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12/03/2019 The 13 Most Important Numbers in the Universe - James D.

Stein's Cosmic Numbers

The 13 Most Important Numbers in the Universe


In the order in which science first became aware of them.

By James D. Stein Sep 15, 2011

Some numbers, such as your phone number or your Social Security number, are decidedly more important than others. But
the numbers on this list are of cosmic importance—they are the fundamental concepts that define our universe, that make the
existence of life possible and that will decide the ultimate fate of the universe. In this piece adapted from his new book Cosmic
Numbers: The Numbers That Define Our Universe, California State University, Long Beach, mathematics professor James D.
Stein reveals not only the effect each number has on our lives and our universe, but also the story of the people who
discovered and worked with them. Here they are, in the order in which science first became aware of them.
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1
The Universal Gravitational Constant

GETTY IMAGES

Maybe 2011 hasn't been such a great year, but 1665 was a whole lot worse—especially if you happened to live in London.
That was the year of the last great outbreak of bubonic plague, and even though Londoners didn't know a whole about
medicine, they knew that it was a good idea to get out of town. The court of King Charles II departed London for Oxfordshire,
and Cambridge University shut down. One of its undergraduates, Isaac Newton, went back home to Woolsthorpe, where he
spent the next eighteen months opening the door to the modern world.

We live in a technological era that would be impossible without the ability to make quantitative predictions. And the first great
example of quantitative prediction was to be found in Newton's theory of universal gravitation. Starting from the hypothesis
that the gravitational attraction between two masses is directly proportional to the product of the masses and inversely
proportional to the square of the distance between them, Newton figured out that the orbit of a planet was an ellipse with the
sun at one of the foci. Johannes Kepler had reached this conclusion from years of painstaking observations, but Newton was
able to do so with no more than the assumption of gravitational attraction and the mathematical tool of calculus (which he had
invented for this purpose).

Curiously, though the gravitational constant, G, was the first constant to be discovered, it is the least accurately known of all
13 constants. That is because of the extreme weakness of the gravitational force when compared with the other basic forces.
Consider that though mass of the earth is approximately 6 x 1024kilograms, by 1957—about three centuries after Newton left
plague-ravaged London—humans overcame the earth's gravitational attraction by using a simple chemical-powered rocket to
place Sputnik, the first artificial satellite, in orbit.

2
The Speed of Light

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MICHAEL DUVA/GETTY IMAGES

The invention of the cannon during the Middle Ages showed that the speed of sound was finite; you could see a cannon fire
long before you heard the sound of the explosion. Shortly thereafter, several scientists, including the great Galileo, realized
the possibly that the speed of light was finite as well. Galileo devised an experiment that might well have proved this, involving
telescopes and men pointing lights at each other over a great distance. But the extreme rapidity of the speed of light,
combined with the technological limitations of the 1600s, made this experiment unworkable.

By the end of the nineteenth century, technology and ingenuity had advanced so far that it was possible to measure the speed
of light within 0.02 percent of its actual value. This enabled Albert Michelson and Edward Morley to demonstrate that the
speed of light was independent of direction. This startling result led eventually to Einstein's theory of relativity, the iconic
intellectual achievement of the 20th century and perhaps of all time.

It is often said that nothing can travel faster than light. Indeed, nothing physical in the universe can travel faster than the
speed of light, but even though our computers process information at near light speed, we still wait impatiently for our files to
download. The speed of light is fast, but the speed of frustration is even faster.

3
The Ideal Gas Constant

IMAGENAVIGETTY IMAGES

In the 17th century, scientists understood three phases of matter—solids, liquids and gases (the discovery of plasma, the
fourth phase of matter, lay centuries in the future). Back then, solids and liquids were much harder to work with than gases
because changes in solids and liquids were difficult to measure with the equipment of the time. So many experimentalists
played around with gases to try to deduce fundamental physical laws.

Robert Boyle was perhaps the first great experimentalist, and was responsible for what we now consider to be the essence of
experimentation: vary one or more parameter, and see how other parameters change in response. It may seem obvious in
retrospect, but hindsight, as the physicist Leo Szilard once remarked, is notably more accurate than foresight.

