the nucleus, then you can make the reaction rate to produce the carbon go faster. And if you make the resonance at the right level and make the cross section bigger, you get the carbon. We see. So Hoyle famously predicted that there would be a resonance in the carbon 12 nucleus. That I believe the story is that Willie Fowler at Caltech then discovered. Yeah, and it's super important for the way our universe works, in the way our universe makes carbon. Now then the question becomes, if I change the value, the energy level of that resonance. Yes.

Fred Adams

What happens? Well, here's the thing. And people have said, well, if you change it a little bit, you change the carbon abundance. Which is true.

Brian Keating

Yeah.

Fred Adams

But let's do the calculation. So this is a hard calculation. So I had an undergraduate do it. She was actually a very smart undergraduate named Lillian Huang. She and Evan Gross, who's graduate of here, did this as her senior thesis. And what she did is she ran the Mesa models to do carbon 12 production in massive stars over a huge mass range and a huge range of resonances. Bottom line is the first thing you need to know. If you make the carbon resonance lower energy, you get more carbon, not less.

Fred Adams

So you can get a better universe with more carbon if you change it in one direction. But as you make the carbon resonance higher and higher and higher, you get less and less carbon out of your stars. But here's the thing. It's not that you don't make carbon or that the stars don't make carbon, the stars make carbon. But because they're burning so hot, because you've raised the resonance level, the carbon will immediately or tend to eat another alpha particle and become oxygen. So you're replacing your carbon with oxygen. Now then the question is, how far do you have to Go before you don't get any carbon out. Right.

Fred Adams

So it turns out you can move the resonance in physics units about 300Mev down and 500Mev up and still get carbon up. So you have a range of 800 MEV. Now, what the heck does that mean? Right. Well, one thing you need to know is that the resonance levels in nuclei are typically only a couple MEV apart. So this is a good fraction of the distance between them, the total energy. The other thing that you need to know is that the whole reason the stars have to jump through these hoops and produce carbon through this triple alpha process, as we call it, with this resonance is because beryllium 8 is unstable, but it's only unstable by something like 92. I said MEV, I'm at KEV earlier, so.

Brian Keating

But the level of this energy level is at the MEV level. But yeah, the resonance has a width of the cave.

Fred Adams

Sorry, I misspoke. So let me start again. If you look at the broad picture, you can move the resonance level about 300kEV down and 500kEV up. So the range is like 800kEV, which is a good fraction of an MEV. And the typical spacing of nuclei resonances is measured in MeV. Usually they're only one MeV apart, but in carbon, they're a couple MeV apart. So the range over which you can have valid triple alpha resonances is a healthy fraction of the spacing of them. The other thing you need to know is that if you look at beryllium 8, beryllium 8 only fails to be stable by 92kEV.

Fred Adams

So here's the thing. 800kEV is bigger than 92 by about an order of magnitude. So in a certain sense, it's 10 times easier to make beryllium 8 stable and not need the triple alpha reaction than it is to change physics so much that the triple alpha reaction doesn't.

Brian Keating

Work in terms of fine tuning.

Fred Adams

Brings us back to the question we released earlier. You know, is the story is complicated. Is that tuning? Is that not tuning? It's not that sensitive. But how do you place a number on the tuning? That also leads us to another thing that I think we need to put on the table in this discussion, is that we have been talking as if we can, on our, in our theories, change the value of the constants, change the value of the triple alpha resonance just as we feel like it. And we can do that calculationally. But the question that underlies all of this is what's the probability distribution from which these constants are drawn. And here we have a problem we simply do not know. Now, when people do probabilities, they have to assume something.

Fred Adams

But it's important to know that people are simply assuming a probability distribution. They have no idea that that's the probability distribution. We have no fundamental theory that gives us that probability distribution. Now you can make an argument, well, it has to be logarithmically distributed or it has to be uniformly distributed. Both of those answers will give you completely different probabilities over these enormous ranges that we're talking about. And you can make both of those arguments, but we don't know if any of those are true, right? So one of the fundamental things about this whole enterprise is that we don't know what the underlying probability is. Are. So what I would say is, in the tack that I've taken in the things I can present in the talk today, is that in the absence of knowing the probability distributions, the first step is to simply see what the range of values is.

Fred Adams

How big can we make, or how big a range can we make, the parameters vary and still have a working star or a working nucleus or a working galaxy or whatever it is that you ask, right? So the first step in the, in the story is to get the ranges right. And that's to my mind, about as.

Brian Keating

Far as we've come and even pushing farther back, you know, so making a star, making a planet even more primitive than that is, you know, many time past guests, Sir Roger Penrose pointed out the initial value of the universe's entropy must have been extraordinarily low.

Fred Adams

Right?

Brian Keating

How does this factor in? Is this going to be a part of an initial conditions or boundary conditions problem that has to be solved in addition to the 10 parameters that we already discussed? Or is it something completely, literally in another universe that this will bring up questions not related to the type of fine tuning that you're talking about. Is it a fine tuning problem to say that it was close to zero? As we can possibly speculate, when we.

Fred Adams

Look at the very, very early parts of the universe and we look at the, what I would call the moments in which the universe is launched, at those moments, there is an issue. We can call it the entropy problem. And I respect Penrose and I'm happy with his framing of the question. All good. But the picture that emerges to me is that somehow when the universe launches itself into existence, however it does that, and I should remark we do not have a fundamental theory of that yet again, one of those things we would love to be doing.

Brian Keating

We're working on it, we're working on.

Fred Adams

It, but I don't think we have a credible theory of that yet. But somehow the universe does say, well, this piece of space time is going to separate out from whatever manifold its parent is and start expanding. It's going to expand rapidly enough to become old and big and flat and homogeneous and isotropic like our universe. Now, one part of that story is probably the inflationary universe, that when the universe is cooled from the Planck scale to the gut scale, so 10 to the -37 old or so, it somehow gets itself caught in this state where its energy density is vacuum dominated and it's in an accelerating state. And if it finds itself in that realm and accelerates long enough and then successfully gets out of it and reheats, then we get back our universe. So I think that there is an important problem in the very, very early universe, the ultra early universe we're talking about, of how does a universe come into existence and launch itself from its parental space time manifold? And how does it get into inflation or whatever replaces inflation? I mean, you always have to say, well, inflation isn't 100% proved by any means, so there's alternates to it. I happen to think in terms of inflation, and Alan Guth was my office mate for a semester and I had the privilege of writing a paper with him. So I'm very much in favor of or want the inflationary picture to be a good part of the story, but that doesn't mean that it is.

Fred Adams

Sure, we have to, we have to keep all these possibilities in mind. But I would say, the way I would say it is that if inflation isn't the thing that makes the universe big and flat and homogeneous and old, then something like it does. So I will say inflation or something like it has to happen. So to back up, there's an issue of how you launch a universe and go into an inflation like state. After that you get a universe that may or may not be alive. And it's at that stage where I begin entropy.

Brian Keating

Getting back to the entropy.

