Cosmoparticle Hub researchers collaborate in CERN-curated Arts/Science exhibition
7 October 2019
Professor Hiranya Peiris contributes a ‘living scientists’ blackboard to complement historical blackboards such as Einstein's, Rudolf Steiner’s and Joseph Beuys’ in a sci/art collaboration.
In August 2018 Professor Hiranya Peiris was among a group of scientists invited to contribute to an exhibition curated by , founder of, the interdisciplinary arts/science/technology programme based at the world’s largest particle physics research laboratory, the home of the Large Hadron Collider.
Professor Peiris invited colleagues to participate in a collaborative science discussion and captured it on the blackboard. The result was entitled ‘The Quantum Origin of the Universe’.She provides an explanation of the creative impulse behind the work:
“What event gave birth to our universe? The theory of ‘inflation’ might hold the answer. Itconjectures that the early universe went through a time of accelerated expansion, ironing outany lumpsand bumps to leave it nearly uniform with just very slight irregularities. In fact, itspredictions have been startlingly accurate as, over the last decade, we have mapped the universeon the largestscales – and so inflation is now a highly-favoured scenario for the very-early universe.Yet inflation is so powerful that, once unleashed, it might continue indefinitely, ending only inside afewisolated ‘bubbles’; our own universe would then be contained within one of these rare patches.Looking back in time from within the bubble, we see the beginning of the universe as a mysterious‘Big Bang’ event. We could uncover more about what that event means if we can understand thephysics of the bubble formation. In orderto shed light on the originating event of the cosmositself requires understanding the quantum nucleation event — for which current techniques are not adequate.”
“The blackboard depicts the conception of a collaboration aiming to answer these difficult questions. The collaborators involved include (other than myself) Jonathan Braden and Andrew Pontzen at С̳, Silke Weinfurtner at the University of Nottingham, and Matt Johnson at the Perimeter Institute in Canada. It is one of the most wide-ranging and enjoyable collaborations of my career so far, and has led us to try to gain further understanding of the origin of the Universe by means of studying analogue condensed matter systems that can be built in the lab.”
Images from the exhibition
Figure 1 Installation by Goshka Macuga
Fig 2Equations by contemporary physicists (Peiris blackboardtop right)& Einstein and Beuys blackboards
Figure 3Rudolph Steiner blackboards
Read more about
View the exhibition online: