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
(Page 2 of 5)
They already knew that the universe is expanding. In 1929, the astronomer Edwin Hubble had discovered that distant galaxies were moving away from us and that the farther away they got, the faster they seemed to be receding.
This was a radical idea. Instead of the stately, eternally unchanging still life that the universe once appeared to be, it was actually alive in time, like a movie. Rewind the film of the expansion and the universe would eventually reach a state of infinite density and energy—what astronomers call the Big Bang. But what if you hit fast-forward? How would the story end?
The universe is full of matter, and matter attracts other matter through gravity. Astronomers reasoned that the mutual attraction among all that matter must be slowing down the expansion of the universe. But they didn’t know what the ultimate outcome would be. Would the gravitational effect be so forceful that the universe would ultimately stretch a certain distance, stop and reverse itself, like a ball tossed into the air? Or would it be so slight that the universe would escape its grasp and never stop expanding, like a rocket leaving Earth’s atmosphere? Or did we live in an exquisitely balanced universe, in which gravity ensures a Goldilocks rate of expansion neither too fast nor too slow—so the universe would eventually come to a virtual standstill?
Assuming the existence of dark matter and that the law of gravitation is universal, two teams of astrophysicists—one led by Saul Perlmutter, at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the other by Brian Schmidt, at Australian National University—set out to determine the future of the universe. Throughout the 1990s the rival teams closely analyzed a number of exploding stars, or supernovas, using those unusually bright, short-lived distant objects to gauge the universe’s growth. They knew how bright the supernovas should appear at different points across the universe if the rate of expansion were uniform. By comparing how much brighter the supernovas actually did appear, astronomers figured they could determine how much the expansion of the universe was slowing down. But to the astronomers’ surprise, when they looked as far as halfway across the universe, six or seven billion light-years away, they found that the supernovas weren’t brighter—and therefore nearer—than expected. They were dimmer—that is, more distant. The two teams both concluded that the expansion of the universe isn’t slowing down. It’s speeding up.
The implication of that discovery was momentous: it meant that the dominant force in the evolution of the universe isn’t gravity. It is...something else. Both teams announced their findings in 1998. Turner gave the “something” a nickname: dark energy. It stuck. Since then, astronomers have pursued the mystery of dark energy to the ends of the Earth—literally.
“The South Pole has the harshest environment on Earth, but also the most benign,” says William Holzapfel, a University of California at Berkeley astrophysicist who was the on-site lead researcher at the South Pole Telescope (SPT) when I visited.
He wasn’t referring to the weather, though in the week between Christmas and New Year’s Day—early summer in the Southern Hemisphere—the Sun shone around the clock, the temperatures were barely in the minus single digits (and one day even broke zero), and the wind was mostly calm. Holzapfel made the walk from the National Science Foundation’s Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station (a snowball’s throw from the traditional site of the pole itself, which is marked with, yes, a pole) to the telescope wearing jeans and running shoes. One afternoon the telescope’s laboratory building got so warm the crew propped open a door.
But from an astronomer’s perspective, not until the Sun goes down and stays down—March through September— does the South Pole get “benign.”
“It’s six months of uninterrupted data,” says Holzapfel. During the 24-hour darkness of the austral autumn and winter, the telescope operates nonstop under impeccable conditions for astronomy. The atmosphere is thin (the pole is more than 9,300 feet above sea level, 9,000 of which are ice). The atmosphere is also stable, due to the absence of the heating and cooling effects of a rising and setting Sun; the pole has some of the calmest winds on Earth, and they almost always blow from the same direction.
Perhaps most important for the telescope, the air is exceptionally dry; technically, Antarctica is a desert. (Chapped hands can take weeks to heal, and perspiration isn’t really a hygiene issue, so the restriction to two showers a week to conserve water isn’t much of a problem. As one pole veteran told me, “The moment you go back through customs at Christchurch [New Zealand], that’s when you’ll need a shower.”) The SPT detects microwaves, a part of the electromagnetic spectrum that is particularly sensitive to water vapor. Humid air can absorb microwaves and prevent them from reaching the telescope, and moisture emits its own radiation, which could be misread as cosmic signals.
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Comments (64)
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A.E.I.O.U, Absolute Energy = Input, Output, Utilization. If E=mc2, then -E=-mc-^2. For a "positive one" to be, it needs the "negative one" to be also. Like when one digs "a hole", it has the hole, plus the pile removed, which gives "one whole". The sum of the whole will always equal the whole, as only the input/output utilization sum differs. For example - 1 earth = 7 billion humans, but remember there was not always 7 billion humans but earth is still one earth.