Fred Adams

Well, at that stage you're good on entropy because you've already inflated, right? So yeah, you've already solved the entropy problem and you're just big and old and going to expand for a while. Then the question is, do you make structures? And structures can be heavy elements, starting with helium onto carbon and other heavy elements that are more interesting, and do you make stars and planets and galaxies and all the structures that we have in our Universe. So those are the questions that as an astrophysicist we can actually do calculations on and say, well, what range of the fundamental parameters will allow us for to make all of those different kinds of structures? And that's what we can actually do an honest calculation of.

Brian Keating

We've had on multiple believers and different forms, what would be considered Intelligent Design supporters. One of the things I hear a lot about from guests that have been on that are proponents of so called intelligent design, Stephen Meyer, Luke Barnes, others, is that the claim that our universe is not designed or optimized for life, you know, is sort of an attack perhaps on a designer. You know, if you don't have a need for, if you're not actually finely tuned, finely designed, then it obviates the need for a designer. And, you know, so the question that I often hear from them is that, well, who are we to say what a designer would or wouldn't do if they have the power and capability to create a unit? I mean, Sean Carroll has said, you know, things I find ridiculous, like what's the purpose of all, you know, of all those galaxies in the Hubble deep field? Okay, so they don't do anything for you, and therefore there's that they're meaningless. And that's evidence against the God, because why would God create so many galaxies? Well, you could have said, you know, in the year 1850, you know, why do we need more than 32 elements that Mendeleev had in the periodic table? And now we know that a lot of them are necessary for life beyond what we actually think or just for the conditions of life. Radioactive decay heats the earth's crust and provides it with a temperate environment. We didn't know any of that back in the 1850s. So isn't it a little bit of hubris to say what would a designer or what would not a designer view as criteria or criteria for, you know, their creation, his or, you know, its creation of the universe? What allows us to say what would be a better choice of parameters or of tuning ability and whatnot? How do you react to those common kind of concerns? I'm sure you've heard them.

Fred Adams

First of all, let me say that I don't want to step over or step upon anyone's beliefs. And the question of whether there's an intelligent design or whatnot as an argument for the existence of God is not something that I'm going to address. And the reason is not that I'm a theist or an atheist. It's more that I'm a Heathen.

Brian Keating

So you would have obligations under a system where you knew for sure there was a God or believed.

Fred Adams

No. And by that I simply mean it's not what I'm about. The question itself, it doesn't interest you. It's not a relevant question to my work. What I do in my own time when I'm not working is none of your damn business. But it's not relevant to the science that we're talking about. Both in the question of anthropic arguments and Intelligent Design arguments, they both have something in common, namely that they say, well, if the universe were a little bit different, it wouldn't work. And then the Intelligent Design argument in a nutshell, as I understand it, again, I don't work on this, is that if it were a little bit different, the universe wouldn't work.

Fred Adams

Therefore someone designed it very carefully. We need a designer, and that designer is presumably a deity. And then the anthropic arguments say, well, if you change the constants a little bit, then the universe won't work. Therefore the fact that they have the values they do, that the constants have the values they do is an argument for why they have the values they do. It's at least a consistency argument. Both of those fundamentally rely on the idea that if you change the constants a little bit, the universe doesn't work. So I think again back to what we said earlier. The first step in the chain is to ask the more fundamental question, the starting question.

Fred Adams

What range of parameters work? So that is the question that I'm interested in. That is a question that I have worked very hard to try to answer in a variety of ways. That is exactly the subject of my talk this afternoon.

Brian Keating

Yes, which we will air after this.

Fred Adams

I've written 12 papers on this in hopes of answering parts of those questions. And I think that unless you find that the concepts need to be very fine tuned, that they have to be in very small ranges in order for the universe to work, unless you find small ranges, then anthropic arguments carry very little weight and the Intelligent Design arguments don't carry very much weight. But let me just say right away, I think if you want to be a theist and believe in we'll say God, you don't have to believe wrong things. You can believe in God without believing in Intelligent Design. You can believe in God without making incorrect arguments about Intelligent Design. Many of the Intelligent Design arguments that are online say wrong things about what fine tuning arguments do. They say that if you change, you know, the strong force by a Little bit. Then stars don't work.

Fred Adams

It's simply not true.

Brian Keating

Just before we wrap up, I want to make sure that you hit subscribe and join me beyond the Big Bang every week right here. Click to subscribe and make sure to leave a thumbs up. And for bonus extra credit, homework, leave a comment.

Brian Keating

But what is their strongest argument? What would be the one parameter that is the most finely tuned? I don't think we, I, I actually.

Fred Adams

Okay, so if we, if we back.

Brian Keating

Up to that, you could ask Steel Manning them.

Fred Adams

Okay. What's the failure point of the universe? In other words, if I want to, like, turn all the knobs, strong force up, strong force down, gravity weaker, whatever. How do I. What's the easiest way to kill the universe? Right. The answer is if you look at our universe and we look at something as simple as the hydrogen atom. The hydrogen atom consists of a proton with an electron in orbit around it. In another scenario, you could imagine that in our universe, the neutron is heavy enough that the proton and the electron and the hydrogen atom cannot combine to form a neutron because there's not enough energy to do so. But if you change the masses of the quarks enough, then you can imagine the mass difference between the proton and the neutron being smaller than the energy you have from the electron.

Fred Adams

And that you could imagine a hydrogen atom being unstable. And if that were the case, then our universe would be very, very different. And that failure point making hydrogen atoms unstable so protons eat their electrons and become neutrons. That failure point is the closest our universe is to failing.

Brian Keating

MEV out of a thousand.

Fred Adams

Yeah.

Brian Keating

And actually, you don't have to change one of the quarks. You only have to change the down quark. Right.

Fred Adams

Now, to be clear, if you look at the whole range of allowed quark masses that work, we just happen to be close to the edge of that parameter space. You can move the up quark several orders of magnitude lower and still have the universe work. And for most of that space, you can move the down quark not quite an order of magnitude, turns out to be a factor of seven up and down. So there's a wide parameter space of up down quark mass space that works. It's just that we happen to be very close to the edge.

Brian Keating

Yes.

Fred Adams

So if you move it down a little bit, you can go into this failure point where electrons and protons get together in hydrogen atoms to make neutrons and no longer be hydrogen. So that's our failure point. At least I should qualify that. That's the closest failure Point that I've.

Brian Keating

That's the most finely tuned well that.

Fred Adams

I've discovered so far. There could be one that we'll find tomorrow or someone else who's smarter than me will find as well. So that's just as good as I have at this moment. For when you're asking, that's intellectually honest.

Brian Keating

Yeah, yeah, you're being intellectually honest, which we expect. So, last topic I want to bring up always seems to come concomitantly with discussions of tuning, etc, and that's the multiverse I've had on Andre Linde, you know, in the past, and he, you know, almost yelled at ma', am, he's a gentleman. But yeah, you know, why do you insist on a universe? You know, why should I be defending the multiverse? Shouldn't it be you defending the universe? To me, what do you make of these arguments? Is the multiverse more, more natural than the universe, than a single universe? And what role, if any, does it play in fine tuning arguments such as those that you work on?

