Last week, I said that the current best estimate for the age of the universe, 13.8 billion years old, is based on a mathematical model. In order to get that number, astronomers had to assume the universe evolved in a particular way, according to a model where the universe is composed of ordinary matter, dark matter, and dark energy. In other words, the age of the universe is a model-dependent statement.
Reading that, you might ask whether we can do better. What about a model-independent measurement of the age of the universe?
As intuitive as it might seem, we can’t actually do that. In fact, if we’re really strict about it, we can’t get a model-independent measurement of anything at all. Everything is based on a model.
Imagine stepping on your bathroom scale, getting a mass in kilograms. The number it gives you seems as objective as anything. But to get that number, you have to trust that a number of models are true. You have to model gravity, to assume that the scale’s measurement of your weight gives you the right mass based on the Earth’s surface gravity being approximately constant. You have to model the circuits and sensors in the scale, and be confident that you understand how they’re supposed to work. You have to model people: to assume that the company that made the scale tested it accurately, and that the people who sold it to you didn’t lie about where it came from. And finally, you have to model error: you know that the scale can’t possibly give you your exact weight, so you need a rough idea of just how far off it can reasonably be.
Everything we know is like this. Every measurement in science builds on past science, on our understanding of our measuring equipment and our trust in others. Everything in our daily lives comes through a network of assumptions about the world around us. Everything we perceive is filtered through instincts, our understanding of our own senses and knowledge of when they do and don’t trick us.
Ok, but when I say that the age of the universe is model-dependent, I don’t really mean it like that, right?
Everything we know is model-dependent, but only some model-dependence is worth worrying about. Your knowledge of your bathroom scale comes from centuries-old physics of gravity, widely-applied principles of electronics, and a trust in the function of basic products that serves you well in every other aspect of your life. The models that knowledge depends on aren’t really in question, especially not when you just want to measure your weight.
Some measurements we make in physics are like this too. When the experimental collaborations at the LHC measured the Higgs mass, they were doing something far from routine. But the models they based that measurement on, models of particle physics and particle detector electronics and their own computer code, are still so well-tested that it mostly doesn’t make sense to think of this as a model-dependent measurement. If we’re questioning the Higgs mass, it’s only because we’re questioning something much bigger.
The age of the universe, though, is trickier. Our most precise measurements are based on a specific model: we estimate what the universe is made of and how fast it’s expanding, plug it into our model of how the universe changes over time, and get an estimate for the age. You might suggest that we should just look out into the universe and find the oldest star, but that’s model-dependent too. Stars don’t have rings like trees. Instead, to estimate the age of a star we have to have some model for what kind of light it emits, and for how that light has changed over the history of the universe before it reached us.
These models are not quite as well-established as the models behind particle physics, let alone those behind your bathroom scale. Our models of stars are pretty good, applied to many types of stars in many different galaxies, but they do involve big, complicated systems involving many types of extreme and difficult to estimate physics. Star models get revised all the time, usually in minor ways but occasionally in more dramatic ones. Meanwhile, our model of the whole universe is powerful, but by its very nature much less-tested. We can test it on observations of the whole universe today, or on observations of the whole universe in the past (like the cosmic microwave background). And it works well for these, better than any other model. But it’s not inconceivable, not unrealistic, and above all not out of context, that another model could take its place. And if it did, many of the model-dependent measurements we’ve based on it will have to change.
So that’s why, while everything we know is model-dependent, some are model-dependent in a more important way. Some things, even if we feel they have solid backing, may well turn out to be wrong, in a way that we have reason to take seriously. The age of the universe is pretty well-established as these things go, but it still is one of those types of things, where there is enough doubt in our model that we can’t just take the measurement at face value.