Boyle discovered the relationship between the pressure and volume of a gas, and a century later, the French scientists
Jacques Charles and Joseph Gay-Lussac discovered the relationship between volume and temperature. This discovery was
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not simply a matter of donning a traditional white lab jacket (which hadn't yet been invented) and performing a few
measurements in comfortable surroundings. To obtain the required data, Gay-Lussac took a hot-air balloon to an altitude of
23,000 feet, possibly a world record at the time. The results of Boyle, Charles and Gay-Lussac could be combined to show
that in a fixed quantity of a gas, temperature was proportional to the product of pressure and volume. The constant of
proportionality is known as the ideal gas constant.

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4
Absolute Zero

ESA/NASA

It's easy to make heat. Humans have been able to capture or create fire since prehistoric times. Producing cold is a much
more difficult task. The universe as a whole has done a very good job of it, as the average temperature of the universe is only
a few degrees above absolute zero. And it has done so the way that we do it in our refrigerators: through the expansion of
gas.

Michael Faraday, who is far better known for his contributions to the study of electricity, was the first to suggest the possibility
of producing colder temperatures by harnessing the expansion of a gas. Faraday had produced some liquid chlorine in a
sealed tube, and when he broke the tube (and thereby lowered the pressure), the chlorine instantly transformed into a gas.
Faraday noted that if lowering the pressure could transform a liquid into a gas, then perhaps applying pressure to a gas could
transform it into a liquid—with a colder temperature. That's basically what happens in your refrigerator; gas is pressurized and
allowed to expand, which cools the surrounding material.

Pressurization enabled scientists to liquefy oxygen, hydrogen and, by the beginning of the 20th century, helium. That brought
us to within a few degrees of absolute zero. But heat is also motion, and a technique of slowing down atoms by using lasers
has enabled us to come within millionths of a degree of absolute zero, which we now know to be slightly more than –459
degrees Fahrenheit. Absolute zero falls in the same category as the speed of light. Material objects can get ever so close, but
they can never reach it.

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Avogadro's Number

LAWRENCE LAWRY/GETTY IMAGES

Unlocking the secrets of chemistry was not unlike unlocking a safe-deposit box. It took two keys to accomplish the task.

The first key, the atomic theory, was discovered by John Dalton at the dawn of the 19th century. The renowned physicist
Richard Feynman felt that the atomic theory was so important that he said, "If, in some cataclysm, all of scientific knowledge
were to be destroyed, and only one sentence passed on to the next generation of creatures, what statement would contain the
most information in the fewest words? I believe it is the atomic hypothesis that all things are made of atoms—little particles
that move around in perpetual motion."

These are the 92 (naturally occurring) elements that are the fundamental building blocks of all the matter in the universe.
However, almost everything in the universe is a compound; a combination of different kinds of elements. Thus, the second key
to modern chemistry was the discovery that each compound was a collection of identical molecules. For example, a batch of
pure water is made of lots and lots of identical H2O molecules.

But just how many molecules? Getting the bookkeeping right so that we could predict the result of chemical reactions proved
to be a major roadblock to the advancement of chemistry. The Italian chemist Amadeo Avogadro proposed that at the same
temperature and pressure equal volumes of different gases contained the same number of molecules. This hypothesis was
largely unappreciated when it was first announced, but it enabled chemists to deduce the structure of molecules by measuring
volumes at the start and finish of a chemical reaction. Avogadro's number is defined to be the number of atoms in 12 grams of
carbon, and is approximately six followed by 23 zeroes. (It's also the number of molecules in a mole, a unit of measurement
that chemists use to express the amount of a substance.)

6
The Relative Strength of Electricity and Gravity

GOLLYGFORCE/FLICKR

If you walk across a carpet on a cold winter morning, you may have generated enough static electricity to cause small objects
to adhere to your clothes or to make you hair stand up. This provides a vivid demonstration of how much stronger electricity is

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than gravity. The entire mass of the earth is exerting its best gravitational efforts to pull that object down, yet the small amount
of static electricity you have generated defeats those efforts.

It's a good thing, too—the fact that electricity is so much stronger than gravity enables life to exist. Life is a complex of
chemical and electrical reactions, but even the chemical reactions that power the motions of muscles or the digestion of food
are, at their core, dependent upon electricity. Chemical reactions take place as the electrons at the outer edges of atoms shift
their allegiance from one atom to another. In doing so, different compounds are formed as the atoms recombine. These shifts
cause our nerves to send messages to our muscles, to enable us to move, or to our brain, where the information gathered by
our senses is processed.

If electricity were weaker relative to gravity than it actually is, this would be more difficult. It's possible that evolution could
produce a way for life to adapt to such a circumstance. But we'll have to check in another universe to find out.