Fred Adams

Well, I would say that to my mind, having more than one universe is in fact natural. Going back to our earlier discussion, we said, well, how does the universe begin? Well, somehow it launches itself into existence by taking a little piece of space time that separates itself out from its parental manifold of space time. And that little piece of space time that becomes our universe somehow starts expanding, maybe by inflation exponentially rapidly, making it low entropy, reheating to our big bang picture, etc. But if we describe the birth of our universe that way, there's absolutely nothing to say, well, why does it happen only once? Why can't another little piece of space time do its own version of that story? And if one can, why can't? More? So I think it's perfectly natural, given the way we describe the birth of our universe, for there to be birth moments of other universes, other space times, and just logically possible. It's logically possible that these other space times get launched into existence and expand in their own space and never interact with ours. And it's just perfectly possible. So it's certainly possible. That doesn't mean it's got to happen, but it's certainly possible.

Fred Adams

And in my own, I think bias is simply that if it happens once, and if it happens according to the way we tell the story, then it's natural it would happen more than once.

Brian Keating

Can you falsify that hypothesis?

Fred Adams

So the way you falsify any such thing is you say, well, we can't directly go to the other Universe, kind of by definition, we got a problem there. But let's say, let me give you an example. We say that the sun's going to turn into a red giant in 7 billion years, right? And when I say that, you don't.

Brian Keating

Say, well, let's wait around and say.

Fred Adams

How do I know that? Are you sure your theory is right? Can you falsify that? No one gets on their high horse and gets all bent out of shape when I make a prediction like that. Even though ain't nobody going to be around in 7 billion years to see that happen. It's not going to be verified.

Brian Keating

There's this guy, Brian Johnson is working on longevity. We'll see.

Fred Adams

Yeah, well, that's a separate issue. But why do we believe that? Well, the reason we believe that is we have the equations of stellar structure and damn it, they work. And we can describe, not perfectly, but we could describe the structure of the sun, we can describe the structure of other stars. And we test that theory. We test it in the sun, we tested in other stars, we have our cell evolution codes, they turn into red giants and, and we watch red dance in the sky. And we verify and we verify and we verify and we have this theory that works. And because we have this theory, it works. And it's a damn good theory, this theory of stellar structure, because we have this theory that works.

Fred Adams

When we say, well, when we apply it to what our own sun's going to do in 7 million years. I have a little bit of confidence that that's not exactly, but pretty close to the right story. Okay, so suppose this whole enterprise of string theory and its descendants, like M theory becomes successful and it's a complete self consistent theory of everything that describes everything in our universe.

Brian Keating

Yeah.

Fred Adams

And suppose further, we can verify it. Now there are ways to verify that it would predict something about proton decay.

Brian Keating

Yep.

Fred Adams

And if we have a big enough proton decay experiment, we might be able to measure that. It will explain something about the highest energy cosmic rays. And maybe we can see a quantum gravity effect in cosmic rays. I mean, we don't have any of these things. But you could imagine that you have a good enough theory of quantum gravity, string theory, M theory, that you can make predictions of things like quantum gravity on cosmic rays, proton decay, etc. And suppose it worked and all those things, Suppose it got to the level that the standard model of particle physics is now suppose further that that fundamental theory which is now in my mind verified or in my scenario verified because we've done the experiment, suppose it also predicts the launch of the universe and that an inevitable consequence is that there'll be launches of other universes.

Brian Keating

That's right.

Fred Adams

Then you still wouldn't have experimentally verified the launch of another universe. But you have a theory that's battle tested that predicts that. And you would have some confidence that there would be other universe launches the same way. We have confidence that the sun will turn into a red giant. Yeah. We would need the quantum gravity theory to be on the same experimentally verified foundation that the theory of stellar structure is. And if you could achieve that, be wonderful at a lot of fronts. Right?

Brian Keating

That's right.

Fred Adams

But that would allow you to predict or be confident of the plausibility, the possibility. It wouldn't 100% would never say, you know, it's never 100. Science is never 100. Right. But it would give you a whole lot more confidence. That's a reasonable thing.

Brian Keating

Yeah.

Fred Adams

We are a ways away from that, to be honest. Right. Of course we are. I mean, because we're always away. You kind of have to hope one way or another. So you kind of hope. Well, it kind of makes sense that there should be other universes. And I kind of like that idea.

Brian Keating

It's in the Copernican argumental chain, you know.

Fred Adams

Yeah. It's a natural step in the degradation of our places.

Brian Keating

And that's right. I call it the ultimate cosmic big brother principle.

Fred Adams

Pull that.

Brian Keating

You're not that special. No one really cares about you. Well, Fred, thank you so much for being here and for the talk that's going to be so spectacular. I want to give you a byproduct of stellar evolution here. This is a real life meteorite, all right. Which you will get to out there if you have a. Edu email address, as Fred does.

Fred Adams

Heavy.

Brian Keating

Yeah, it is heavy. And it's highly magnetized too. Yeah.

Fred Adams

So that's actually important. Yeah, you're gonna like be mind it says my hotel card.

Brian Keating

No, no, the hotel card might be. No, it will not do anything of the sort. Is not that dangerous. Hello. A little bit of radioactivity in it, but so do bananas, right?

Fred Adams

Yeah.

Brian Keating

So I give those away to people that join my mailing list, Brian Keating.com list. But if you have a. Edu email address and you live in the US I can send them to you. So go to brian keating.comedu for that free gift that will come your way not by gravity, but via the US Postal Service. So, Fred, this has been great. Give a 12 sentence blurb about the talk that my audience is about to hear, which is your colloquium later today at UCSD as a physics colloquium.

Fred Adams

Well, the idea of the talk is to actually do or present the results of the calculations we talked about. Namely, if you consider the universe to have a number of parameters that could in fact vary from universe to universe, you can ask the question what ranges of those allow for working structures? And by working structures, I mean anything from nuclei to planets to galaxies and stars and such.

Brian Keating

If you want to go even deeper into cosmic fine tuning and hear an alternate take the case for and against the multiverse, check out my conversation with astrophysicist Professor Luke Barnes. It's one of the most mind expanding conversations I've ever had. Watch it next.