Posted by Marino Mangone on April 15,2013 | 01:13 AM
When they scientists have found everything which makes up the universe, will they dispense with the present finding that the universe has a beginning, or they will find out that the universe is eternal? If they find out that the universe is eternal, they have still to determine which part(s) of the universe is(are) eternal: for the universe is made up of many parts, as many parts as science will find out and finally reach the conclusive information that they have gotten all of the parts or components whatever they are accounted for and determined their roles individually. So, the part that is eternal is the factor responsible for or to which is attributable the existence of the parts not eternal. Then that is God. If they determine that all the parts are eternal, then they have to determine more in particular which parts depend on which parts for their existence and operation. And again they have to conclude on the parts on which the rest depends for their existence and operation, that they the depended upon ones are the collective God. Suppose they find out that all the parts are eternal and they don't depend on any among themselves for their respective existence and operation? In which case they are all collective God, all in an eternal harmony of existence and operation. BUT IT CANNOT BE THAT ALL PARTS ARE ETERNAL AND NON-DEPENDENT ON OTHERS FOR THEIR EXISTENCE AND OPERATION, FOR WE KNOW EVEN NOW WE HUMANS AND ALL WHAT WE KNOW NOW HAVE HAD A BEGINNING, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT ETERNAL, AND THEY ARE NOT GOD BUT DEPEND ON GOD FOR EXISTENCE AND OPERATION. Whatever, no matter, never mind, God exists and scientists will face that information at the very end when they have identified all the components of the universe and tagged the role of each. Marius de Jess
Posted by Marius de Jess on March 14,2013 | 01:25 AM
is dark matter any how relayed to anti matter ??? we know that matter and anti matter repel each other then whhy not antimatter be the reason for the expansion of the universe and why only dark matter???
Posted by on February 9,2013 | 12:35 PM
why should matter be the reason for the expansion of the universe ?????or why should the expansion of the universe suggest the concept of "dark ABC"??????
Posted by on February 9,2013 | 12:29 PM
What if gravity and electromagnetism are expressions or characteristics of Dark energy?
Posted by Hyginus Mathujrin on January 19,2013 | 01:49 PM
So, the energy of dark energy is (in eV)?
Posted by DE on January 6,2013 | 12:02 PM
very insightful, scholarly!
Posted by jude salau on December 24,2012 | 11:45 AM
There are two other profound mysteries...quantum entanglement and the double slit experiment. All three are intangible forces beyond our understanding. All are "immaterial reality," the same definition as the spiritual. Yes, profound.
Posted by joe arrigo on November 16,2012 | 10:00 AM
Encouraging the spirit of discovery and sharing of fundamental knowledge about the Universe and our place in its midst- at http://universalrule.info New Discovery of the Universe- http://t.co/jVFHtSCr Digital Universe- at http://t.co/nsND5lSm found a- Multimedia DEMO “Brief History of the Universe”
Posted by Shahidur Rahman Sikder on October 10,2012 | 07:05 PM
good trial.go on....
Posted by Evan on September 26,2012 | 04:39 AM
Funny that you put some astronomer's names... Funny that you don´t put the name of the astronomer of Big Bang theory... funny...
Posted by Rodrigo Castro on September 19,2012 | 11:13 AM
its that true ?
Posted by rj aganon on September 15,2012 | 07:06 AM
All The Mass Of The Universe Formed At The Pre-Big-Bang Singularity The universe is a two-poles entity, an all-mass and an all-energy poles. The elementary particle of the universe is the graviton. The gravitons are compacted into the universal inert singularity mass only for the smallest fraction of a second, when all the gravitons of the universe are compacted together, with zero distance between all of them. This state is mandated by their small size and by their hence weak force. The big bang is the shattering of the short-lived singularity mass into fragments that later became galactic clusters. This is inflation. The shattering is the start of movement of the shatters i.e. the start of reconversion of mass into energy, which is mass in motion. This reconversion proceeds at a constant rate since the big bang since the resolution of gravitons, their release from their shatters-clusters, proceeds at constant rate due to their weak specific force due to their small size. Dov Henis (comments from 22nd century) http://universe-life.com/
Posted by Dov Henis on September 2,2012 | 10:35 AM
THIS IS MINDBOGGLING!
Posted by Art Ygoña on August 25,2012 | 05:29 PM
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