NEW
STUDY OF SUPERNOVAE MAY ABSOLVE EINSTEIN OF SELF-CONFESSED "BIGGEST
BLUNDER"
Press Release Courtesy of: California Institute
of Technology
PASADENA (November 22, 2005) Based on an ongoing study of exploding
stars in the distant universe, astrophysicists have concluded that the
effect of the "dark energy" that is speeding up the expansion
of the universe is within 10 percent of that of Albert Einstein's celebrated
cosmological constant. Cosmologists regard this result as a major step
forward in understanding the nature of this mysterious property of the
universe.
Reporting in an upcoming issue of the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics,
an international team using a variety of instruments, including the 10-meter
Keck telescopes, show the extent to which supernovae that erupt across
the universe compare to those closer to home. Measuring the receding motion
of supernovae at great distances has been intensely investigated since
1998, when researchers discovered that supernovae of a given recessional
velocity seem to be fainter than they would be if the expansion of the
universe was slowing down. This result, which has been observed consistently
for the last eight years, strongly implies that the expansion rate of
the universe is increasing.
The cause of this acceleration may be some form of exotic energy that
causes space to push outwards. Einstein originally proposed a mathematical
fudge-factor he called the cosmological constant that would preserve the
notion of a universe with no beginning and no end. But when Edwin Hubble
demonstrated that the universe was expanding, Einstein abandoned the cosmological
constant as his "biggest blunder."
The best way to study the dark energy, whatever it is, continues to be
faraway supernovae, says Richard Ellis, the Steele Family Professor of
Astronomy at the California Institute of Technology and one of the authors
of the paper. "Improved observations of distant supernovae are the
most immediate way in which we can learn more about the mysterious dark
energy," Ellis says. "The present study is a very big step forward
in quantity and quality and amazingly suggests that Einstein was pretty
close to the mark."
The research project is known as the Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS),
which aims to discover and examine 700 distant supernovae to map out the
history of the expansion of the universe. The survey confirms earlier
discoveries that the expansion of the universe proceeded more slowly in
the past and is speeding up today. However, the crucial step forward is
the discovery that Einstein's 1917 explanation of a constant energy term
for empty space fits the new supernova data very well.
The current paper is based on about one-tenth of the imaging data that
will be obtained by the end of the survey. Future results are expected
to double or even triple the precision of these findings and conclusively
solve several remaining mysteries about the nature of dark energy.
"The significance is huge," said Professor Ray Carlberg, of
the department of astronomy and astrophysics at the University of Toronto.
"Our particular observation is at odds with a number of theoretical
ideas about the nature of dark energy. They generally predict that it
should change its form as the universe expands, and as far as we can see,
it doesn't."
According to Carlberg, the findings suggest that if a human being were
to stand on the surface of Earth when the universe is 10-to-20 times its
current age and look up at the night sky, most of the galaxies that we
take for granted will be so far away that they'll be virtually invisible,
with perhaps only one galaxy in our visible universe.
The researchers located distant supernovae using an innovative, 384-million
pixel camera called MegaCam, built by the Commissariat à l'Energie
Atomique, a unit of the French atomic energy agency. "Because of
its wide field of view—you can fit four moons in an image—it
allows us to measure simultaneously several supernovae, which are rare
events," said lead investigator Pierre Astier, a researcher at the
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS).
Ellis contributed a critical piece to this work, using spectrographs
mounted on the 10-meter Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea in Hawaii. "Representative
supernovae from the program have been examined more closely using the
giant aperture of the Keck telescope," he says. "I find these
distant supernovae are strikingly similar to those seen locally, validating
their use as cosmic yardsticks and hence strongly supporting our scientific
conclusions."
The Supernova Legacy Survey is a collaborative international effort that
uses images from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, a 3.6-metre telescope
atop Mauna Kea, a dormant Hawaiian volcano. Over nearly five hundred nights
of observing time, the researchers identified a few dozen bright pixels
of distant supernovae, then examined their spectra using some of the largest
telescopes on earth, including the Keck telescopes and the Frederick C.
Gillett Gemini North Telescope on Mauna Kea, the Gemini South Telescope
on the Cerro Pachón mountain in the Chilean Andes, and the European
Southern Observatory Very Large Telescope (VLT) at the Paranal Observatory
in Atacama, Chile.
The research was funded by the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, the French
agency Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique (CEA), Centre National
de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut National des Sciences de
l'Univers du CNRS, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
of Canada, the National Research Council of Canada's Herzberg Institute
of Astrophysics, the Gemini Observatory, the W.M. Keck Observatory, and
the Very Large Telescope Project.
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Credit: W. M. Keck Observatory
Observations with the Keck I telescope on Mauna Kea have
found distant supernovae are strikingly similar to local supernovae, giving
strong support to theories that the expansion rate of the universe is
increasing.
The cause of this acceleration may be some unknown form
of exotic energy that causes space to push outwards.
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