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More from this recording

🔖 Titles
  1. Have We Been Misled About Fine Tuning and Intelligent Design? Fred Adams Breaks It Down

  2. Exploring the Multiverse: Fine Tuning, Cosmological Constants, and the Origins of Existence

  3. Fred Adams on Cosmic Fine Tuning: Are Universal Constants Really Designed for Life?

  4. Debunking Intelligent Design? Fred Adams and Brian Keating Discuss Fine Tuning Mysteries

  5. How Special Is Our Universe? Fred Adams on Fine Tuning, Life, and the Multiverse

  6. The Truth About Fine Tuning: Fred Adams Investigates Life, Stars, and Universal Origins

  7. Are We Living in a Multiverse? Fred Adams Discusses Fine Tuning and Cosmic Probability

  8. Rethinking the Cosmos: Fred Adams on the Real Meaning of Fine Tuning and Intelligent Design

  9. Multiverse, Fine Tuning, and Life: Fred Adams Reveals What Really Matters in Cosmic Physics

  10. Can Physics Explain Fine Tuning? Fred Adams Challenges Intelligent Design and Multiverse Theories

💬 Keywords

Sure! Here are 30 topical keywords that were covered in the transcript:

fine tuning, cosmological constant, multiverse, universe parameters, dark energy, equation of state, standard model of cosmology, vacuum energy, gravity, strong force, weak force, electromagnetic force, nuclear fusion, stellar structure, particle physics, quark masses, anthropic principle, intelligent design, entropy, structure formation, proton decay, string theory, M theory, baryon content, dark matter, cosmic microwave background, inflation, carbon production, Hoyle resonance, galaxy formation

💡 Speaker bios

Brian Keating is a renowned physicist and cosmologist whose passion centers on the deepest questions about our universe’s origins and structure. Inspired by pioneering thinkers like Fred Adams, Brian explores the fascinating “what ifs” of cosmology: How would the universe look if the laws of physics were even slightly different? Would stars and planets form, and could life like ours exist? Through his research and writing, Brian brings to life the big questions of why our universe seems so perfectly tuned for life, whether this is mere coincidence, or if it hints at deeper principles—perhaps even the existence of a multiverse. His work invites us to ponder not just how our universe works, but why it exists at all, making the mysteries of the cosmos accessible and deeply relevant to everyone.

💡 Speaker bios

Fred Adams is an astrophysicist whose research explores some of the universe’s most perplexing mysteries, such as dark energy—the elusive force that makes up about two-thirds of the cosmos. Around the turn of the millennium, Fred helped illuminate the idea that empty space isn’t truly empty; instead, it’s filled with a strange energy that causes the universe to accelerate as it expands. By analyzing cosmological data, he explained how this “cosmological constant” or “vacuum energy” forms the backbone of our simplest models of the universe, helping scientists grasp why the universe is evolving the way it is today.

ℹ️ Introduction

Welcome to another mind-bending installment of the INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast! In this episode, host Brian Keating is joined by astrophysicist Fred Adams—pioneer of the “what if” universe—who has spent decades running cosmic “experiments on paper,” tweaking the fundamental forces and constants of nature to see what makes our universe tick.

Ever wondered why the laws of physics seem so perfectly tailored for life? Fred takes us on a tour of fine-tuning in the cosmos, exploring what would happen if gravity, electromagnetism, or dark energy were a little bit stronger or weaker. Is our universe just a lucky accident, or does its life-friendly design hint at something deeper? Could it be evidence for a multiverse, where countless other universes—with different physical rules—blink in and out of existence?

The conversation dives into cutting-edge cosmological debates, including recent findings that challenge our understanding of dark energy, and scrutinizes the infamous “cosmological constant problem”—quite possibly the greatest puzzle in physics. Brian presses Fred on whether fine-tuning is just philosophical speculation, or whether it offers real, testable science. Plus, they wrestle with big questions about intelligent design: is our universe so finely tuned that it must have had a designer? Or are these arguments based on misconceptions about the underlying physics?

Tune in for a deep dive into the frontiers of astrophysics, the mathematics of possibility, and the ultimate mysteries of why our universe is the way it is—and whether we might someday find others that are impossibly different.

📚 Timestamped overview

00:00 Fred Adams' work explores alternate universes by altering fundamental forces, questioning the formation of stars, planets, and atoms, and our existence. It underscores why our universe supports life, suggesting either a lucky accident or deeper significance, and lends credibility to the multiverse as a serious scientific idea.

03:56 The cosmological constant, introduced by Einstein, is key to understanding the universe's expansion. Once fluctuating in popularity, it's now the best model due to data from around 2000. Current experiments like DESI investigate if it varies over time or conditions, with hints suggesting possible variability but no conclusive evidence yet.

08:16 The cosmological constant problem is an issue in theoretical physics, but not an embarrassment. Vacuum energy density calculations greatly differ from expectations, highlighting the problem's complexity.

10:02 Energy scale adjustments and alternative mass scales reduce the discrepancy in predictions, but a significant difference remains.

14:43 Fine-tuning example: Vary gravitational constant (G) to see how much change the sun can withstand before it ceases to shine as a star.

17:06 Steven Weinberg's work in the late 1980s showed that an excessively large cosmological constant would prevent structure formation, fundamentally impacting the universe's development.

21:27 Tuning a radio requires specifying the frequency with 1% accuracy due to station spacing dictated by the FCC.

23:51 Simplified, the text discusses the complexity of fine-tuning multiple parameters in calculations, questioning whether all need tuning or if a few critical ones suffice.

27:02 Nuclear fusion in stars involves turning four protons into a helium nucleus using both the strong and weak forces, but a comprehensive theory linking these forces to the fusion rate doesn't exist.

29:58 The book explores the birth of everything in the universe and was originally titled "Origins of Existence," later changed to "Our Living Multiverse" for marketing, highlighting the idea of multiple universes.

34:10 Beryllium 8, with a short half-life, continuously forms in the sun, enabling helium to convert it into stable carbon.

37:31 You can shift resonance by 800 MeV in physics, affecting the carbon creation through the triple alpha process due to the instability of beryllium-8.

40:12 We lack a fundamental theory for probability distributions, and assumptions vary widely, making it crucial first to assess the range of values.

45:11 Intelligent Design proponents argue against dismissing a designer based on perceived lack of optimization, questioning human assumptions about a designer's intentions and the necessity of specific universe parameters.

48:40 Belief in God doesn't require belief in Intelligent Design; fine tuning arguments are often misconstrued.

50:05 Altering quark masses to reduce the mass difference between protons and neutrons could disrupt hydrogen atoms, effectively "killing" the universe.

53:01 Multiple universes are possible; each can form and expand independently, similar to our universe's birth.

56:15 A proton decay experiment might explain high-energy cosmic rays and reveal quantum gravity effects, possibly predicting universe creation and other universes, given a verified theory like quantum gravity or string theory.

59:25 Explore cosmic fine-tuning with astrophysicist Luke Barnes in this mind-expanding conversation.

📚 Timestamped overview

00:00 "What-If Universes Explored"

03:56 Cosmological Constant's Time Dependence?

08:16 "Cosmological Constant Problem Overview"

10:02 Energy Scale Adjustments in Physics

14:43 Fine-Tuning in Astrophysics

17:06 Cosmological Constant and Universe Formation

21:27 Radio Tuning Requires 1% Accuracy

23:51 "Fine-Tuning Debate in Parameters"

27:02 Nuclear Fusion in Stars Explained

29:58 "Universe Origins & Multiverse"

34:10 Beryllium-8's Role in Carbon Formation

37:31 Resonance Shifts in Carbon Formation

40:12 Uncertain Probability Distributions

45:11 Intelligent Design: Universe Purpose Debate

48:40 "Belief in God Without Design"

50:05 "Tweaking Forces to End Universe"

53:01 Multiverse: A Natural Possibility

56:15 Quantum Gravity and Cosmic Rays

59:25 Astrophysics: The Multiverse Debate

❇️ Key topics and bullets

Absolutely! Here’s a comprehensive sequence of topics covered in the provided transcript, broken down with primary topics and relevant sub-topics beneath each:


1. Introduction to Fine-Tuning and the Multiverse

  • "What If" Universes: How changing fundamental constants would affect the universe

  • The importance of fine-tuning in cosmology and intelligent design debates

  • Scientific significance of the multiverse concept


2. Recent Cosmological Discoveries and Tensions

  • Atacama Cosmology Telescope results and Lambda-CDM consistency

  • DESI experiment findings and potential implications for the fate of the universe


3. Dark Energy and the Cosmological Constant

  • Definition and role of dark energy, vacuum energy, and the cosmological constant

  • Historical context: Einstein, cosmological constant, and modern data

  • Variability questions: Could the cosmological constant change over time or position?

