Four Cambridge 探花直播 astronomers are to share the most important award in cosmology for their role in discovering that the Universe's expansion is speeding up.
Four Cambridge 探花直播 astronomers are to share the most important award in cosmology for their role in discovering that the Universe's expansion is speeding up.
Dr Richard McMahon, Dr Mike Irwin and Dr Nic Walton from the Institute of Astronomy, and Dr Nelson Nunes from the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, have all be named as winners of the 2007 Gruber Cosmology Prize.
All the Cambridge researchers were in one of the two teams that made the Dark Energy discovery at around the same time in 1998. This mysterious force, which astronomers still do not fully understand, is accelerating the expansion of the universe and accounts for 75% of the mass-energy density within it.
A little under a decade ago, the idea that the Universe was somehow expanding at an increasing speed was an outlandish notion that academics found it difficult to accept. Existing theories suggested that it would either expand then contract, or expand forever, slowing over the millennia.
Evidence that both of these theories might be flawed was, however, growing at the same time. Two teams, led by Dr Saul Perlmutter and Dr Brian Schmidt, set out to resolve the matter once and for all.
Racing neck and neck, they examined exploding stars which are visible from the earth despite being billions of light years away and billions of years old. This allowed them to measure the speed at which distant objects in space are travelling away from us, as well as how far away they are.
To their surprise, and independently of one another, each team discovered that the fate of the universe is just to keep expanding, faster and faster. Initially neither group accepted their findings and spent time trying to find out where they had made an error. But the data was correct 鈥 it was the accepted model of the universe that was wrong.
鈥淲e worked for almost 10 years trying to measure how much the Universe was slowing down due to gravity,鈥 Dr McMahon said. 鈥淲e were very shocked to find the opposite of what we expected and that the Universe was accelerating as it expanded.
鈥淭his acceleration of the Universe appears to have started around 10 billion years ago and is caused by kinetic energy that is released as the Universe expands. 10 years on, our results are widely accepted and this energy is called Dark Energy. It makes up 75% of the total mass-energy of the Universe but is almost undetectable. 探花直播earth contains just one hundredth of a gram of Dark Energy.鈥
探花直播Gruber Cosmology Prize honours a leading cosmologist, astronomer, astrophysicist or scientific philosopher for theoretical, analytical or conceptual discoveries leading to fundamental advances in the field. A previous Cambridge recipient is Professor Martin Rees, who won the prize in 2001 for his work in unravelling the complexities of the universe.
Both teams will be presented with the prize on Friday, September 7, at 4.30pm at a private ceremony in Trinity College at the 探花直播 of Cambridge. On Saturday, September 8, the 探花直播's Institute of Astronomy will host a public lecture given by the two team leaders, Drs. Perlmutter and Schmidt, about how the discovery was made, and what its implications are for the future of the Universe. 探花直播talk will be at 10.30am in the Sackler Lecture Theatre and is free to attend.
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