The Prague Post - Dark energy seems to be changing, rattling our view of universe

EUR -
AED 4.037723
AFN 78.405346
ALL 98.420291
AMD 430.063576
ANG 1.967954
AOA 1006.947624
ARS 1179.886018
AUD 1.807638
AWG 1.978718
AZN 1.867362
BAM 1.942096
BBD 2.211255
BDT 133.080933
BGN 1.954622
BHD 0.414334
BIF 3255.513116
BMD 1.099288
BND 1.46436
BOB 7.56914
BRL 6.372358
BSD 1.095103
BTN 93.431266
BWP 15.252046
BYN 3.584442
BYR 21546.045319
BZD 2.199837
CAD 1.560626
CDF 3158.254105
CHF 0.942092
CLF 0.027613
CLP 1059.702983
CNY 8.004521
CNH 8.009033
COP 4635.367821
CRC 553.940027
CUC 1.099288
CUP 29.131133
CVE 109.495349
CZK 25.193457
DJF 195.023683
DKK 7.460197
DOP 69.153158
DZD 146.804392
EGP 55.617155
ERN 16.48932
ETB 144.337093
FJD 2.54474
FKP 0.838408
GBP 0.84903
GEL 3.023354
GGP 0.838408
GHS 17.024058
GIP 0.838408
GMD 79.302206
GNF 9504.38923
GTQ 8.457027
GYD 229.952518
HKD 8.547168
HNL 28.11702
HRK 7.532764
HTG 143.780006
HUF 400.567225
IDR 18406.998962
ILS 4.107435
IMP 0.838408
INR 93.811211
IQD 1436.22734
IRR 46540.544582
ISK 143.530896
JEP 0.838408
JMD 172.691987
JOD 0.779382
JPY 160.205849
KES 142.070065
KGS 95.299876
KHR 4365.927003
KMF 489.345406
KPW 989.2802
KRW 1595.478081
KWD 0.338158
KYD 0.914124
KZT 551.751806
LAK 23752.230091
LBP 98435.221736
LKR 324.493107
LRD 219.617313
LSL 20.600601
LTL 3.245911
LVL 0.664948
LYD 5.301262
MAD 10.461542
MDL 19.680364
MGA 5091.764792
MKD 61.846595
MMK 2308.005039
MNT 3852.70846
MOP 8.805893
MRU 43.598454
MUR 49.875785
MVR 16.974212
MWK 1903.971347
MXN 22.497397
MYR 4.88372
MZN 70.225378
NAD 20.600601
NGN 1688.641626
NIO 40.404225
NOK 11.792777
NPR 150.168296
NZD 1.95852
OMR 0.423173
PAB 1.099288
PEN 4.030369
PGK 4.513916
PHP 62.717814
PKR 307.785903
PLN 4.205052
PYG 8725.050394
QAR 4.001442
RON 4.951813
RSD 116.524798
RUB 92.431316
RWF 1557.89252
SAR 4.122563
SBD 9.343154
SCR 15.750661
SDG 659.987561
SEK 11.006852
SGD 1.467226
SHP 0.863868
SLE 25.008714
SLL 23051.521461
SOS 626.240165
SRD 40.195204
STD 22753.042694
SVC 9.618903
SYP 14292.301853
SZL 20.600601
THB 37.493751
TJS 11.964127
TMT 3.845056
TND 3.358629
TOP 2.647431
TRY 41.776116
TTD 7.422472
TWD 36.361535
TZS 2917.860209
UAH 45.384397
UGX 4014.640468
USD 1.099288
UYU 46.504626
UZS 14189.63069
VES 76.997561
VND 28367.538939
VUV 135.878891
WST 3.104262
XAF 652.460541
XAG 0.036881
XAU 0.000361
XCD 2.976062
XDR 0.82882
XOF 652.460541
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.29784
ZAR 20.931049
ZMK 9894.911968
ZMW 30.735254
ZWL 353.970296
  • RBGPF