  • Implications of a time-varying cosmological constant

  • The energy budget of the universe and the fate of cosmic acceleration


4. The Cosmological Constant Problem

  • Theoretical calculation vs. observed value: The 120 orders of magnitude mismatch

  • Implications for physics: Is this an embarrassment or a normal mystery?

  • Hierarchy problem and adjusting the calculation

  • Comparison with other fundamental particle masses


5. Fine-Tuning as a Scientific Tool

  • What is "fine-tuning" in physics and cosmology?

  • Two types of fine-tuning:

    • Parameter sensitivity: How much can constants change before the universe becomes uninhabitable?

    • Hierarchical fine-tuning: Vast differences between theoretical and observed values

  • Concrete examples:

    • How much can gravity vary before stars stop working?

    • The impact of changing the cosmological constant


6. Examples and Analogies for Fine-Tuning

  • Tuning a radio as an analogy for fine-tuning universe parameters

  • Discussion on joint probability when tuning multiple parameters


7. Number and Nature of Fine-Tuned Parameters

  • Overview of the fundamental parameters relevant to cosmic habitability:

    • Four fundamental forces (gravitational, electromagnetic, strong, weak)

    • Masses of the electron, up quark, and down quark

    • Cosmological parameters: baryon content, dark matter content, value of the cosmological constant, fluctuation amplitude in CMB, nuclear action rates

  • Debate on how many parameters need to be fine-tuned (typically around 10)


8. Fred Adams’ Books and Research Context

  • "Five Ages of the Universe": Examining cosmic history from birth to death

  • "Origins of Existence"/"Our Living Multiverse": Marketing, content, and multiverse imagery

  • Relationship between these books, the transcript discussion, and cosmological fine-tuning


9. The Hoyle Resonance and Nuclear Fine-Tuning

  • Explanation of the triple-alpha process and carbon production in stars

  • How sensitive is the Hoyle resonance to changes in physical constants?

  • The myth vs. reality of "miraculous" fine-tuning in nuclear synthesis

  • Quantitative analysis: range of resonance energy shift tolerated for carbon creation


10. Probability Distributions and Unknowns in Fine-Tuning

  • The challenge of not knowing probability distributions for constants

  • Impact of different assumptions (uniform, logarithmic) on perceived fine-tuning

  • Emphasis on defining the range of viable parameters first


11. The Low Entropy Problem and Early Universe Conditions

  • Penrose’s argument regarding initial low entropy as another kind of fine-tuning

  • How inflation or similar processes might address the entropy problem

  • Distinction between launching a universe and building habitable structures


12. Fine-Tuning, Anthropic Principle, and Intelligent Design

  • Differentiating intelligent design arguments from anthropic reasoning

  • Why most “fine-tuning” claims (e.g., strong force) are overstated scientifically

  • Importance of identifying true parameter sensitivities before invoking philosophical arguments

  • Fred Adams’ position: fine-tuning as a physical question, separate from theism or design


13. Most Finely Tuned Parameter: The Hydrogen Atom Case

  • Identifying the closest-to-failure point: stability of hydrogen atoms

  • How close are we to making hydrogen unstable by altering quark masses?

  • The role of up and down quark mass difference


14. The Multiverse and Fine-Tuning

  • Natural emergence of the multiverse from current universe-birth theories

  • Philosophical and scientific arguments for and against the multiverse

  • Can the multiverse hypothesis be falsified?

  • Comparison with predictions in stellar evolution and conditions for scientific plausibility


15. Conclusion and Preview

  • Invitation to listen to the follow-up colloquium on structure formation and parameter sensitivity

  • Encouragement to further explore fine-tuning debates through other guest episodes


If you need an even more detailed breakdown, or want key themes for each speaker, let me know!

👩‍💻 LinkedIn post

🌌 Have we been LIED to about Intelligent Design and Fine Tuning in the Universe? Astrophysicist Fred Adams joined Brian Keating on The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast for a fascinating and nuanced discussion about the science behind the universe’s fundamental constants — and whether our cosmos is truly fine-tuned for life.

Here are 3 thought-provoking takeaways from the episode:

🔬 Fine-tuning is often overstated:
Fred Adams explains that, contrary to popular belief, not every fundamental constant needs to be "tuned" with extreme precision for stars, planets, and life to exist. Many parameters can vary by large factors and still allow for a working universe, challenging some common claims about how unlikely our cosmos is.

🌍 The Multiverse is a serious scientific possibility:
Adams highlights that, if universes can "launch" from a parental space-time manifold more than once, then a multiverse is not just science fiction. It’s logically and scientifically possible — and may even be the “natural” default view given what we know about cosmology.

⚖️ Intelligent Design arguments often misrepresent science:
Many so-called “Intelligent Design” claims about the universe's fine-tuning are based on incorrect assumptions or misunderstandings of the physics. As Adams points out, scientists focus on which ranges of constants actually work, not on making philosophical or theological claims.

Listen to the full episode for a scientifically grounded take on what fine-tuning really means—and why it matters to our understanding of existence: [link to episode]

#Cosmology #FineTuning #Astrophysics #IntelligentDesign #Multiverse #ScienceCommunication

🧵 Tweet thread

🚨 What if the universe had turned out differently? 🚨

Let’s dive into an eye-opening conversation between @DrBrianKeating and Fred Adams, one of the architects of the “What If” universe studies. Ever wonder what would happen if you tweaked the very laws of physics? 👇

1/ 🧬 Fred Adams pioneered exploring "what if universes" — like alternate realities where gravity, electromagnetism, or the nuclear force are just a little different. Would stars still shine? Atoms exist? Could we even be here to ask these questions?

2/ 🌌 Why does this matter? It’s about the fine-tuning of our universe. Turns out, the seemingly precise values of our physical constants make life possible. But are we here by luck… or does it point to something deeper? 🤔

3/ 🔬 Here’s the twist: Some constants need LESS fine-tuning than you think. For example, the strength of gravity could be 1,000,000x stronger or weaker, and stars would STILL form! Not everything is as precariously balanced as pop science claims.

4/ 🎚️ But there IS one number that’s astonishingly close to disaster: The mass difference between the neutron & proton. Change it slightly, and hydrogen atoms—aka, the building blocks of life—become unstable. That’s the most “finely tuned” aspect we know.

5/ 💥 Enter the cosmological constant (aka dark energy): The “Big Embarrassment” of physics. Theory predicts it should be 10¹²⁰ times bigger than what we measure. If it were just 100x higher, galaxies wouldn’t form. Is it luck, or does a Multiverse explain this?

