The Janus Point

Entropy and the arrow of time

The cyclic theory of the universe considers that the Big Bang would not necessarily be the origin of everything, as the cosmos could actually undergo an expansion followed by a contraction which would terminate in a "Big Crunch" followed by a "Big Bounce" and so on, indefinitely and since the dawn of time:

But in such an infinite series of expanding-contracting universes, the arrow of time would keep the same direction in all consecutive spacetimes:


Whereas according to Andrei Sakharov (see the section dedicated to CPT symmetry), the two universes have opposite arrows of time, originating from the same initial singularity \(\Phi\):


In Sakharov's model, entropy is increasing going away from \(t = 0\) from both sides of the initial singularity \(\Phi\), which reverses charge, space and time (complete CPT symmetry).

Indeed, the arrow of time, which points in the direction where time flows, is related to increasing entropy in thermodynamics.

How to reverse the arrow of time

Minimum or maximum entropy?

In the 1970s, British physicist Stephen Hawking wrote about the reversal of time's arrow, claiming it could happen in a very dense point of maximal entropy, i.e. in the hot model of the Big Bang.

Sakharov did not agree with this view and disproved Hawking when they both met at the International Seminar on Quantum Gravity, Moscow, in May 1987.
 
Sakharov explained to Hawking that entropy always grows with time (both are directly related) and that the arrow of time can reverse only if entropy reaches a minimal state, i.e. zero. Hawking was forced to agree with Sakharov's demonstration. You can read the complete story in this article.


For this reason, Sakharov advocated for a "cold model" of the Big Bang after this idea, since an initial singularity with no particle motion would enable the CPT reflections of his twin universe model.

Sakharov also showed that the arrow of time could reverse a second time in a distant future, when all baryons in the universe would have decayed, reaching another state of minimal entropy.

But Sakharov didn't take into account – neither did Hawking – a variable speed of light. Especially in the very high energy density state right after the Big Bang. This changes everything, as an infinite speed of light allows the reversal of time's arrow when entropy reaches a maximum value, as shown below.

Flipping the light cone upside-down

\( t = 0 \rightarrow c = \infty\)

In the Janus model, going back in time toward the ultra hot dense state of the Big Bang, temperature, entropy, pressure and speed of light all increase to infinity. The light cone and the arrow of time normally look like a Japanese umbrella. As \(c\) increases when we go backwards in the course of events toward the Big Bang, the light cone becomes flatter and flatter, until it becomes a disc at the origin when the speed of light becomes infinite. Then it can reverse like an umbrella blewing inside out in a gust of wind. The "handle of the umbrella", i.e. the arrow of time, then reappears in the opposite direction:

Sakharov considered the Janus point as a "singular point". But there is no need to make this junction point a singularity. In the 2D figure above, the singularity is replaced by a small throat circle (that would become a throat surface in 3D) linking the two spacetimes together, that would still enable CPT symmetry.

How the speed of light vary in the Janus model without breaking the laws of physics will be explained in the next page "Variable Speed of Light" (work in progress).