Alternative histories • a formulation of quantum theory in which the probability of any observation is constructed from all the possible histories that could have led to that observation.
   Anthropic principle • the idea that we can draw conclusions about the apparent laws of physics based on the fact that we exist.
   Antimatter • each particle of matter has a corresponding anti-particle. If they meet, they annihilate each other, leaving pure energy.
   Apparent laws • the laws of nature that we observe in our universe—the laws of the four forces, and the parameters such as mass and charge that characterize the elementary particles—in contrast to the more fundamental laws of M-theory that allow for different universes with different laws.
   Asymptotic freedom • a property of the strong force that causes it to become weaker at short distances. Hence, although quarks are bound in nuclei by the strong force, they can move within nuclei almost as if they felt no force at all.
   Atom • the basic unit of ordinary matter, consisting of a nucleus with protons and neutrons, surrounded by orbiting electrons.
   Baryon • a type of elementary particle, such as the proton or neutron, that is made of three quarks.
   Big bang • the dense, hot beginning of the universe. The big bang theory postulates that about 13.7 billion years ago the part of the universe we can see today was only a few millimeters across. Today the universe is vastly larger and cooler, but we can observe the remnants of that early period in the cosmic microwave background radiation that permeates all space.
   Black hole • a region of space-time that, due to its immense gravitational force, is cut off from the rest of the universe.
   Boson • an elementary particle that carries force.
   Bottom-up approach • in cosmology, an idea that rests on the assumption that there’s a single history of the universe, with a well-defined starting point, and that the state of the universe today is an evolution from that beginning.
   Classical physics • any theory of physics in which the universe is assumed to have a single, well-defined history.
   Cosmological constant • a parameter in Einstein’s equations that gives space-time an inherent tendency to expand.
   Electromagnetic force • the second strongest of the four forces of nature. It acts between particles with electric charges.
   Electron • an elementary particle of matter that has a negative charge and is responsible for the chemical properties of elements.
   Fermion • a matter-type elementary particle.
   Galaxy • a large system of stars, interstellar matter, and dark matter that is held together by gravity.
   Gravity • the weakest of the four forces of nature. It is the means by which objects that have mass attract each other.
   Heisenberg uncertainty principle • a law of quantum theory stating that certain pairs of physical properties cannot be known simultaneously to arbitrary precision.
   Meson • a type of elementary particle that is made of a quark and an anti-quark.
   M-theory • a fundamental theory of physics that is a candidate for the theory of everything.
   Multiverse • a set of universes.
   Neutrino • an extremely light elementary particle that is affected only by the weak nuclear force and gravity.
   Neutron • a type of electrically neutral baryon that with the proton forms the nucleus of an atom.
   No-boundary condition • the requirement that the histories of the universe are closed surfaces without a boundary.
   Phase • a position in the cycle of a wave.
   Photon • a boson that carries the electromagnetic force. A quantum particle of light.
   Probability amplitude • in a quantum theory, a complex number whose absolute value squared gives a probability.
   Proton • a type of positively charged baryon that with the neutron forms the nucleus of an atom.
   Quantum theory • a theory in which objects do not have single definite histories.
   Quark • an elementary particle with a fractional electric charge that feels the strong force. Protons and neutrons are each composed of three quarks.
   Renormalization • a mathematical technique designed to make sense of infinities that arise in quantum theories.
   Singularity • a point in space-time at which a physical quantity becomes infinite.
   Space-time • a mathematical space whose points must be specified by both space and time coordinates.
   String theory • a theory of physics in which particles are described as patterns of vibration that have length but no height or width—like infinitely thin pieces of string.
   Strong nuclear force • the strongest of the four forces of nature. This force holds the protons and neutrons inside the nucleus of an atom. It also holds together the protons and neutrons themselves, which is necessary because they are made of still tinier particles, quarks.
   Supergravity • a theory of gravity that has a kind of symmetry called supersymmetry.
   Supersymmetry • a subtle kind of symmetry that cannot be associated with a transformation of ordinary space. One of the important implications of supersymmetry is that force particles and matter particles, and hence force and matter, are really just two facets of the same thing.
   Top-down approach • the approach to cosmology in which one traces the histories of the universe from the “top down,” that is, backward from the present time.
   Weak nuclear force • one of the four forces of nature. The weak force is responsible for radioactivity and plays a vital role in the formation of the elements in stars and the early universe.