6/ 🎲 So, what’s the “multiverse”? If universes can “launch” off like bubbles in a cosmic foam, there could be countless realities—each with different constants! Ours just happens to be one where life (and podcasts) are possible.

7/ 🤯 The MULTIVERSE isn’t just sci-fi. It’s a real, testable (eventually!) scientific hypothesis. If we develop a solid quantum gravity theory (think: next-gen string theory), predicting more than one universe could become as accepted as predicting our Sun’s future.

8/ ⚖️ The fine-tuning debate isn’t just “Who designed the universe?” It’s “What range of parameters actually work?” Maybe more universes are possible than we think. But maybe, just maybe… we’re closer to the edge than we realize.

9/ 🥇 Fred’s advice to thinkers everywhere: Before jumping to deep philosophical/metaphysical conclusions, let’s first calculate what actually works. Spoiler: It’s a lot more than people realize!

10/ 📚 Want more? Check out Fred Adams’ books: “The Five Ages of the Universe” and “Our Living Multiverse.” If the universe vanished, you’d want at least these on your Kindle. 😆

💬 What would YOU change about the universe? Which constant would you tweak? Let’s get cosmic in the replies! #Cosmology #Multiverse #FineTuning #Physics

— end thread —

🗞️ Newsletter

Subject: Into the Impossible: Have We Been Lied to About Intelligent Design? | Fred Adams

Hey Into The Impossible Listeners,

This week's episode dives deep into one of the most profound questions in science: Is our universe truly fine-tuned for life—or have we been sold a myth about Intelligent Design? Cosmologist Fred Adams joins host Brian Keating for a mind-expanding conversation you won't want to miss.

Here’s what’s inside the episode:

🚀 Fine-Tuning Explained
Fred breaks down the real science behind "fine-tuning." Is our universe so finely balanced that life is almost impossible anywhere else—or do the numbers actually tell a different story? You'll hear why most constants aren't as delicate as people think, and which parameters come closest to being "the universe's Achilles' heel."

🌌 The Multiverse: Science or Science Fiction?
What if our universe is just one of many? Fred explains why the multiverse isn’t just a sci-fi fantasy, but a legitimate scientific concept—and what it means for our understanding of why anything exists at all.

💥 Cosmological Constant: The Greatest Embarrassment in Physics?
Why is the cosmological constant such a conundrum? Fred and Brian wrestle with the infamous “120 orders of magnitude problem” and what it means for future discoveries.

🧬 Intelligent Design: Science, Philosophy, or Something Else?
Fred offers a nuanced take on why arguments for or against Intelligent Design may be missing the real scientific point. Discover which fine-tuning claims don’t hold up—and which one parameter is our universe’s true “failure point.”

🔭 From Element Building to the Edge of Physics
The conversation explores the famous Hoyle resonance (a.k.a. the “carbon miracle”), what actually counts as fine-tuned, and why life might not be as improbable as many believe. Plus, the pair discuss what it would take to ever truly “test” the existence of other universes.

🎁 Bonus: Fred’s Book Picks
Get Fred’s insider take on his own books—why publishers change titles, how marketing shapes science, and what he’s learned about communicating cosmic ideas.

If you’re curious about the origins of existence, the future of cosmic structure, or the science behind “why we’re here,” this episode packs decades of research into one accessible, fascinating discussion.

Don’t forget: Fred’s in-depth UCSD physics colloquium is next up in your feed. And if you have a .edu email, you could win a real meteorite! Details are in the episode.

Listen now and go deeper Into The Impossible.

[Listen to the Full Episode]
[Subscribe on YouTube]
[Leave Us a Review!]

Clear skies,
The Into The Impossible Team

P.S. For more mind-stretching conversations, check out Brian's interview with Professor Luke Barnes, where they debate cosmic fine-tuning and the multiverse head-to-head. It’s a must-listen for cosmic truth-seekers!

❓ Questions

Absolutely! Here are 10 discussion questions inspired by the conversation between Brian Keating and Fred Adams on this episode of the INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast:

  1. What is fine-tuning in the context of cosmology, and how does Fred Adams distinguish between different types of fine-tuning problems?

  2. How does Fred Adams describe the significance of the cosmological constant, and why is its observed value such a major puzzle for physicists?

  3. The calculation for the vacuum energy density is off by up to 120 orders of magnitude compared to what we observe. In your opinion, does this represent a “great embarrassment” for science, or is it simply an open mystery? Why?

  4. How does tuning a radio serve as an analogy for the concept of fine-tuning in cosmology? Where does this analogy hold up, and where might it break down?

  5. Fred Adams and Brian Keating discuss multiple parameters that need to be 'just right' for life as we know it to exist. Which parameters do they identify as most crucial or most finely tuned?

  6. According to Fred Adams, what roles could the possible "multiverse" play in explaining the apparent fine-tuning of our universe for life?

  7. How does Adams handle arguments related to Intelligent Design and anthropic reasoning within science? Does he think they hold scientific weight based on what we know so far?

  8. Adams talks about the range of values certain fundamental constants can take while still supporting stars and life. What does he say about how 'sensitive' our universe really is to these constants?

  9. What is the Hoyle resonance, and how does Fred Adams address claims that it is an example of extreme fine-tuning or even a “miracle”?

  10. If advancements in physics, like a fully-verified theory of quantum gravity, predicted the existence of other universes, should we consider the multiverse hypothesis as scientifically acceptable as predicting the future of our sun? Why or why not?

These questions should get people thinking deeply about the science, philosophy, and implications of the ideas discussed in this episode!

curiosity, value fast, hungry for more

✅ What if our universe could have been totally different—and what if you never existed to even ask why?
✅ Renowned astrophysicist Fred Adams joins host Brian Keating on The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast to unravel the secrets of "fine-tuning" and the possibility of a multiverse.
✅ Dive into a mind-bending conversation: Are we just a cosmic accident or evidence of something deeper? Get clarity on the science behind intelligent design, the role of dark energy, and why the very fabric of reality might be much stranger than we ever imagined.
✅ Listen now to challenge everything you think you know about the universe—and discover what REALLY makes our world possible.

#IntoTheImpossible #BrianKeating #FredAdams #Cosmology #Multiverse #FineTuning #Podcast

Conversation Starters

Absolutely! Here are some conversation starters you can use to spark thoughtful discussion in your Facebook group about this episode of The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast featuring Fred Adams:

  1. Fred Adams mentions that the universe is surprisingly robust to changes in certain parameters, like the strength of gravity. Were you surprised to learn that stars could still form even if gravity were a million times stronger or weaker? What does this say about the so-called "fine tuning" of our universe?

  2. The episode dives into the infamous cosmological constant problem—why is the observed value of vacuum energy so much smaller than theoretical predictions? Do you think this is "the greatest embarrassment in physics," as some physicists say, or just an unsolved mystery like any other?

  3. Fred Adams discusses the idea of multiple universes (the multiverse) as a natural outcome of our current theories. Do you find the concept of the multiverse plausible, or does it raise more questions than it answers?

