tlb wrote:I realize that you both were talking about the same thing. Considering all the things that have happened in the Universe, from supernova to blackholes, I find it difficult to imagine that humans could do something so unprecedented. I prefer to think that if it could happen, then it already would have happened.
I don't. I mean, you're right that if nature could have created those conditions, it probably would have. That's true for the story of the water you mentioned. Therefore, for such other state to exist, there also needs to be a reason why nature couldn't have got to it on its own.
For the vacuum energy, I understand the energy levels required to un-split the elctroweak force are MUCH higher than even supernovae, at least in dense enough conditions. Of course, the model could be wrong too, but then we need something else to explain the effects that the electroweak symmetry breaking does. Since that's the thing that leads to the Higgs mechanism and thus "why mass"...
Human agency has created things that nature can't. Take the super-heavy atoms, above Z=100. Nature creates atoms (much) heavier than iron via neutron bombardment during neutron star collisions or supernovae, but the weight of such nucleus is limited by the number of neutrons being captured by the nucleus versus its own spontaneous decay. At very high masses, such nuclei decay to lighter elements too quickly, more quickly than they can capture more neutrons. This is the explanation I've heard why no atoms in the purported "island of stability" around Z=126 have been found in the universe, if it exists.
And we can also create anti-hydrogen, but the universe is conspicuously lacking it. This leads to headlines in non-scientific publications like "scientists conclude universe shouldn't exist."