Getting to Know the Universe
7 Surprising facts about the Universe.........
1. The Universe Is Old (Really Old)
The universe began with the Big Bang, and is estimated to be approximately 13.7 billion years old (plus or minus 130 million years). Astronomers calculated this figure by measuring the composition of matter and energy density in the universe, which enabled them to determine how fast the universe expanded in the past. As a result, researchers could turn back the hands of time and pinpoint when the Big Bang occurred. The time in between that explosion and now makes up the age of the universe.
2. The Universe Is Getting Bigger
In
the 1920s, astronomer Edwin Hubble made the revolutionary discovery
that the universe is not static, but rather is expanding. But, it was
long thought that the gravity of matter in the universe would slow this
expansion or even cause it to contract.
In 1998, the Hubble Space Telescope studied very distant supernovas
and found that, a long time ago, the universe was expanding more slowly
than it is today. This puzzling discovery suggested that an inexplicable
force, called dark energy, is driving the accelerating expansion of the
universe.
While dark energy is thought to be the strange force that is pulling the cosmos apart at ever-increasing speeds, it remains one of the greatest mysteries in science because its detection remains elusive to scientists.
While dark energy is thought to be the strange force that is pulling the cosmos apart at ever-increasing speeds, it remains one of the greatest mysteries in science because its detection remains elusive to scientists.
3. The Universe's Growth Spurt Is Accelerating
Three scientists won the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics for their 1998 discovery that the expansion of the universe was accelerating.
4. The Universe Could Be Flat
Yet, if the density of the universe is exactly equal to the critical density, then the geometry of the universe is "flat," like a sheet of paper. Here, the universe has no bounds and will expand forever, but the rate of expansion will gradually approach zero after an infinite amount of time. Recent measurements suggest that the universe is flat with roughly a 2 percent margin of error.
5. The Universe Is Filled With Invisible Stuff
6. The Universe Has Echoes of Its Birth
The cosmic microwave background is made up of light echoes left over from the Big Bang that created the universe 13.7 billion years ago. This relic of the Big Bang explosion hangs around the universe as a pocked veil of radiation.
The European Space Agency's Planck mission mapped the entire sky in
microwave light to reveal new clues about how the universe began.
Planck's observations are the most precise views of the cosmic microwave
background ever obtained. Scientists are hoping to use data from the
mission to settle some of the most debated questions in cosmology, such
as what happened immediately after the universe was formed.
7. There May Be More Universes
Researchers searched the best available observations of the cosmic microwave background for signs of bubble universe collisions, but didn't find anything conclusive. If two universes had collided, the researchers say, it would have left a circular pattern behind in the cosmic microwave background.
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