    1.0200

    69.02

    +1.48%

  • JRI

    -0.8500

    11.97

    -7.1%

  • CMSC

    -0.1190

    22.141

    -0.54%

  • BCC

    -0.2700

    94.36

    -0.29%

  • RYCEF

    -1.3800

    8.42

    -16.39%

  • NGG

    -2.9000

    66.49

    -4.36%

  • RIO

    -4.0630

    54.367

    -7.47%

  • BCE

    0.4200

    23.08

    +1.82%

  • RELX

    -2.4000

    49.04

    -4.89%

  • SCS

    -0.1900

    10.55

    -1.8%

  • CMSD

    -0.2300

    22.44

    -1.02%

  • VOD

    -0.8350

    8.535

    -9.78%

  • AZN

    -4.8800

    69.04

    -7.07%

  • BTI

    -1.6650

    40.255

    -4.14%

  • BP

    -2.8250

    28.515

    -9.91%

  • GSK

    -2.2240

    36.786

    -6.05%

Dark energy seems to be changing, rattling our view of universe
Dark energy seems to be changing, rattling our view of universe / Photo: Handout - ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA/AFP/File

Dark energy seems to be changing, rattling our view of universe

Dark energy, the mysterious force thought to be driving the ever-faster expansion of the universe, appears to be changing over time, according to new observations released Wednesday.

Text size:

If dark energy is in fact weakening, it would likely mean that science's understanding of how the universe works will need to be rewritten.

The new findings come from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI), which sits on a telescope at the Kitt Peak National Observatory in the US state of Arizona.

"What we are seeing is deeply intriguing," said Alexie Leauthaud-Harnett, a spokesperson for the DESI collaboration which brings together 70 institutions across the world.

"It is exciting to think that we may be on the cusp of a major discovery about dark energy and the fundamental nature of our universe," she said in a statement.

The DESI instrument's thin optical fibres can simultaneously observe 5,000 galaxies or quasars -- blazing monsters with a black hole at their heart -- for 20 minutes.

This allows scientists to calculate the age and distance of these objects, and create a map of the universe so they can detect patterns and trace its history.

- 'Tensions' emerging -

Scientists have known for a century that the universe is expanding, because massive clusters of galaxies have been observed moving away from each other.

In the late 1990s, scientists shocked the field by discovering that the universe's expansion has been speeding up over time.

The name dark energy was given to the phenomenon driving this acceleration, the effects of which seem to be partially offset by ordinary matter -- and an also unknown thing called dark matter.

The universe is thought to be made of 70 percent dark energy, 25 percent dark matter -- and just five percent normal matter.

Science's best understanding of how the universe works, which is called the standard cosmological model, refers to dark energy as being constant -- meaning it does not change.

The idea was first introduced by Albert Einstein in his theory of relativity.

Arnaud de Mattia, a French physicist involved in analysing the DESI data, told AFP that the standard model is "satisfactory" but some "tensions" are emerging between observations.

There are several different ways of measuring the expansion of the universe, including looking at the lingering radiation from after the Big Bang, exploding stars called supernovae and how gravity distorts the light of galaxies.

When the DESI team combined their new data with other measurements, they found "signs that the impact of dark energy may be weakening over time", according to a statement.

"When we combine all the cosmological data, it favours that the universe's expansion was accelerating at a slightly higher rate around seven billion years ago," de Mattia said.

But for the moment there is "absolutely not certainty" about this, he added.

- 'Inflection point' -

French physicist Etienne Burtin was confident that "we should have a clearer picture within five years".

This is because there is loads of new data expected from DESI, Europe's Euclid space telescope, NASA's upcoming Nancy Grace Roman space telescope and the Vera Rubin Observatory in Chile.

"This new generation of surveys -- in the next few years -- will nail this," Joshua Frieman, a theoretical astrophysicist at the University of Chicago, told AFP.

But for now, "we're at this interesting inflection point", added Frieman, a dark energy expert and former DESI member.

Burtin said confirming the "evolving dark energy" theory would be a "revolution on the level of the discovery of accelerated expansion", which itself was the subject of a physics Nobel.

"The standard cosmological model would have to be different," he added.

The DESI research, which involved three years' worth of observations of 15 million galaxies and quasars, was presented at a conference of the American Physical Society in California.

Q.Fiala--TPP