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7
Boltzmann's Constant

NAWARIT RITTIYOTEE / EYEEMGETTY IMAGES

We all know that water flows downhill, not uphill, because that's the way gravity works. Gravity is a force, and the gravitational
pull of the earth acts as if it were concentrated at the center of the earth, and pulls the water downhill. However, there isn't a
similar explanation for why we see ice cubes melt when placed in a glass of hot water but never see ice cubes form
spontaneously in a glass of tepid water. This has to do with the way heat energy is distributed, and the solution to this
problem was one of the great quests of 19th-century physics.

The solution to this problem was found by the Austrian physicist Ludwig Boltzmann, who discovered that there were many
more ways for energy to be distributed throughout the molecules of a glass of tepid water than in a glass of hot water with ice
cubes. Nature is a percentage player. It goes most often with the most likely way to do things, and Boltzmann's constant
quantifies this relationship. Disorder is much more common than order—there are many more ways for a room to be messy
than clean (and it's much easier for an ice cube to melt into disorder than for the ordered structure of an ice cube to simply
appear).

Boltzmann's entropy equation, which incorporates Boltzmann's constant, also explains Murphy's law: If anything can go
wrong, it will. It isn't that some malignant force is acting to make things go wrong for you. It's just that the number of ways that
things can go wrong greatly exceeds the number of ways that things can go right.

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8
Planck's Constant

PASIEKA/GETTY IMAGES

For the most part, scientists are a relatively self-effacing group. They know that Nature is the final judge of whatever analyses
they have made, and sometimes it takes Nature a substantial amount of time to deliver its verdict. Yet one day Max Planck
made an assumption about the physical universe that impelled him to tell his son during a lunchtime walk, "I have had a
conception today as revolutionary and as great as the kind of thought that Newton had."

Strong words, indeed, but time proved Planck was absolutely correct. His startling revelation was that the universe packages
energy in finite multiples of a smallest amount, much as the atomic theory proclaims that the universe packages matter in
finite multiples of atoms. These small packages of energy are known as quanta, and Planck's constant, abbreviated h, tells us
the size of these packages.

Planck's quantum theory has proved to be not only an explanation of the way the universe is structured, but also the spark of
the technological revolution of the 20th and 21st centuries. Almost every advance in electronics, from lasers to computers to
magnetic resonance imagers, derives from what the quantum theory tells us about the universe. Additionally, the quantum
theory provides us with a highly counterintuitive picture of reality. Concepts such as parallel universes, once the stuff of
science fiction (if envisioned at all), are now firmly entrenched, thanks to quantum theory, as legitimate explanations of the
way things are—or at least the way they might be.

9
The Schwarzschild Radius

CHRIS WALSH/GETTY IMAGES

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The concept of a black hole, a space in which so much matter was packed that the gravitational pull prevents the escape of
light, was known as far back as the 18th century. But it was seen as more of a theoretical possibility than an actual
phenomenon. The possibility of an actual black hole emerged as a result of Einstein's theory of general relativity, which gave
a detailed explanation of subtleties of gravitation that had eluded Newton. A copy of this theory made its way to the Russian
Front during World War I, to Karl Schwarzschild, a physicist and astronomer serving in the German army.

Einstein put forth his theory in the form of a system of equations. These equations were extremely difficult to solve, but
Schwarzschild managed to find a solution to them in the midst of the carnage of a war. Not only that, but he also showed that
for any given quantity of matter, there was a sphere so small that if all that matter were packed inside it, it would become a
black hole. The radius of the sphere is known as the Schwarzschild radius. (There is no single Schwarzschild radius; it's a
different size for every possible mass.)

Popular treatments leave us with the impression that black holes are ominously small, dense and black. For example, the
Schwarzschild radius for a mass the size of the earth is only about 1 centimeter. But surprisingly, much larger black holes can
be diffuse. If an entire galaxy's mass were distributed evenly within its Schwarzschild radius to create a black hole, the black
hole's density would be about 0.0002 the density of the earth's atmosphere.

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10
The Efficiency of Hydrogen Fusion

NASA

Carl Sagan famously said, "We are all star-stuff." That's true, and it's thanks to the efficiency of hydrogen fusion.

The universe is mostly hydrogen. To produce more complex elements—in particular, the ones that make life possible—there
has to be a way to get those other elements from hydrogen. The universe does it with stars, which really are just very large
balls of hydrogen, assembled through gravitational attraction. The pressure of this gravitational attraction is so strong that
nuclear reactions start to occur, and hydrogen is transmuted into helium through fusion.

