Dark Energy: The Biggest Mystery in the Universe
At the South Pole, astronomers try to unravel a force greater than gravity that will determine the fate of the cosmos
- By Richard Panek
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2010, Subscribe
Far from light and plunged into months-long darkness, Antarctica's South Pole Telescope is one of the best places on Earth for observing the universe. Keith Vanderlinde / National Science Foundation
Twice a day, seven days a week, from February to November for the past four years, two researchers have layered themselves with thermal underwear and outerwear, with fleece, flannel, double gloves, double socks, padded overalls and puffy red parkas, mummifying themselves until they look like twin Michelin Men. Then they step outside, trading the warmth and modern conveniences of a science station (foosball, fitness center, 24-hour cafeteria) for a minus-100-degree Fahrenheit featureless landscape, flatter than Kansas and one of the coldest places on the planet. They trudge in darkness nearly a mile, across a plateau of snow and ice, until they discern, against the backdrop of more stars than any hands-in-pocket backyard observer has ever seen, the silhouette of the giant disk of the South Pole Telescope, where they join a global effort to solve possibly the greatest riddle in the universe: what most of it is made of.
For thousands of years our species has studied the night sky and wondered if anything else is out there. Last year we celebrated the 400th anniversary of Galileo’s answer: Yes. Galileo trained a new instrument, the telescope, on the heavens and saw objects that no other person had ever seen: hundreds of stars, mountains on the Moon, satellites of Jupiter. Since then we have found more than 400 planets around other stars, 100 billion stars in our galaxy, hundreds of billions of galaxies beyond our own, even the faint radiation that is the echo of the Big Bang.
Now scientists think that even this extravagant census of the universe might be as out-of-date as the five-planet cosmos that Galileo inherited from the ancients. Astronomers have compiled evidence that what we’ve always thought of as the actual universe—me, you, this magazine, planets, stars, galaxies, all the matter in space—represents a mere 4 percent of what’s actually out there. The rest they call, for want of a better word, dark: 23 percent is something they call dark matter, and 73 percent is something even more mysterious, which they call dark energy.
“We have a complete inventory of the universe,” Sean Carroll, a California Institute of Technology cosmologist, has said, “and it makes no sense.”
Scientists have some ideas about what dark matter might be—exotic and still hypothetical particles—but they have hardly a clue about dark energy. In 2003, the National Research Council listed “What Is the Nature of Dark Energy?” as one of the most pressing scientific problems of the coming decades. The head of the committee that wrote the report, University of Chicago cosmologist Michael S. Turner, goes further and ranks dark energy as “the most profound mystery in all of science.”
The effort to solve it has mobilized a generation of astronomers in a rethinking of physics and cosmology to rival and perhaps surpass the revolution Galileo inaugurated on an autumn evening in Padua. They are coming to terms with a deep irony: it is sight itself that has blinded us to nearly the entire universe. And the recognition of this blindness, in turn, has inspired us to ask, as if for the first time: What is this cosmos we call home?
Scientists reached a consensus in the 1970s that there was more to the universe than meets the eye. In computer simulations of our galaxy, the Milky Way, theorists found that the center would not hold—based on what we can see of it, our galaxy doesn’t have enough mass to keep everything in place. As it rotates, it should disintegrate, shedding stars and gas in every direction. Either a spiral galaxy such as the Milky Way violates the laws of gravity, or the light emanating from it—from the vast glowing clouds of gas and the myriad stars—is an inaccurate indication of the galaxy’s mass.
But what if some portion of a galaxy’s mass didn’t radiate light? If spiral galaxies contained enough of such mystery mass, then they might well be obeying the laws of gravity. Astronomers dubbed the invisible mass “dark matter.”
“Nobody ever told us that all matter radiated,”Vera Rubin, an astronomer whose observations of galaxy rotations provided evidence for dark matter, has said. “We just assumed that it did.”
The effort to understand dark matter defined much of astronomy for the next two decades. Astronomers may not know what dark matter is, but inferring its presence allowed them to pursue in a new way an eternal question: What is the fate of the universe?
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Related topics: Astronomy Physics Arctic Outer Space
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Comments (43)
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Perhaps dark energy/cosmic expansion is simply an affect of a big crunch?
Allow me to elucidate;- When a 'crunch' condenses below its Schwarzchild Radius, I propose a duality is formed, being the Lorentz Transform imaginary (complex number) values associated with 10^12 years.
Posted by David Paul on January 20,2012 | 12:03 AM
According to brane theory two branes touched or bumped into each other at a point and this was the singularity of the big bang.
However if we think of these two branes continuing to contact at an increasingly larger radius moving at a rate greater than the speed of light( relative to our space/time ) would this not explain how inflation occurred?
What if these branes are like soap bubbles and our universe is the contact surface between two of these bubbles. The matter in our universe condensed out of the kinetic energy from this collision.
Posted by Rick Delmonico on January 2,2012 | 10:58 AM
Dark energy may be a property of space itself.
If the nature of the universe is indeed digital then what the speed of light defines for us is the processor speed.
Time, gravity, the stretching out of space and the second law of thermal dynamics are somehow linked in a manner that has yet to be described.
The history of a black hole is written or smeared upon it's rippling surface, called the event horizon. (10-29-10)
The observable universe is just the rippling skin of the real universe.
