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Ken Kubos
 
Default Dark energy may be vacuum... the energy of empty space.

http://www.physorg.com/news88256526.html

Dark energy may be vacuum

Researchers at the University of Copenhagen's Dark Cosmology Centre at the
Niels Bohr Institute have brought us one step closer to understanding what
the universe is made of. As part of the international collaboration ESSENCE
they have observed distant supernovae (exploding stars), some of which
emitted the light we now see more than half the age of the universe ago.
Using these supernovae they have traced the expansion history of the
universe with unprecedented accuracy and sharpened our knowledge of what it
might be that is causing the mysterious acceleration of the expansion of the
universe.

At the end of last century astronomers discovered the startling fact that
the expansion of our universe is not slowing down, as all our previous
understanding of gravity had predicted. Rather the expansion is speeding up.
Nothing in conventional physics can explain such a result. It means that
either the universe is made up of around 70% 'dark energy' (something that
has a sort of anti-gravity) or our theory of gravity is flawed.

Now, as part of the international collaboration "ESSENCE", researchers at
the Danish Dark Cosmology Centre have added a new piece to the puzzle. In
two papers recently released they detail observations of supernovae
(exploding stars) that allow them to trace the expansion history of the
universe in unprecedented detail. ESSENCE is an extension of the original
team that discovered the acceleration of the universe and these results push
the limits of technology and knowledge, observing light from dying stars
that was emitted almost half the age of the universe ago.

In a third paper, led by the Danish team and released this week, the many
new theories that have been proposed to explain the acceleration of the
universe are critically assessed in the face of this new data. Dr. Jesper
Sollerman and Dr. Tamara Davis lead the team who show that despite the
increased sophistication in cosmological models over the last century the
best model to explain the acceleration remains one that was proposed by
Einstein back in 1917. Although Einstein's reasoning at the time was flawed
(he proposed the modification to his theory so it could support a static
universe, because in those days everyone 'knew' the universe was not
expanding, it may be that he was right all along.

The results include 60 new type Ia supernovae discovered on the Cerro-Tololo
Interamerican Observatory 4m telescope in an ongoing survey that so far has
lasted four years. In order to follow up these discoveries the team uses
some of the biggest telescopes in the world: the 8.2m VLT (Very Large
Telescope) run by the European Southern Observatory and the 6m Magellan
telescope (both in Chile), the 8m Keck telescope and the 10m Gemini
telescope (both in Hawaii). The ESSENCE team includes 38 top researchers
from many different countries on four continents.

The primary aim of the experiment is to measure the 'dark energy' - the
thing that is causing the acceleration of the universe - to better than 10%.
The feature of this dark energy that we measure is its 'equation of state'.
This also allows us to check whether our theory of gravity needs
modification. So far it looks like our theory is correct and that the
strange acceleration of the expansion of the universe can be explained by
Einstein's 'cosmological constant'.

In modern terms the cosmological constant is viewed as a quantum mechanical
phenomenon called the 'energy of the vacuum'. In other words, the energy of
empty space. It is this energy that is causing the universe to accelerate.
The new data shows that none of the fancy new theories that have been
proposed in the last decade are necessary to explain the acceleration.
Rather, vacuum energy is the most likely cause and the expansion history of
the universe can be explained by simply adding this constant background of
acceleration into the normal theory of gravity.

References:

On http://www.lanl.gov see:

1. astro-ph/0701043 Miknaitis et al. "The ESSENCE Supernova Survey: Survey
Optimization, Observations, and Supernova Photometry"

2. astro-ph/0701041 Wood-Vasey et al. "Observational Constraints on the
Nature of the Dark Energy: First Cosmological Results from the ESSENCE
Supernova Survey"

3. astro-ph/******* Davis et al. "Scrutinizing exotic cosmological models
using ESSENCE data combined with other cosmological probes" (to be published
tomorrow, the number will be updated)

Source: University of Copenhagen

--

Ken

"Buddhism elucidates why we are sentient."
"Karma means that you don't get away with anything."



 
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