Oxbridge Croquet Day, Sunday 2 April 2017



Dr Luke Barnes, a research astronomer, keen cricketer and speaker at Vivid, and Professor Geraint Lewis, cosmologist and galactic archaeologist, both Cambridge alumni. The planets, stars and galaxies that fill the night sky obey elegant mathematical patterns: the laws of nature. Why does our Universe obey these particular laws? As a clue to answering this question, scientists have asked a related question: what if the laws were slightly different? What if it had begun with more matter, had heavier particles, or space had four dimensions?
In the last 30 years, scientists have discovered something astounding: the vast majority of these changes are disastrous. We end up with a universe containing no galaxies, no stars, no planets, no atoms, no molecules, and most importantly, no intelligent life-forms wondering what went wrong. This is called the fine-tuning of the universe for life. After explaining the science of what happens when you change the way our universe works, we ask: what does all this mean?