With each quantum tick of time the the skin or membrane of our universe gets bigger. Einstein tells us that the distinction between the past present and future is a stubbornly persistent illusion. This would suggest that the universe is like a set of Russian dolls nested inside of one another. They all exist but we are stepping from one to the next with every tick of time. From highly energetic and highly ordered to cold dark chaos. As it turns out this is the most likely outcome. 12/2010
If science is to have any chance of grasping the nature of reality, it must first solve the question of how the universe wound itself up through random processes.
Posted by Rick Delmonico on January 2,2012 | 10:21 AM
Did Einstein, as others, reject the idea of Intelligent Design, a Creator God, as the cause of, the Maker of all that is? Some think it intelligent to ask "Then who created God?" Matter and energy all eventually decay and halve their "half life," etc. Something has to have eternal existence back into the past, which is hard for us to grasp. It should help if one remembers this: Something or Someone has to have always existed, BECAUSE if ever there was a time when there was nothing, then there would NEVER be anything, ever!! Something with Creative and Generative Powers had to have always been, ... or we and the whole Universe would never have existed.
Posted by James Averill on December 29,2011 | 02:24 PM
See into- http://digg.com/d31GlVu Encouraging the spirit of discovery and sharing of fundamental knowledge about the Universe and our place in its midst. See visions- Digital Universe http://twitpic.com/4cjmuq see DEMO: found dark energy & big bang!
Posted by Shahidur Rahman Sikder on October 8,2011 | 06:05 PM
Maybe there really isn't any such thing as dark matter. Maybe it's just gravity and that gravity comes from other dimensions. The gravity is just sliping back and forth between the dimensions. The one thing the dimensions share. This would keep the law of coservation in tact. That energy not being created nor destroyed--just transferable. And with energy being consciousness and god and all that jazz it keeps everything as one. Even dimensions. All that exists in any galaxy, universe or dimension is one.
Posted by heyman29323 on September 9,2011 | 02:15 PM
What is Dark Energy? Answer of question- as I see it that of single energy of Power can be called in different name i.e. that means many instances such as: Dark energy, God, Nature, Single dimension, Super power, Black body, Primordial whole, Big black hole, A Black Hole, Borders on the spiritual, Ultimate reality, Huge reserve of the natural force, Primordial whole and eternity present, Absolute zero space-time and physics, and so on. Reality of Creator
Posted by Shahidur Rahman Sikder on August 31,2011 | 06:13 PM
The answer to the dark mystery may be too simple for humans to figure out. The matter that we are made of is 4.507034%. The universe isn't accelerating, but light is slowing down. GM=tc^3, a child could understand it...
Posted by Louise on April 18,2011 | 10:51 AM
For all the GOD believers I ask you this? Who created GOD and for what reason? I have read the Bible The Kiron and even at one time went to Bible study. This is a quote from Einstein one year before his death. " The word GOD is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weakness, the Bible a collection of honorable but still purely primitive, legends which are nervertheless pretty childish. No interpretation no matter how subtle can (for me) change this." I rest my case!
Posted by Steve on February 15,2011 | 01:24 AM
darkness doesn't exist. it's just the absence of light.
Posted by jhe ar on February 13,2011 | 03:54 AM
you guys are looking at space wrong. think of it like water. if i drop a light into the ocean does it not get dimmer the deeper it falls? and if a fish i can not see swims between the light and myself, will not the light miraculously disappear then reappear? and not knowing how deep the water is because i can not see the bottom, i could perceive it to be endless.
Posted by michael on July 16,2010 | 02:34 AM
It is said that the matter (tangible) in the universe is about 4% of what should have been there. Isn't it possible that the rest of the matter exist in other dimensions? Is that why we can't observe them?
Posted by Anonymous on July 7,2010 | 08:31 AM
DARK ENERGY IS THE MAGNETIC FORCE OF COMBINED PARALLEL SHADOWS OF REVERSE POLARITIES IN RADIATION. ENERGY IN MOLECULAR MOTION EQUALS A PARALLEL NUCLEAR STRUCTURE THAT CONSIST OF (CARBON PRINTS,HOLOGRAMS,PARALLEL DIMENSIONS,INFINITE COSMIC ACCELERATION)DARK ENERGY FEEDS ITSELF AND CLONES ITS SELF IN RETURN MAKES THE DENSITY CONSTANT CAUSING COSMIC ACCELERATION.IN STRUCTURE EXTRA DIMENSIONS ARE THE CAUSE OF EXPANSION .GENERAL RELATIVITY AND QUANTUM MECHANICS IS THE PERSPECTIVE OF MATTER LARGE OR SMALL..IT IS SELF SUFFICIENT AND HAS CONTINUOUS FORCE GRAVITY BEING THE GHOST IN THE MACHINE......ENERGY NEVER DIES
Posted by SIN on May 26,2010 | 11:57 PM
I do not understand why, in the face of such boundless mystery, it so reprehensible within the scientific community to suggest that God has created the universe and put it in motion. I do not think that such a conclusion would take away anything from the validity and worthwhileness of the study of math or science. To accept the reality of God might even enhance our understanding of such disciplines.
Posted by fred stellato on May 9,2010 | 11:24 AM
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