For today’s Nobel Laureates in Physics,  it was pretty much a matter of when, not if. When the three winners and  their teams announced back in 1998 that the universe was not only  expanding, but accelerating, they shook cosmology to its core: Their findings said the universe would end not with a bang, but a whimper. 
 And the question of why — the mysterious force of dark energy, which  accounts for about three-fourths of the mass-energy of the entire  universe — is one of the greatest questions in modern science. 
Saul Perlmutter, Brian Schmidt and Adam Riess won for their shared  discovery that the cosmos is expanding at an accelerating rate. They  used ground and space telescopes to map the most distant Type Ia  supernovae, and found these exploded stars seemed dimmer than they  should have been. Type Ias are used as standard candles because  astronomers know their brightness, which is extremely consistent, and  can use this to measure their distance from us. 
But measurements showed that these standard candles were not properly  bright; they were fading. Something was going on, and it could easily  have been blamed on the technology, or maybe the calculations. But both  teams — the Supernova Cosmology Project and the High-z Supernova Search Team — found the same thing. The data showed that these standard candles were moving away at an accelerating rate.
This was an astounding finding. Everyone knew since Edwin Hubble that  the universe was being flung apart as a consequence of the Big Bang,  some 13.7 billion years ago. But for it to be speeding up? It  meant something else was at work, a force much more mysterious and  bizarre than anyone had thought. No one knows what this force is, but  after another decade of calculations, physicists know it makes up about  74 percent of the universe. “We call it dark energy to express  ignorance,” Perlmutter said in a lecture I attended in 2008. 
The work is exciting by itself, but these physicists are also some of  the best young science evangelists you'll meet. Perlmutter, 52, is an  animated and enthusiastic speaker, the exact type of person you want  explaining phrases like “baryonic oscillation” and the Big Fade. He has  continued his dark energy research as a senior scientist at Lawrence  Berkeley National Laboratory. He wants a supernova observatory, the  Supernova Acceleration Probe (SNAP), to be built like a Works Progress  Administration project: “Everybody talks about dark energy, but nobody  does anything about it,” he said back then. 
Riess, who is just 41, is an astronomer at the Space Telescope  Science Institute and a professor at Johns Hopkins University. He's also  the recipient of a MacArthur Foundation genius grant and numerous other  honors for his cosmology work. 
Schmidt, who is 44 and works at the Australian National University,  conducted some of the calculations that verified Riess' findings. 
I still have Perlmutter's business card on my desk, because that talk  is one of the reasons I wanted to write about things like redshift and  the cosmological constant. This is fundamental stuff — the everlasting  nature and the future of all things, still enigmatic and mysterious but  almost, because of Perlmutter, Riess and Schmidt, truly knowable. 
“The findings of the 2011 Nobel Laureates in Physics have helped to  unveil a Universe that to a large extent is unknown to science,” the  Nobel Assembly wrote. “And everything is possible again.”
 by "environment clean generations"

Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar