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jackovesk
28th May 2011, 07:09
http://l.yimg.com/a/i/us/nws/p/afp_logo_51.png

Fri May 27, 4:01 am

SYDNEY (AFP) – A 22-year-old Australian university student has solved a problem which has puzzled astrophysicists for decades, discovering part of the so-called "missing mass" of the universe during her summer break.

Undergraduate Amelia Fraser-McKelvie made the breakthrough during a holiday internship with a team at Monash University's School of Physics, locating the mystery material within vast structures called "filaments of galaxies".

http://d.yimg.com/a/p/afp/20110527/capt.photo_1306483191663-1-0.jpg?x=400&y=304&q=85&sig=h2iETTaLBl.GEl02k6IepQ--
AFP/NASA/File – This NASA illustration photo shows stars that are forming in a dwarf starburst galaxy

Monash astrophysicist Dr Kevin Pimbblet explained that scientists had previously detected matter that was present in the early history of the universe but that could not now be located.

"There is missing mass, ordinary mass not dark mass ... It's missing to the present day," Pimbblet told AFP.

"We don't know where it went. Now we do know where it went because that's what Amelia found."

Fraser-McKelvie, an aerospace engineering and science student, was able to confirm after a targeted X-ray search for the mystery mass that it had moved to the "filaments of galaxies", which stretch across enormous expanses of space.

Pimbblet's earlier work had suggested the filaments as a possible location for the "missing" matter, thought to be low in density but high in temperature.

Pimbblet said astrophysicists had known about the "missing" mass for the past two decades, but the technology needed to pinpoint its location had only become available in recent years.

He said the discovery could drive the construction of new telescopes designed to specifically study the mass.

Pimbblet admitted the discovery was primarily academic, but he said previous physics research had led to the development of diverse other technologies.

"Whenever I speak to people who have influence, politicians and so on, they sometimes ask me 'Why should I invest in physics pure research?'. And I sometimes say to them: 'Do you use a mobile phone? Some of that technology came about by black hole research'.

"The pure research has knock-on effects to the whole society which are sometimes difficult to anticipate."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110527/sc_afp/australiaastrophysicsscience

Ilie Pandia
29th May 2011, 20:26
"There is missing mass, ordinary mass not dark mass ... It's missing to the present day," Pimbblet told AFP.

"We don't know where it went. Now we do know where it went because that's what Amelia found."

This comes to mind: "When you observe that the terrain does not match the map what is wrong is the map... not the terrain..." (Or you use advanced math to create warp fields to squeeze the terrain back into the map...)

Mad Hatter
30th May 2011, 09:03
Hmmm...still waiting for the Plasma Physics boys to cross the quadrangle and present Engineering with all the overunity err I mean cross sectional anomolies data / information...

Mike Gorman
30th May 2011, 09:11
The filaments themselves are only recently accounted for in the 'Electrical Universe' paradigm, prior to this the Astro people
were puzzling over the weird structures of Nebulae and wondering why they behaved this way-Gasses in a Vacuum?
Takes a Celtic Woman to unravel it all...begorrah!

AlexanderLight
31st May 2011, 13:45
Energy = Mass
Mass = Energy

The so called 'missing mass' in the universe is a form of filamentery energy collecting matter into "walls".

Filiments are the mass of the universe clumping together creating a pathway for energy to transverse.
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-7bnHjioMuRQ/TeN8Ciu1FXI/AAAAAAAABYQ/Z3EvkeXkzog/s1600/03+fili.jpg

And now the coolest stuff! According to the Big Bang Theory, the Universe is 14 billion years old, but some of these structures are thought to have taken up to 100 billion years to form.

Click to read all (http://humansarefree.com/2011/05/australian-student-uncovers-universes.html)