   THE UNIVERSE HAS A DESIGN, and so does a book. But unlike the universe, a book does not appear spontaneously from nothing. A book requires a creator, and that role does not fall solely on the shoulders of its authors. So first and foremost we’d like to acknowledge and thank our editors, Beth Rashbaum and Ann Harris, for their near-infinite patience. They were our students when we required students, our teachers when we required teachers, and our prodders when we required prodding. They stuck with the manuscript, and did it in good cheer, whether the discussion centered around the placement of a comma or the impossibility of embedding a negative curvature surface axisymmetrically in flat space. We’d also like to thank Mark Hillery, who kindly read much of the manuscript and provided valuable input; Carole Lowenstein, who did so much to help with the interior design; David Stevenson, who guided the cover to completion; and Loren Noveck, whose attention to detail has saved us from some typos we would not like to have seen committed to print. To Peter Bollinger: much gratitude for bringing art to science in your illustrations, and for your diligence in ensuring the accuracy of every detail. And to Sidney Harris: Thank you for your wonderful cartoons, and your great sensitivity to the issues facing scientists. In another universe, you could have been a physicist. We are also grateful to our agents, Al Zuckerman and Susan Ginsburg, for their support and encouragement. If there are two messages they consistently provided, they were “It’s time to finish the book already,” and “Don’t worry about when you’ll finish, you’ll get there eventually.” They were wise enough to know when to say which. And finally, our thanks to Stephen’s personal assistant, Judith Croasdell; his computer aide, Sam Blackburn; and Joan Godwin. They provided not just moral support, but practical and technical support without which we could not have written this book. Moreover, they always knew where to find the best pubs.
   Air, discovery of
   Almagest (Ptolemy)
   Alternative histories. See also Quantum physics/quantum theory
   Feynman diagrams and
   Feynman’s sum over histories and
   the past and
   quantum vs. Newtonian worlds and
   universe and
   Anaximander
   Anthropic principle
   strong anthropic principle
   weak anthropic principle
   Antimatter
   Anti-quarks (pi mesons)
   Anti
-realists
   Apparent laws of nature
   Aquinas, Thomas
   Archimedes
   Aristarchus
   Aristotle
   creation as deliberate design
   four-element theory
   on no exceptions to natural laws
   rate of falling objects theory
   reason for principles of nature
   use of reason instead of observation
   Asymptotic freedom
   Atomism
   Atoms
   hydrogen, Lamb shift and
   quarks, protons, and neutrons
   strong nuclear force and
   Augustine of Hippo, St.
   Babylonians
   Baryon
   Berkeley, George
   Beryllium
   Big bang theory
   CMBR and
   evidence of
   irregular universe and inflation
   as spontaneous quantum event
   when it happened
   Black hole
   Boshongo people
   Boson
   Brain
   laws of science and
   model building of
   Buckyballs
   buckyball soccer
   particle paths
   Buoyancy, law of
   Caenorhabditis elegans
   Carbon
   as basis for life
   creation of, in primordial universe
   triple alpha process and
   in universe
   Carroll, John W.
   Cathode rays
   CERN, Geneva
   Chemistry
   Chinese philosophy and mythology
   God as Creator
   tale of the ten suns
   Christianity
   creation as deliberate design
   John XXI’s list of heresies, science and
   miracles
   natural laws as obedient to God
   notion of free will and purpose
   Ptolemaic model adopted by Roman Catholic Church
   rejection of indifferent natural laws
   Roman Catholic Church acknowledges wrong to Galileo
   Clepsydra
   Conway, John
   Copernicus
   Corpuscle theory
   Cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR)
   evidence of inflation and
   Cosmological constant
   Cosmology. See also Universe
   “bottom up” approach
   grand design and
   laws of nature as “fine-tuned”
   number of dimensions in the universe
   predictions in
   “top down” approach
   Crater Lake, Oregon
   Creation. See also Life; Universe
   account in Genesis
   big bang theory
   empirical evidence of
   God as Creator
   as godless
   of life
   M-theory and
   myths
   origin of the universe
   spontaneous quantum creation of the universe
   Curvature/curved spaces
   geodesics
   great circle
   Darwin, Charles
   Davisson, Clinton
   Davy, Sir Humphrey
   Delayed-choice experiments
   Democritus
   De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres [Copernicus])
   Descartes, René
   Dicke, Robert
   Double-slit experiment
   buckyball soccer
   delayed-choice experiments
   Feynman’s insight
   particle paths
   two-slit soccer
   “which-path” information
   Dualities
   Earth
   as center of the universe
   cessation of rotation
   Copernican model and
   creation
   curvature of, and geodesics
   eclipse and
   ether (luminiferous ether) and
   gravity and
   as hospitable to life
   laws of nature and
   Mercator projection, world map
   orbit
   planetary system of
   Ptolemaic model and
   seasonal weather patterns
   speed of
   Eccentricity of elliptical orbits
   Eclipse (lunar or solar)
   prediction of
   Economics
   Eddington, Arthur
   Effective theory
   Egyptian creation myth
   Einstein, Albert
   cosmological constant
   on creation of the universe
   expanding universe and
   general relativity
   photoelectric effect
   special relativity
   on time
   on unified theory
   on the universe
   Einstein’s theory of relativity
   general relativity
   GPS satellite navigation systems and general relativity
   space-time and general relativity
   special relativity
   Electromagnetic force
   bosons and
   electroweak force and
   light and
   Maxwell’s equations
   QED and
   speed of electromagnetic waves
   Electrons
   double-slit experiment and
   Feynman diagrams and
   particle paths
   Electroweak force
   three new particles discovered
   Elegance, of models
   Empedocles
   Energy
   constant zero
   of empty space
   of universe
   Epicurus
   Ether (luminiferous ether)
   Euclid
   Evolution
   Faraday, Michael
   Fermion
   Feynman, Richard (Dick)
   Feynman diagrams
   Feynman paths
   QED and
   sum over histories
   van owned by
   FitzGerald, George Francis
   Force fields
   bosons
   fermions
   Fowler, William
   Free will
   Friedmann, Alexander
   Fuller, Buckminster
   Galaxies
   alternative histories and
   cosmological constant and
   expanding universe and
   heavy elements and formation of
   inhomogeneities in universe and
   light from distant
   number of and stars in
   planetary systems of
   quantum fluctuations and formation of
   Galileo
   rate of falling objects theory
   Game of Life
   blinkers
   evolution of a still life
   glider guns
   gliders
   still-life blocks
   Geodesics
   Germer, Lester
   God (or gods)
   as causal in nature
   creation and
   as dice-thrower
   first-cause argument
   Joshua praying for the sun and moon to halt
   as mathematician
   natural laws, human statues and
   natural laws and
   Newton’s belief in God’s intervention
   universe as God’s dollhouse
   what happened before the world existed?
   Grand design
   laws of nature as “fine-tuned” and
   no-boundary condition and
   Grand unified theories (GUTS)
   Gravitational waves
   Gravity
   cosmological constant
   cosmological constant and
   creation of stars, galaxies, planets
   effective theory and
   Einstein’s general relativity and
   galaxies and
   mathematical 
formulation of theory
   M-theory and
   Newton’s law of
   orbits and three dimensions
   quantum theory and
   as shaper of space-time
   standard model not applicable
   supergravity theory
   warpage of time and space by
   as weak force
   Great circle
   Greece, ancient
   distinction between human and natural laws lacking
   Ionian science
   laws of nature and
   questions of creation and
   scientific method lacking
   Stoics
   “Grimnismal” (The Elder Edda)
   Harris, Sidney, cartoons by
   Heisenberg, Werner
   Heisenberg uncertainty principle
   empty space, impossibility of, and
   Planck’s constant
   Helium
   big bang theory and
   creation of beryllium, carbon, and
   in primordial universe
   Heraclitus
   Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
   Holographic principle
   Hoyle, Fred
   Hubble, Edwin
   Humans. See also Life
   creation of, Biblical
   definition of living beings
   existence relative to cosmic history
   free will and
   natural laws and
   origins of homo sapiens
   psychology as study of will and behavior
   robot vs.
   self-awareness
   soul of
   written language and cultivation begun
   Hume, David
   Hydrogen
   fusion, in stars
   isotopes
   Lamb shift and
   in primordial universe
   Inertia, law of
   Inflation theory
   irregular universe and
   “Initial conditions”
   Intelligent design
   Interference
   constructive
   destructive
   double-slit experiment
   Newton’s rings and
   puddle interference
   “which-path” information and
   Young’s experiment and
   Ionian science
   Johnson, Samuel
   John XXI, Pope
   Kelvin, William Thomson, Lord
   
 
 The Grand Design Page 13