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Cidersomerset
17th March 2014, 22:33
Cosmic inflation 'Spectacular' discovery hailed | Breaking News

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Published on 17 Mar 2014
Cosmic inflation 'Spectacular' discovery hailed

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17 March 2014 Last updated at 14:46

Cosmic inflation: 'Spectacular' discovery hailedBy Jonathan Amos

Science correspondent, BBC News


http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/73634000/jpg/_73634668_73628859.jpg
BICEP2 The measurements were taken using the BICEP2 instrument at the South Pole

Scientists say they have extraordinary new evidence to support a Big Bang Theory
for the origin of the Universe.

Researchers believe they have found the signal left in the sky by the super-rapid
expansion of space that must have occurred just fractions of a second after
everything came into being.

It takes the form of a distinctive twist in the oldest light detectable with telescopes.

The work will be scrutinised carefully, but already there is talk of a Nobel.

"This is spectacular," commented Prof Marc Kamionkowski, from Johns Hopkins University.


Inflation pioneer

"I've seen the research; the arguments are persuasive, and the scientists involved
are among the most careful and conservative people I know," he told BBC News.

The breakthrough was announced by an American team working on a project
known as BICEP2.

This has been using a telescope at the South Pole to make detailed observations of
a small patch of sky.

The aim has been to try to find a residual marker for "inflation" - the idea that the
cosmos experienced an exponential growth spurt in its first trillionth, of a trillionth
of a trillionth of a second.

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/73634000/jpg/_73634672_73634671.jpg

BICEP data Gravitational waves from inflation put a distinctive twist pattern in the
polarisation of the CMB

Theory holds that this would have taken the infant Universe from something
unimaginably small to something about the size of a marble. Space has continued
to expand for the nearly 14 billion years since.

Inflation was first proposed in the early 1980s to explain some aspects of Big Bang
Theory that appeared to not quite add up, such as why deep space looks broadly
the same on all sides of the sky. The contention was that a very rapid expansion
early on could have smoothed out any unevenness.

But inflation came with a very specific prediction - that it would be associated with
waves of gravitational energy, and that these ripples in the fabric of space would
leave an indelible mark on the oldest light in the sky - the famous Cosmic
Microwave Background.

The BICEP2 team says it has now identified that signal. Scientists call it B-mode
polarisation. It is a characteristic twist in the directional properties of the CMB. Only
the gravitational waves moving through the Universe in its inflationary phase could
have produced such a marker. It is a true "smoking gun".

Speaking at the press conference to announce the results, Prof John Kovac of the
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and a leader of the BICEP2
collaboration, said: "This is opening a window on what we believe to be a new
regime of physics - the physics of what happened in the first unbelievably tiny
fraction of a second in the Universe."

Completely astounded

The signal is reported to be quite a bit stronger than many scientists had dared
hope. This simplifies matters, say experts. It means the more exotic models for
how inflation worked are no longer tenable.

The results also constrain the energies involved - at 10,000 trillion
gigaelectronvolts. This is consistent with ideas for what is termed Grand Unified
Theory, the realm where particle physicists believe three of the four fundamental
forces in nature can be tied together.

But by associating gravitational waves with an epoch when quantum effects were
so dominant, scientists are improving their prospects of one day pulling the fourth
force - gravity itself - into a Theory of Everything.

The sensational nature of the discovery means the BICEP2 data will be subjected to
intense peer review.

It is possible for the interaction of CMB light with dust in our galaxy to produce a
similar effect, but the BICEP2 group says it has carefully checked its data over the
past three years to rule out such a possibility.

Other experiments will now race to try to replicate the findings. If they can, a Nobel
Prize seems assured for this field of research.

Who this would go to is difficult to say, but leading figures on the BICEP2 project
and the people who first formulated inflationary theory would be in the running.

One of those pioneers, Prof Alan Guth from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, told the BBC: "I have been completely astounded. I never believed
when we started that anybody would ever measure the non-uniformities of the
CMB, let alone the polarisation, which is now what we are seeing.

"I think it is absolutely amazing that it can be measured and also absolutely
amazing that it can agree so well with inflation and also the simplest models of
inflation - nature did not have to be so kind and the theory didn't have to be right."

British scientist Dr Jo Dunkley, who has been searching through data from the
European Planck space telescope for a B-mode signal, commented: "I can't tell you
how exciting this is. Inflation sounds like a crazy idea, but everything that is
important, everything we see today - the galaxies, the stars, the planets - was
imprinted at that moment, in less than a trillionth of a second. If this is confirmed,
it's huge."

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/73627000/jpg/_73627518_c0141243-big_bang_and_galaxies,_artwork-spl.jpg
Big Bang Theory conceptual artwork "Everything we see today - the galaxies, the
stars, the planets - was imprinted at that moment"

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-26605974

Fellow Aspirant
18th March 2014, 02:09
Wow! This truly is a huge scientific milestone in our progress toward understanding the nature of cosmic reality. Nobel Prize, anyone?

Namaste

B.

olddragon
18th March 2014, 04:32
I have to ask.

How did Earth, or the matter that makes up the earth, get ahead of the light or energy wave from the center of the universe, the big bang??????

Are the scientists suggesting that the Earth got here ahead of the light, if so, isn't that breaking the very laws that these scientists are working with.

It just doesn't make sense to me.

Cidersomerset
18th March 2014, 07:13
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Published on 17 Mar 2014
News for BBC explains Big Bang discovery using a sock

Cidersomerset
18th March 2014, 07:28
AMS-02: NASA's Search for Parallel Universes & Dark Matter after the Big Bang.

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Uploaded on 28 Apr 2011


The AMS detector heads for the International Space Station
The AMS particle detector will take off on 29 April 2011 at 21.47 CEST onboard the
very last mission of the space Shuttle Endeavour. AMS, the Alpha Magnetic
Spectrometer, will then be installed on the International Space Station from where
it will explore the Universe for a period of over 10 years. AMS will address some of
the most exciting mysteries of modern physics, looking for antimatter and dark
matter in space, phenomena that have remained elusive up to now.

A futuristic experiment sounding like something out of a scifi novel, that will hunt
for antimatter galaxies and signs of dark matter, was nearly cancelled but is finally
poised to voyage into orbit aboard the next-to-last space shuttle mission.

The $2 billion Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, a more than 15,000-pound (6,900-
kilogram) device searching for cosmic- rays -- high-energy charged particles from
outer space -- will ride up to the International Space Station on the shuttle
Endeavour this Friday April 29.

The instrument will employ a nearly 4,200-pound (1,900 kg) permanent magnet to
generate a strong, uniform magnetic field more than 3,000 times more intense
than Earth's. This deflects cosmic rays so that a battery of detectors can analyze
their properties, such as charge and velocity, and beam their findings to mission control.

When NASA launches the experiment, Sam Ting, Principal Investigator for the
Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-2 experiment, hopes that it will provide data that
proves the existence of parallel universes that are composed of anti-matter.
Discoveries could verify theories and answer basic questions regarding how the
Universe formed.

According to Ting, the experiment is already accruing data as it awaits its launch
date. Scheduled to fly aboard the final flight of the space shuttle Endeavour, STS-
134, AMS-02 will search through cosmic rays for exotic particles, antimatter and
dark matter. The experiment will be mounted to the outside of the International
Space Station (ISS) and will require no spacewalks to attach.

While Ting has certain things that he hopes to discover, he believes that the most
exciting questions are those that scientists don't even know to ask yet.

The particles that the 7.5 ton experiment is currently registering have had some of
their qualities removed by the abrasive nature of Earth's atmosphere. This problem
will be solved after Feb. 26 when the AMS-02 is delivered to its new home on the
space station's S3 truss assembly. From its high vantage point it is hoped that the
experiment will open new windows into particle physics and cause a revolution in
our understanding of the Universe.

Ting hopes that AMS-02 will provide data that proves the existence of parallel
universes that are composed of anti-matter. It is also hoped that the experiment
will also discover particles that contain magnetic and electric particles that are
exactly the opposite of ordinary particles.

Discoveries could verify theories and answer basic questions regarding how the
universe formed, such as that of Burt Ovrut, professor of theoretical high energy
physics at the University of Pennsylvania and pioneer of the use of M-theory to
explain the Big bang without the presence of a singularity. Ovrut and colleagues
imagine two branes, universes like ours, separated by a tiny gap as tiny as 10-32
meters. There would be no communication between the two universes except for
our parallel sister universe's gravitational pull, which could cross the tiny gap.

Orvut's theory could explain the effect of dark matter where areas of the Universe
are heavier than they should be given everything that's present. With Ovrut's
theory, the nagging problems surrounding the Big Bang (beginning from what, and
caused how?) are replaced by an eternal cosmic cycle where dark energy is no
longer a mysterious unknown quantity, but rather the very extra gravitational force
that drives the universe to universe (brane-brane) interaction.

Up until AMS-02, mankind's understanding of cosmic rays has been limited to
measuring light gathered in telescopes such as the Hubble Space Telescope (HST).

The AMS-02 P.I. is also hoping to find out what dark matter is made of. This
material is believed to be the "glue" that holds the Universe together. mankind's
understanding of cosmic rays has been limited to measuring light gathered in
telescopes such as the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). This experiment will be the
first time that charged particles can be studied in the cold vacuum of space -- away
from the distorting influence of Earth's opaque atmosphere