Fine-tuning

In theoretical physics, fine-tuning is a necessary procedure of fudging and very accurate adjusting of the values of the parameters of a theory in order for various physical quantities to be very small. Physicists do not like fine-tuning because the natural values of dimensionless parameters should be of order one. If some parameters must be chosen very exactly in order to reproduce the Universe, even qualitatively, it indicates that there are some new physical mechanisms still waiting to be understood. The necessity of fine-tuning leads to various problems that do not show that our theories are incorrect, but nevertheless indicate that a piece of the story is missing. For example the cosmological constant problem (why is the cosmological constant so small?); the hierarchy problem; the strong CP problem, and others.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
roche de la muzelle
lifelong learning
leinster rugby
lambda cdm model
stephen yan
hvitserk
gaston rbuffat
sekiwake
amaknak island
komusubi
royal and parliamentary titles act
gonzalo mrquez
appeal to motive
john mowbray, 2nd duke of norfolk
shannon burchett
baseball positioning
andreanof islands
japan sumo association
manitoba general election, 1986
nanterre
strong cp problem
zinc oxide eugenol
carlos vallertes
due on sale clause
dog leg gearbox
noida
taiho koki
william wilkins
komi language
taiho
john gall
kitanoumi toshimitsu
johann kiefuss
mohammed bello
bastards
rat islands
mercer university
raymond du puy de provence
near islands
juryo
inverse doppler effect
isothermic reaction
ikarus
rowing at the 2004 summer olympics men's single sculls