A simpler cosmology

4:30PM, 13 Apr 2026

Neil Turok presents a minimal paradigm for cosmology that explains the universe’s large-scale structure, dark matter and the Standard Model.

Observations of the universe across the largest and smallest accessible scales reveal a striking simplicity, in tension with prevailing theories that predict a slew of new particles, forces, extra dimensions and even a chaotic multiverse.

In this lecture, Prof. Neil Turok argues that these observations should prompt a rethinking of basic assumptions, and outlines a simpler, unified paradigm grounded in the known laws of physics and CPT symmetry.

Prof. Turok shows how this framework accounts for the large-scale structure of the universe and primordial density perturbations without inflation, identifies dark matter with a right-handed neutrino without additional beyond-standard-model particles, and explains the existence of three generations of elementary particles without recourse to string theory.

The proposal offers new insights into quantum gravity, the Big Bang and the arrow of time as well as a possible resolution of the long-standing gauge-gravity hierarchy puzzle.

Event information

This event takes place at 4:30pm on Wednesday 13 May in the Faraday seminar room of the London Institute for Mathematical Sciences, on the second floor of the Royal Institution. LIMS colloquia are sponsored by Cognia.

A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology
A simpler cosmology

Speaker

Neil Turok

Prof. Neil Turok is the Higgs Chair of Theoretical Physics at the University of Edinburgh, former Director of the Perimeter Institute and founder of the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences. He works on developing and testing fundamental theories of the universe.