Krishna: The universe means everything there is.
But if the universe is everything, does that mean it includes the things that we don't know that we don't know exist, or even the things that we believe exist but haven't yet seen or observed?
In science, we usually distinguish between these two notions of the universe :
1. the observable universe, which is everything whose existence we've thus far been able to confirm or observe, or could, in principle, observe if we pointed our telescopes at it.
2. the Universe with a capital U, or the whole universe, which is everything that exists, has existed, or will exist, anytime, anywhere, regardless of whether or not we are aware of it yet or ever will be.
Some physicists say we live in a 'participatory universe'. Physics gives rise to observer-participancy, which results in information, which gives rise to physics. This means that the observer is a participant, just by his/her mere existence.
Man is “entangled” in this “participatory universe”, suggested Niels Bohr. And so, according to another physicist, John Archibald Wheeler, it follows that the “laws” of the functioning of the Universe (physics) make man’s participation in the flow of events – in the observable material reality – a given (2).
Footnotes:
Q: What is blue sky research?
Krishna: Research where there is no clear goal is called blue-skied research. It is usually a curiosity driven work, like asking and finding why sky is blue. It is also basic research. Basic (or “blue-sky”) research is distinct from applied research, which is targeted toward developing or advancing technologies to solve a specific problem or to create a new product.
Examples of blue sky work are finding new particles in physics, finding gravitational waves.
Blue-sky projects are sometimes politically and commercially unpopular and tend to lose funding to research perceived as being more reliably profitable or practical.
But I think this doesn't portray the true picture. I think no research is aimless. It leads to some more important work. For instance, finding why the sky 's blue was initially thought to be of no value but led to many other discoveries of much more direct use.
Einstein devoted his life to elucidating elementary concepts such as the nature of gravity and the relationship between space and time.
In addition to advancing our understanding of the world, Einstein’s work led to important technological developments. The Global Positioning System, for instance, would not have been possible without the theories of special and general relativity. A GPS receiver, like the one in your smart phone, determines its location based on timed signals it receives from the nearest four of a collection of GPS satellites orbiting Earth. Because the satellites are moving so quickly while also orbiting at a great distance from the gravitational pull of Earth, they experience time differently from the receiver on Earth’s surface. Thanks to Einstein’s theories, engineers can calculate and correct for this difference.
There’s a long history of serendipitous output from basic research. For example, in 1989 at CERN European research center, computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee was looking for a way to facilitate information-sharing between researchers. He invented the World Wide Web.
While investigating the properties of nuclei within a magnetic field at Columbia University in the 1930s, physicist Isidor Isaac Rabi discovered the basic principles of nuclear magnetic resonance. These principles eventually formed the basis of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, MRI.
Another tool of particle physics, the particle detector, has also been adopted for uses in various industries. In the 1980s, for example, particle physicists developed technology precise enough to detect a single photon. Today doctors use this same technology to detect tumors, heart disease and central nervous system disorders. They do this by conducting positron emission tomography scans, or PET scans. Before undergoing a PET scan, the patient is given a dye containing radioactive tracers, either through an injection or by ingesting or inhaling. The tracers emit antimatter particles, which interact with matter particles and release photons, which are picked up by the PET scanner to create a picture detailed enough to reveal problems at the cellular level.
So no research work is actually useless in science.