What's new

Major Discovery: 'Smoking Gun' for Universe's Incredible Big Bang Expansion Found

dray

BANNED
Joined
Apr 8, 2013
Messages
10,853
Reaction score
-1
Country
India
Location
India
Major Discovery: 'Smoking Gun' for Universe's Incredible Big Bang Expansion Found

By by Mike Wall, Senior Writer March 17, 2014 10:59 AM

.
Astronomers have found the first direct evidence of cosmic inflation, the theorized dramatic expansion of the universe that put the "bang" in the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago, new research suggests.
If it holds up, the landmark discovery — which also confirms the existence of hypothesized ripples in space-time known as gravitational waves — would give researchers a much better understanding of the Big Bang and its immediate aftermath.

"If it is confirmed, then it would be the most important discovery since the discovery, I think, that the expansion of the universe is accelerating," Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb, who is not a member of the study team, told Space.com, comparing the finding to a 1998 observation that opened the window on mysterious dark energy and won three researchers the 2011 Nobel Prize in physics. [The Big Bang to Now in 10 Easy Steps]

A team led by John Kovac, of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, is announcing the results today (March 17), unveiling two manuscripts that have not yet been submitted to peer-reviewed journals. To understand just what the detection of an inflation "smoking gun" would mean, a little background about the universe's first instants is in order. Kovac's team will discuss the results in a news conference today at 12 p.m. EDT (1600 GMT).

The universe grows up

The brief and astonishing inflationary epoch transformed the infant universe from mere quantum fluctuations into something of macroscopic size, adherents of the theory say.

Beginning just 10 to the minus 35 seconds (roughly one trillionth of a trillionth of a trillionth of a second) after the universe's birth, the idea goes, space-time expanded incredibly rapidly, ballooning outward faster than the speed of light. (This did not violate Albert Einstein's theory of special relativity, which holds that nothing can move faster than light through space, since inflation was an expansion of space itself.)

View gallery

The sun sets behind BICEP2 (in the foreground) and the South Pole Telescope (in the background).

Basic inflation theory has been supported over the years by several different space missions that mapped out the cosmic microwave background (CMB), the ancient light that began saturating the universe about 380,000 years after the Big Bang. (Before this time, the universe was a sizzling fog of plasma and energy too hot for photons to travel freely.)

While the CMB contains tiny temperature variations, it is, for the most part, strikingly uniform across the entire sky — a property that bolsters the inflation concept, researchers say.

"Why the cosmic microwave background temperature is the same at different spots in the sky would be a mystery if it was not for inflation saying, well, our whole sky came from this tiny region," Chuck Bennett, principal investigator of NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) mission, told Space.com last year. "So the idea of inflation helps answer some of these mysteries, and it explains where these fluctuations came from."

But astronomers had never claimed to find a smoking gun for inflation — until now.

Polarized light

The smoking gun is a type of polarization in the CMB known as "B-modes." The spectacular expansion of the universe during inflation produced gravitational waves, which, in turn, generated the B-modes, according to the theory.

View gallery

Gravitational waves from inflation generate a faint but distinctive twisting pattern in the polariza …

So multiple teams have been hunting for the B-modes; indeed, Bennett last year referred to their detection as "the current Holy Grail of the business." In the new study announced today, Kovac and his team report that they have spotted the characteristic swirls of B-mode polarization using the BICEP2 telescope in Antarctica. (BICEP is short for "Background Imaging of Cosmic Extragalactic Polarization.")

The researchers made ultrasensitive maps of the CMB over about 2 percent of the sky, taking advantage of BICEP2's great observing site.

"The South Pole is the closest you can get to space and still be on the ground," Kovac said in a statement. "It’s one of the driest and clearest locations on Earth, perfect for observing the faint microwaves from the Big Bang."

Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves in 1916, as part of his theory of general relativity. The new find represents the first direct evidence of these primordial space-time ripples, researchers said.

This is probably a direct image of gravitational waves across the entire sky, showing us the early universe," Kovac told Space.com.

Knowing how big the potential discovery is, Kovac and his colleagues pored over the BICEP2 dataset for several years to be sure the signal wasn't some kind of artifact generated by the telescope's instrumentation.

View gallery

The tiny temperature fluctuations of the cosmic microwave background (shown here as color) trace pri …

"We're very confident that the signal that we're seeing is real, and it's on the sky," he said.

Still, Kovac knows that a great deal of scientific scrutiny is sure to follow.

"It's going to be controversial," he told Space.com. "We can expect that people will try to shoot at it from every direction, and we invite that — that's the scientific process, and it'll be fun and interesting."

"I'm sure there will be lots of discussion about galactic foregrounds and whether they could possibly be fooling us, be totally different than we'd expected," Kovac added. "But our paper goes into some detail on using all the best available models for what galactic foregrounds ought to look like, and why what we see doesn't look like that."

Loeb said he finds the team's data and arguments compelling. But wide acceptance of the find will likely only come if other instruments, such as the European Space Agency's Planck spacecraft, spot the signal in the CMB as well, he added. [Gallery: Planck Spacecraft Sees Big Bang Relics]

"I think the most exciting thing to watch out for is in the next few months, to see what, for example, the Planck team will say about it," Loeb said. "It may take them time, because they're in the midst of analyzing their polarization data. But it would be very important for confirming or disputing this claim."

In addition to providing strong support for inflation theory, the new BICEP2 observations reveal some details about the inflation process itself.

