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- There is no "empty space" in the universe
- Hints of Higgs particles from Cern
- Promising puzzle piece for confirming dark matter now seems unlikely
- 3 new elements have been named
- LHC proton run for 2011 reaches successful conclusion
- Crab pulsar beams energy beyond theoretical limit
- Attempts to "hear" gravitional waves
- Gamma-Ray Bursts shed light on dark energy
- A complete 2year mapping of the X-ray sky
- News from the CERN LHC
- Update from LHC: A hint of the Hiccs particle
- Major step forward towards detecting gravitational waves
- Galaxy sized twist in time pulls violating particles back into line
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- Study predicts distribution of gravitational wave sources
- Lights on merging supermassive black holes
- Re-cunstructing the last cry from a black hole
- Dark matter detection in a mine
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Gamma-Ray Bursts shed light on dark energy
Saturday, 17 September 2011 23:43
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| Astronomy - Astrophysics |
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A new method for measuring the largest distances in the Universe developed by scientists from the Faculty of Physics, University of Warsaw, and the University of Naples Federico II helps solve the mystery of dark energy. A key role is played by the most powerful cosmic explosions - gamma-ray bursts.
What is the nature of dark energy, a recently discovered dominant constituent of the Universe today? Is expansion-accelerating dark energy an intrinsic property of space-time itself or rather a field unknown to science? A new distance-measuring method developed by scientists from the Faculty of Physics, University of Warsaw (FUW), and the University of Naples Federico II can provide the answer. “We are able to determine the distance of an explosion on the basis of the properties of the radiation emitted during gamma-ray bursts. Given that some of these explosions are related to the most remote objects in space that we know about, we are able, for the first time, to assess the speed of space-time expansion even in the relatively early periods after the Big Bang,” says Prof. Marek Demianski (FUW). The method was used to verify models of the structure of the Universe containing dark energy. Examining the density of dark energy in various periods after the Big Bang can help choose the correct model. If the density remained constant, it would mean that dark energy is related to the cosmological constant, that is to say, the property of space-time. But if the acceleration of the Universe is caused by a scalar field, then, given the swelling-up of space-time, the density of dark energy should change. “This used to be a problem. In order to assess the changes in the density of dark energy immediately after the Big Bang, one needs to know how to measure the distance to very remote objects. So remote that even Type Ia supernovae connected to them are too faint to be observed,” says Prof. Demianski. The next step was to find statistical dependencies between various properties of the radiation emitted during a gamma-ray burst and the total energy of the explosion. Such relations were discovered. “We cannot provide a physical explanation of why certain properties of gamma-ray bursts are correlated,” points out Prof. Demianski. “But we can say that if registered radiation has such and such properties, then the burst had such and such energy. This allows us to use bursts as standard candles, to measure distances.” Source: Press-rellease from University of Warsaw |





