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Archive for the ‘cosmology’ category: Page 85

Jan 21, 2024

Hubble captures an exceptionally luminous supernova site

Posted by in category: cosmology

This week’s image from the Hubble Space Telescope shows the aftermath of an epic explosion in space caused by the death of a massive star.

Some of the most dramatic events in the cosmos are supernovas, when a massive star runs out of fuel to fuse — first running out of hydrogen, then helium, then burning through heavier elements — and eventually can no longer sustain the outward pressure from heat caused by this fusion. When that happens, the star collapses suddenly into a dense core, and its outer layers are thrown off in a tremendous explosion called a Type II supernova.

Jan 21, 2024

Are gaps in the Andromeda galaxy filled with dark matter? This NASA telescope could find out

Posted by in category: cosmology

The space between streams of stars may be influenced by the presence of the universe’s most mysterious form of matter.

Jan 21, 2024

Astronomers rule out one explanation for the Hubble tension

Posted by in category: cosmology

Perhaps the greatest and most frustrating mystery in cosmology is the Hubble tension problem. Put simply, all the observational evidence we have points to a universe that began in a hot, dense state, and then expanded at an ever-increasing rate to become the universe we see today. Every measurement of that expansion agrees with this, but where they don’t agree is on what that rate exactly is.

We can measure expansion in lots of different ways, and while they are in the same general ballpark, their uncertainties are so small now that they don’t overlap. There is no value for the Hubble parameter that falls within the uncertainty of all measurements, hence the problem.

Of course, most of the results depend on a long chain of observational results. When we measure using , for example, the result depends on the derived distances of these supernovae as found through the cosmic distance ladder, where ever greater distances are determined based on the distance of closer things.

Jan 21, 2024

The End of the Multiverse

Posted by in category: cosmology

Audiences are falling out of love with dizzying multiverse sagas. Can the concept still be a useful lens on the psychology of regret, or is it dead on arrival?

Jan 21, 2024

Scientists observe strange lights in the heart of the Milky Way

Posted by in category: cosmology

Astronomers spot periodic lights coming from near the black hole at the center of our galaxy.

Jan 21, 2024

Astronomers Discover the Oldest Known Black Hole, Breaking a Record Set Last Year

Posted by in category: cosmology

The supermassive structure dates to about 400 million years after the Big Bang, and it’s particularly large for its age.

Jan 20, 2024

Structure of Space-Time Video

Posted by in category: cosmology

A Visual Model of Space and Time linking Gravity, Dark Energy, Black Holes, and Inertia.

Jan 20, 2024

Lee Smolin — How are Multiple Universes Generated?

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

Cosmologists believe that multiple universes really exist; they call the whole vast collection, which might even be infinite in number, the ‘multiverse’. But how are all these universes generated? There are several ways, each radically different from the others, each incredibly fascinating, each capable of generating infinite universes.

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Jan 19, 2024

2303.0083v2-3.pdf

Posted by in category: cosmology

Relationship of the photon to cosmology and the origin of the universe.


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Jan 19, 2024

New study: universe rapidly expanding, consistent with century-old Einstein theory

Posted by in category: cosmology

A group of over 400 scientists have spent the last decade studying supernovae with unprecedented results about the expansion of space and the role of dark energy.

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