  4. What did you make of Fred Adams' stance on the arguments for intelligent design based on fine tuning? Does the evidence discussed in the episode strengthen, weaken, or leave unchanged your views about a possible designer of the universe?

  5. The analogy of tuning a radio was used to explain fine tuning. Did that help clarify the concept for you? Are there alternative analogies that work better in your view?

  6. When considering the list of parameters that "need" to be just right for life—like the strengths of the fundamental forces and particle masses—do you think we’ll ever have a theory that predicts their values? Or will they always be input parameters of physics?

  7. The episode suggests that if just one parameter—like the mass difference between protons and neutrons—were a little different, hydrogen atoms wouldn't exist, and neither would life as we know it. How does this influence your perception of cosmic "fragility" or "resilience"?

  8. Fred Adams emphasizes our lack of knowledge about the probability distribution of physical constants. How important do you think it is to resolve this for making progress on the fine tuning question?

  9. The multiverse is sometimes criticized for being unfalsifiable. After hearing Fred Adams' take, do you think we can ever test the multiverse hypothesis? Or is it inherently outside the realm of science?

  10. Do you think the study of fine tuning can ever move beyond philosophical speculation into something truly scientific and predictive, as Fred Adams hopes? What would it take for that transition to happen?

Feel free to use or adapt these prompts to get people thinking and sharing their perspectives about this episode!

🐦 Business Lesson Tweet Thread

What if our universe didn’t have to be exactly like this? What if the dials on physics were spun a little to the left or right? Let’s talk about fine-tuning, why it matters, and why most people get it wrong. 🧵👇

1/ The big myth: change a constant a hair, and the universe falls apart. Most of the time, that’s just not true.

2/ Take gravity. If you tweak it—make it a million times stronger or weaker—stars can still form. Life goes on. The universe is robust, not fragile.

3/ What about stars making carbon, the “Hoyle miracle”? Turns out, you can move the tuning dial a LOT and still get plenty of carbon. Not as fine-tuned as the headlines claim.

4/ Fine-tuning is about ranges that work, not razor-thin bullseyes. Most “knobs” in physics give us lots of room to play.

5/ The real limits? Hydrogen atoms. Change a quark mass too much, and suddenly protons grab electrons and everything becomes neutrons. Now you’ve got a dead universe.

6/ Even then, universe-killing tweaks are rare. Most of physics is sitting comfortably far from the edge of disaster.

7/ If you want to use “fine-tuning” as an argument for a designer or as proof of some bigger plan, you’d better show your math. Most constants aren’t tuned to a knife’s edge.

8/ The parameters that matter most? A handful: the interactions of the four forces, a few particle masses, some cosmic settings. Not thousands. Maybe ten.

9/ The lesson: our universe isn’t a fragile snowflake. It’s surprisingly sturdy. And that means arguments for why we exist have to be a lot more nuanced.

10/ Before you draw wild conclusions about our cosmic significance, check how wide the radio dial really is. You might find it plays more stations than you think.

11/ Curiosity > dogma. That, and a little humility, is how you get to the heart of creation.

12/ If you thought the universe was balanced on a razor’s edge, think again. It’s more like a broad plateau. Explore it.

#physics #cosmos #curiosity

✏️ Custom Newsletter

Subject: New Episode Drop: Have We Been LIED to About Intelligent Design? | Into the Impossible Podcast

Hey friends of the cosmos,

We’ve just dropped a brand new INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE episode that’s guaranteed to teleport your mind into the farthest reaches of the multiverse! 🚀 This week, Brian Keating chats with astrophysicist and “Mr. Fine-Tuning” himself, Fred Adams, in an eye-opening conversation titled: Have We Been LIED to About Intelligent Design?

Here’s what’s waiting for you in this cosmic journey:

5 Keys You’ll Learn in This Episode:

  1. What “Fine Tuning” Really Means: Fred unpacks the difference between actual fine-tuning and good old cosmic coincidences, and why our universe might not be as delicate as some people claim.

  2. Debunking Intelligent Design Myths: The real science behind those claims that life or stars wouldn’t exist if constants were changed “even by a smidge.” Spoiler alert: many of those dramatic statements just aren’t true!

  3. How Close ARE We to the Edge? Find out which fundamental parameter truly puts our universe close to the brink—hint: it’s all about the masses of up and down quarks and the stability of hydrogen.

  4. Why the Multiverse Isn’t Just Sci-Fi: Fred lays out why having more than one universe actually makes sense and how a “multiverse” fits logically into modern cosmological thinking (and why it isn’t just fantasy).

  5. What the Cosmological Constant Embarrassment Really Is: Ever heard about the biggest mismatch in physics—120 orders of magnitude off? Fred breaks it down, explains why it’s interesting (but not shameful), and why we still don’t have all the answers.

Fun Fact of the Episode:
The universe could actually handle GRAVITY being a million times stronger or weaker and stars would still form! So much for that glass slipper fit, right? (Sorry, fairy tale fans.)

Outtro:
By the end of this episode, you’ll appreciate just how much science, not wishful thinking, goes into exploring the “design” of our universe. Fred’s curiosity is infectious, and his ability to break down complex physics into relatable analogies—yes, there’s even a radio-tuning metaphor—makes this a must-listen for science fans of all levels.

CALL TO ACTION:
Go tune in to this episode now! Whether you’re Team Multiverse, Team One-and-Only, or just Team Open-Minded, this one will stretch your thinking. Listen here [insert link], then hit subscribe so you never miss a mind-expanding discussion. And share your thoughts: is OUR universe living on a knife’s edge, or is it just one chord in a cosmic symphony?

Stay curious,

The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Team

P.S. Drop a comment, hit that thumbs up, or reply to this email—what’s your favorite fine-tuning fact? We’d love to hear from you!

🎓 Lessons Learned

Absolutely! Here are 10 key lessons from the event, each with a brief five-word title and a concise description:

  1. Fine Tuning in Physics
    Small parameter changes can drastically impact the universe’s structure, but many constants allow wider variation than often claimed.

  2. Limits of Cosmological Constant
    The cosmological constant’s value isn’t “tuned” extremely tightly—substantial changes would still allow a viable universe.

  3. Nature of Dark Energy
    Current experiments suggest dark energy might vary with time, though present hints aren’t yet conclusive.

  4. Calculating Universe’s Failure Points
    The most sensitive parameter appears to be hydrogen stability; shifting quark masses can destroy hydrogen easily.

  5. Probability Distributions Unknown
    We lack knowledge of which probability distributions set physical constants, making fine-tuning discussions highly speculative.

  6. Resonances and Carbon Production
    Contrary to claims, the process for stellar carbon creation isn’t as precariously balanced as once believed.

  7. Multiverse as Natural Outcome
    Given how universes can launch from parental space-time, a multiverse is a logical, even expected, possibility.

  8. Testing Multiverse Hypotheses
    You can’t directly observe other universes, but a well-verified theory could suggest their existence with high confidence.

  9. Anthropic Arguments Revisited
    Anthropic and intelligent design arguments depend on narrow tuning, but evidence shows broader permitted parameter ranges.

  10. Core Parameters to Tune
    Roughly ten parameters—forces and particle masses—are truly essential, not dozens, for viable universes to exist.

10 Surprising and Useful Frameworks and Takeaways

Absolutely! Drawing from the rich content in the transcript, here are the ten most surprising and useful frameworks and takeaways from the episode with Fred Adams on The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast:

  1. Fine Tuning Isn’t Always as “Fine” as We Think
    The concept of fine tuning in cosmology often gets overemphasized. Fred Adams points out that many physical parameters—like the gravitational constant (G)—can actually vary by orders of magnitude (e.g. a factor of a million) and still allow for stars and potentially habitable universes. The universe is robust to parameter changes much more than we might assume.

  2. Hierarchy Problem vs. Fine Tuning
    Adams distinguishes between fine tuning (small changes causing catastrophic results) and hierarchy problems (large unexplained differences between calculated and observed values, like the cosmological constant being 120 orders of magnitude off). Not all “fine tuning” arguments are about delicately balanced numbers—sometimes, we’re just baffled by absurdly big mismatches.

  3. Probabilities Are Assumptions, Not Answers
    When discussing why our universe’s physical constants allow for life, Adams emphasizes that probability calculations (e.g., assuming a uniform or logarithmic distribution for physical constants) are arbitrary in the absence of a guiding theory. We simply do not know the true probability distribution for these fundamental parameters, so caution is warranted in drawing deep conclusions from these arguments.

  4. “Intelligent Design” Arguments Often Get the Science Wrong
    Many popular intelligent design claims about fine tuning (e.g., that a small change in a constant would make stars impossible) are incorrect. The scientific math actually shows a much broader “safe” range for life-supporting universes. Adams urges people to separate theological or philosophical beliefs from misrepresented physical calculations.

  5. What Really IS Finely Tuned? The Hydrogen Atom as a Failure Point
    The closest our universe comes to a true “failure point” is the stability of the hydrogen atom. If the mass difference between the up and down quarks were tweaked just a bit (a factor of about seven), hydrogen atoms would become unstable and the universe would be dramatically different. This is the parameter Adams identifies as the most “finely tuned” in physical law as we know it.

  6. Tuning Analogy: The Radio Model
    Adams uses the analogy of tuning a radio—where you don’t need absolute precision, just enough to tune to a band within 1%. Similarly, many constants in physics can vary significantly without the universe “falling apart.” Only a few need precise settings to support complex structures like life.

  7. Dozens of Parameters are Relevant—But Not All Equally So
    There are many (but not hundreds) of physical constants relevant for a life-permitting universe. Adams identifies about ten key ones—coupling constants for fundamental forces, particle masses, cosmological parameters—whose values matter most. Yet, most are not mind-bogglingly finely tuned.

  8. Range-First, Probability-Second Framework for Parameter Variation
    Before jumping to anthropic explanations (or “designer” arguments), Adams argues the first step is to calculate for each fundamental parameter: how much can it vary while still permitting stars, galaxies, planets, and life? Only then should we analyze probabilities or deeper philosophical implications.

  9. Multiverse as a Natural Byproduct—Not Just a Cop-Out
    Fred Adams lays out a framework where, if our universe is spawned from a spacetime “parental manifold,” it’s plausible (even likely) that many universes could exist—each with varied parameters. The existence of a multiverse is a natural, logical extension of inflationary and quantum cosmology, not just a philosophical trick to explain fine tuning away.

  10. Experimental Verification as the Gold Standard
    Adams sketches out a philosophy for scientific confidence: our trust in predictions about the sun's far-future (turning into a red giant) is grounded in experimentally verified theories. If string theory or another "Theory of Everything" became similarly predictive and verifiable—including about the existence of other universes—then even multiverse claims would shift from speculation to credible cosmological science.


Bonus: Humility in Cosmological Explanations
Throughout the episode, Adams reminds us how much we don’t know (e.g., how the universe launches, the true probability distributions behind constants, why there’s a cosmological constant at all). This humility is a cornerstone of good science and helps us keep philosophical and scientific frameworks distinct.

These frameworks from Fred Adams’ conversation are not just useful for physicists, but for anyone thinking rigorously about deep questions of existence, meaning, science, and philosophy.

Clip Able

Absolutely! Here are five compelling social media clips from the episode, each at least 3 minutes long, complete with a catchy title, timestamps, and ready-to-share captions:


Clip 1
Title: "Cracking the Mystery of Dark Energy and the Universe’s Fate"
Timestamps: 00:02:03 – 00:06:39
Caption:
What is dark energy, and how does it shape the destiny of the cosmos? Astrophysicist Fred Adams breaks down the latest discoveries, including hints that the 'cosmological constant' might not be constant after all. Why does this matter, and what does it mean for the ultimate fate of our universe? Tune in for a lucid explanation that turns abstract science into something truly cosmic.
#Cosmology #DarkEnergy #Astrophysics #UniverseFate


Clip 2
Title: "Fine-Tuning: Are the Laws of Physics Designed for Life?"
Timestamps: 00:13:22 – 00:17:03
Caption:
Is the universe perfectly 'tuned' for life, or is it just a cosmic coincidence? Fred Adams explains what 'fine-tuning' really means in physics, the difference between hierarchy and sensitivity, and why some so-called “miracles” might not be so miraculous after all. This is the ultimate science vs. philosophy moment!
#FineTuning #Physics #LifeInTheUniverse #ScienceDebate


Clip 3
Title: "How Many Cosmic Dials Must Be Set for Stars and Life?"
Timestamps: 00:23:51 – 00:28:55
Caption:
If our universe is like a cosmic radio, how many stations must be perfectly tuned for life to exist? Fred Adams counts up the fundamental parameters you’d need to “set” for stars, planets, and galaxies to form. Spoiler: it’s not as many as you think, and some are far less sensitive than the fine-tuning myth suggests.
#CosmicSettings #AnthropicPrinciple #Astrobiology #ScienceExplained


Clip 4
Title: "The Truth About the ‘Hoyle Miracle’ and Carbon for Life"
Timestamps: 00:33:04 – 00:40:12
Caption:
Is carbon production in stars a fluke—or is it robust across a wide range of possible universes? Fred Adams busts the “fine-tuning” myth around the famous Hoyle resonance, revealing that nature leaves surprising wiggle room for the building blocks of life. Essential listening for anyone curious about how stars make the elements we’re made of!
#HoyleResonance #StarScience #OriginOfLife #FineTuningMyth


Clip 5
Title: "Are Other Universes Inevitable? Fred Adams on the Multiverse"
Timestamps: 00:53:01 – 00:57:48
Caption:
Is it more natural to believe in a multiverse than a single universe? Fred Adams lays out why the laws of physics might point towards endless universes spawning beyond our own—and what it would actually take to ‘prove’ or falsify that idea. This is multiverse theory as you’ve never heard it before.
#Multiverse #Cosmology #BigQuestions #PhysicsPodcast


These clips are rich in insight, accessible for a broad audience, and ideal for generating conversation! Let me know if you need custom video templates or have specific platforms in mind.

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