Posted on 05/18/2004 9:13:51 PM PDT by petuniasevan
Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.
Explanation: What caused this unusual looking crater floor on Mars? Appearing at first glance to resemble the human brain, the natural phenomena that created the unusual texture on the floor of this Martian impact crater are currently under investigation. The light colored region surrounding the brain-textured region is likely sand dunes sculpted by winds. The Mars Global Surveyor robot spacecraft that has been orbiting Mars since 1997 took the above image. Meanwhile, down on the surface, robots Spirit and Opportunity continue to roll, inspecting landscape, rocks, and soil for clues to the ancient watery past of the red planet. Humorously, this brain-terrain on Mars spans about a kilometer, making it just about the right size to fit inside the rock formation once dubbed the Face on Mars.
Astronomers have detected and probed dark energy by applying a powerful, new method that uses images of galaxy clusters made by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory. The results trace the transition of the expansion of the universe from a decelerating to an accelerating phase several billion years ago.
Chandra images of multimillion degree Celsius gas in galaxy clusters have provided astronomers with a powerful new method to probe the mass and energy content of the universe. A recent study of 26 clusters of galaxies confirms that the expansion of the universe stopped slowing down about 6 billion years ago, and began to accelerate. Credit: NASA/CXC/IoA/S.Allen et al. Download larger image version here |
Allen and his colleagues used Chandra to study 26 clusters of galaxies at distances between one and eight billion light years. These data span the time when the universe slowed from its original expansion, before speeding up again, because of the repulsive effect of dark energy.
"We're directly seeing the expansion of the universe is accelerating by measuring the distances to these galaxy clusters," said IoA scientist and study co-author Andy Fabian. "The new Chandra results suggest the dark energy density does not change quickly with time and may even be constant, consistent with the "cosmological constant" concept first introduced by Albert Einstein," he said.
If the dark energy is unchanging, the universe is expected to continue expanding forever, and more dramatic fates for the universe would be ruled out. These include the "Big Rip," where dark energy increases until galaxies, stars, planets and, finally, even atoms are torn apart, and the "Big Crunch," where the universe eventually collapses on itself.
Chandra's probe of dark energy uses X-ray observations to detect and study the hot gas in galaxy clusters. From these data, the ratio of the mass of the hot gas to the mass of the dark matter in a cluster can be determined. Since galaxy clusters are so large, the relative amounts of hot gas and dark matter should be the same for every cluster. Using this assumption, Allen and colleagues derive distances that show the expansion of the universe was first decelerating, and it began to accelerate about six billion years ago.
Chandra's observations agree with observations of distant supernovae, including those from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope (HST), that first showed dark energy's effect on the acceleration of the universe. Chandra's results are completely independent of the supernova technique.
"Our Chandra method has nothing to do with other techniques, so they're definitely not comparing notes, so to speak," said Robert Schmidt of the University of Potsdam, Germany, another co-author of the study.
Better limits on the amount of dark energy, and how it varies with time, are obtained by combining the X-ray results with data from NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP). It used observations of the cosmic microwave background radiation to discover evidence for dark energy in the very early universe. Using the combined data, Allen and his colleagues found dark energy makes up about 75 per cent of the universe, dark matter about 21 per cent, and ordinary matter about 4 per cent.
More detailed studies with Chandra, HST, WMAP and future X- ray missions like Constellation-X, should provide much more precise constraints on dark energy.
"Until we better understand cosmic acceleration and the nature of the dark energy, we cannot hope to understand the destiny of the universe," said Michael Turner, assistant director for mathematical and physics sciences, National Science Foundation, Arlington, Va.
The research team also included Harald Ebeling of the University of Hawaii and the late Leon van Speybroeck of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. These results appear in an upcoming issue of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomy Society.
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The floor of the crater does not look like a brain. It is pits and depressions. If anyone is having trouble seeing this, turn your monitor upside down, the shadows are going the wrong direction, light is usually coming from the upper left in images and relief will appear inverted if it comes from the lower right. This is a common source of misperception.
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Okay, have discussed this with an actual geologist. It is his opinion that the floor of the crater and the sidewalls were subject to melting, as in fused basalt. The features on the floor, the darker portion inside the ring of sand dunes are due to refreezing of the rock. The lower part of the crater wall was also altered by melting and appears darker. The upper wall was blown out but not heated so much and appears lighter in color. There might be the track of a Martian dust devil going across the frame right to the edge of the crater.
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