The amount of energy released in this process is given by Einstein's famous equation E = mc2. But only 0.7 percent of the
hydrogen initially present actually becomes energy. Expressed as a decimal, this number is 0.007. This is the efficiency of
hydrogen fusion, and the presence of life in the universe is very sensitive to this number.

One of the first steps in the fusion of hydrogen is the production of deuterium (heavy hydrogen) and this would not happen if
the efficiency of hydrogen fusion fell below 0.006. Stars would still form, but they would simply be large glowing balls of
hydrogen. If the efficiency of hydrogen fusion were 0.008 or higher, then fusion would be too efficient. Hydrogen would

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become helium so quickly that the hydrogen in the universe would be used up. Since each water molecule contains two atoms
of hydrogen, it would be impossible for water to form. Without water, life as we know it could not exist.

11
The Chandrasekhar Limit

NASA

Life as we know it is based on the element carbon, but life also requires a large variety of other, heavier atoms. There is only
one process in the universe that produces these heavier elements, and that is a supernova, the explosion of a giant star. A
supernova explosion produces all those heavier elements and scatters them throughout the universe, enabling planets to form
and life to evolve. Supernovas are rare but spectacular. The supernova that appeared in the sky in 1987 actually happened
more than 150,000 light years from earth, but was still visible to the naked eye.

The size of a star determines its fate. Stars the size of the sun live relatively quiet lives (though billions of years from now the
sun will expand and engulf the earth). Stars slightly larger than the sun will become white dwarves, intensely hot but small
stars that will cool slowly and die. However, if a star exceeds a certain mass—the Chandrasekhar limit—then it is destined to
become a supernova.

The Chandrasekhar limit is approximately 1.4 times the mass of the sun. Extraordinarily, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
discovered this as a 20-year-old student by combining the theories of stellar composition, relativity and quantum mechanics
during a trip on a steamship from India to England.

12
The Hubble Constant

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ALBERT KLEIN/GETTY IMAGES

There are really only two possibilities for the universe: Either it has always been here, or it had a beginning. The question as
to which is right was resolved in the late 1960s, when conclusive evidence showed that the universe began in a giant
explosion. The particulars of the big bang are almost impossible to comprehend. All the matter of the universe, all its stars
and galaxies, originally was squished together inside a volume so small it makes the volume of a single hydrogen atom seem
gargantuan in comparison.

If the universe began in a giant explosion, how long ago did that explosion take place, and how big is the universe today? It
turns out that there is a surprising relationship between those two questions, a relationship that was first suspected in the
1920s as the result of observations by Edwin Hubble (for whom the famous space telescope is named) at the Mount Wilson
observatory outside Los Angeles.

Hubble, using a technique similar to the one currently used by radar guns, discovered that the galaxies were generally
receding from earth. Since there is nothing astronomically special about earth's place in the universe, this must be taking
place across the universe: All the galaxies are flying apart. The relationship between the speed at which a galaxy appears to
be moving away and its distance from earth is given by Hubble's constant. From this we can figure out that the big bang
occurred approximately 13.7 billion years ago.

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13
Omega

GETTY IMAGES

We know how the universe began, and how old it is. But we don't know how it all ends. However, there is a way to determine
its fate, if only we can gather enough information to compute the value of a constant known as Omega.

If you launch a rocket from a planet, and you know the rocket's speed, then knowing whether it can escape a planet's gravity
depends upon how massive the planet is. For instance, a rocket with enough speed to escape the moon might not have
enough speed to escape the earth.

The fate of the universe depends upon the same kind of calculation. If the big bang imparted enough velocity to the galaxies,
they could fly apart forever. But if it didn't, then the galaxies would find themselves similar to rockets without escape velocity.
They would be pulled back together in a big crunch—the reverse of the big bang.

It all depends upon the mass of the entire universe. We know that if there were approximately five atoms of hydrogen per
cubic meter of space, that would be just enough matter for gravitational attraction to bring the galaxies back together in a big

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crunch. That tipping point is called Omega; it's the ratio of the total amount of matter in the universe divided by the minimum
amount of matter needed to cause the big crunch. If Omega is less than one, the galaxies will fly apart forever. If it's more
than one, then sometime in the far-distant future the big crunch will happen. Our best estimate at the moment is that Omega
lies somewhere between 0.98 and 1.1. So the fate of the universe is still unknown.

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