For example, the strength of the B-mode signal suggests that inflation occurred at tremendous energy levels — levels so high that all of the major forces in the universe, except gravity, were unified at the time, Loeb said.

Still, there is much more to learn about our universe's first few moments. For example, astronomers still have no idea what the substance that propelled inflation — dubbed the "inflaton" — actually is, Loeb said.

"It's not yet a victory of theoretical physics that we see evidence for a process that took place early on," he said. "We really need to understand what this substance — this inflaton — is. And until we do that, it's just like dark matter or dark energy — we give it a name, but we don't know what it is."

Major Discovery: 'Smoking Gun' for Universe's Incredible Big Bang Expansion Found - Yahoo News

@thesolar65 @45'22' @chak de INDIA @Indischer @Dem!god @levina @Parul @desert warrior @danish_vij @GURU DUTT @scorpionx @jarves @Mike_Brando @madooxno9 @kbd-raaf @JanjaWeed @arp2041 @ExtraOdinary @ranjeet @Ayush @BDforever
 
Last edited:
. .
was Posted yesterday, But this is indeed something every curious mind have been looking for.
 
.
@levina
lol..ur favorite topic is back in discussion......:D:D

yet how did they found its from the begging of time......:undecided:

Beginning just 10 to the minus 35 seconds (roughly one trillionth of a trillionth of a trillionth of a second) after the universe's birth, the idea goes, space-time expanded incredibly rapidly, ballooning outward faster than the speed of light. (This did not violate Albert Einstein's theory of special relativity, which holds that nothing can move faster than light through space, since inflation was an expansion of space itself.)
true its one of the contradicting theory......as nothing can move faster than light...then how come it expanded faster....
or what if we can really been able travel faster than light.......waht say about hyper jump in space......:D:D
 
Last edited:
.
@levina
lol..ur favorite topic is back in discussion......:D:D

Yes!!
were we not discussing about it? :-)

But my question is how can there be just one universe and infinite amount of space around it???
There must be an end to this expansion..is it not?
Levina logic(LL) says there are more universes in this world.:yes4:
Though I haven't understood how the expansion of universe can happen at a speed faster than light.I dint understand the logic behind it.:blink:

@OrionHunter your conspicuous absence from this thread is worrying 8-)
 
Last edited:
.
Yes!!
were we not discussing about it? :-)

But my question is how can there be just one universe and infinite amount of space around it???
There must be an end to this expansion..is it not?
Levina logic(LL) says there are more universes in this world.:yes4:
Though I haven't understood how the expansion of universe can happen at a speed faster than light.I dint understand the logic behind it.:blink:

@OrionHunter your conspicuous absence on this thread is worrying 8-)

Though unusual it may sound, but i believe in multiverse. Each universe, from it's origin is like a bubble, in a sea of universes. And the universe will continue to expand, until it pops. It came from zero, and it will be zero, as the sum of energy and mass in the universe is zero.

P.S: The energy due to gravity is 'negative'.
 
Last edited:
.
Though unusual it may sound, but i believe in multiverse. Each universe, from it's origin is like a bubble, in a sea of universes. And the universe will continue to expand, until it pops. It came from zero, and it will be zero, as the sum of energy and mass in the universe is zero.
P.S: The force due to gravity is 'negative'.

so we have to wait till we collide with another universe to get the proof??
 
. .
You are saying that there weren't A Big Bang but MANY Big Bangs?

ofcourse!!!
How can there be infinite amount of space around us??
Man has an ego that restricts his imagination.They think earth is unique...milky way is unique....our universe is unique when the reality is far from this :)
 
.
so we have to wait till we collide with another universe to get the proof??

I don't think that might be possible, at least to perceive in our senses.

Imagine two balloons colliding, the particulates inside it will experience a sudden change in the boundary and acceleration of the walls and molecules near it, but can never experience the other balloon.
 
.
I don't think that might be possible, at least to perceive in our senses.

Imagine two balloons colliding, the particulates inside it will experience a sudden change in the boundary and acceleration of the walls and molecules near it, but can never experience the other balloon.
if that ever happens wont our universe get denser???
the overall atmosphere (if tats the right word) of the space would change.So my guess is that we would experience it.
 
.
if that ever happens wont our universe get denser???
the overall atmosphere (if tats the right word) of the space would change.So my guess is that we would experience it.

A ripple in the gravity maybe, but the chances are very low. As the gravitational waves moves with the speed of light, and the observable universe is 90 billion light years in diameter.

Now do the math. :D

And as there are huge tracts of empty spaces in the universe, the density of the cosmic entities will have marginal shift.
 
.
Though unusual it may sound, but i believe in multiverse. Each universe, from it's origin is like a bubble, in a sea of universes. And the universe will continue to expand, until it pops. It came from zero, and it will be zero, as the sum of energy and mass in the universe is zero.

P.S: The force due to gravity is 'negative'.

Am a believer in Multiverse/Parallel universe, because if at certain point the big bang started, then there must be another one at a certain distance and so on but at different time. So for each universe the meaning of time should be different!!

BTW we are slowly moving towards to meet our creator!!
 
.
Am a believer in Multiverse/Parallel universe, because if at certain point the big bang started, then there must be another one at a certain distance and so on but at different time. So for each universe the meaning of time should be different!!

BTW we are slowly moving towards to meet our creator!!

To start with, i'm not comfortable with the concept of a creator as per in literature, that conflicts with the ideology of my existence.

On the point, yes, that's a thought to ponder. Relative time of each universe will be different. And on a broader perspective, there isn't a start or end of time.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom