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Evidence for Universe Expansion Found
Yahoo (AP) ^ | 3/16/2006 | MATT CRENSON

Posted on 03/16/2006 11:31:54 AM PST by The_Victor

Physicists announced Thursday that they now have the smoking gun that shows the universe went through extremely rapid expansion in the moments after the big bang, growing from the size of a marble to a volume larger than all of observable space in less than a trillion-trillionth of a second.

The discovery — which involves an analysis of variations in the brightness of microwave radiation — is the first direct evidence to support the two-decade-old theory that the universe went through what is called inflation.

It also helps explain how matter eventually clumped together into planets, stars and galaxies in a universe that began as a remarkably smooth, superhot soup.

"It's giving us our first clues about how inflation took place," said Michael Turner, assistant director for mathematics and physical sciences at the National Science Foundation. "This is absolutely amazing."

Brian Greene, a Columbia University physicist, said: "The observations are spectacular and the conclusions are stunning."

Researchers found the evidence for inflation by looking at a faint glow that permeates the universe. That glow, known as the cosmic microwave background, was produced when the universe was about 300,000 years old — long after inflation had done its work.

But just as a fossil tells a paleontologist about long-extinct life, the pattern of light in the cosmic microwave background offers clues about what came before it. Of specific interest to physicists are subtle brightness variations that give images of the microwave background a lumpy appearance.

Physicists presented new measurements of those variations during a news conference at Princeton University. The measurements were made by a spaceborne instrument called the Wilkinson Microwave Anistropy Probe, or WMAP, launched by NASA in 2001.

Earlier studies of WMAP data have determined that the universe is 13.7 billion years old, give or take a few hundred thousand years. WMAP also measured variations in the cosmic microwave background so huge that they stretch across the entire sky. Those earlier observations are strong indicators of inflation, but no smoking gun, said Turner, who was not involved in the research.

The new analysis looked at variations in the microwave background over smaller patches of sky — only billions of light-years across, instead of hundreds of billions.

Without inflation, the brightness variations over small patches of the sky would be the same as those observed over larger areas of the heavens. But the researchers found considerable differences in the brightness variations.

"The data favors inflation," said Charles Bennett, a Johns Hopkins University physicist who announced the discovery. He was joined by two Princeton colleagues, Lyman Page and David Spergel, who also contributed to the research.

Bennett added: "It amazes me that we can say anything at all about what transpired in the first trillionth of a second of the universe."

The physicists said small lumps in the microwave background began during inflation. Those lumps eventually coalesced into stars, galaxies and planets.

The measurements are scheduled to be published in a future issue of the Astrophysical Journal.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: cosmology; crevolist; expansion
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To: MineralMan
"Of course it is a valid answer. We do not know is always a valid answer. We may know at some point, but we do not know at this point."

Incorrect. It's not a valid answer to make a statement as if scientific and then to come back with "We don't know." If you don't know, then don't make the statement in the first place.

241 posted on 03/16/2006 2:14:20 PM PST by Southack (Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Dr. Thorne

LOL!! I like that. Cheers!


242 posted on 03/16/2006 2:15:15 PM PST by SQUID
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To: Vicomte13
I'd say that we can demonstrate three, and the fourth, time, is less tangible and more speculative than mind.

Time is as fully tangible as our dimensions of size. Entropy gives time its direction. It's unit measure (seconds) is arbitrary just as the unit measure of length is arbitrary (meters), but in both cases the dimensions are fully tangible and provable. There are (at least) four dimensions. Three spatial, one temporal.
243 posted on 03/16/2006 2:16:09 PM PST by newguy357
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To: The_Victor

"....growing from the size of a marble to a volume larger than all of observable space in less than a trillion-trillionth of a second."

God called, He wants His marble back.


244 posted on 03/16/2006 2:17:13 PM PST by Search4Truth (Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God - Thomas Jefferson.)
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To: bobbdobbs
Actually, if you take all the gas out of the bulb, the rotor stops turning. It heats the gas more on the dark side because the dark side absorbs the light and heats up more than the lighter side. When gas molecules bump into it, they pick up some of the heat energy in recoil. Normally there would be a balance between sides in this random bumping. But the different temperatures break the symmetry.

There is a really good article about it at post 118. When you learn something (and remember it) at age 10, and then quit keeping up with it for 30+ years, one recollections might well have been proven wrong in that time.

245 posted on 03/16/2006 2:18:35 PM PST by The_Victor (If all I want is a warm feeling, I should just wet my pants.)
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To: Search4Truth
God called, He wants His marble back.

Awwwwwwwww, is it time for the big crunch already. I was just starting to have fun.

246 posted on 03/16/2006 2:19:51 PM PST by The_Victor (If all I want is a warm feeling, I should just wet my pants.)
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To: BooksForTheRight.com

Actually, it's Einstein that is saying that it is possible. We're just plugging in various values for his cosmological constant based on different levels of vacuum energy.


247 posted on 03/16/2006 2:21:20 PM PST by Netheron
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To: MineralMan
[ Nope. What does that have to do with the turtles? ]

Everything.. Not all democrats are Moonbats.. some are Turtles.. with the world on their shoulders..

248 posted on 03/16/2006 2:21:40 PM PST by hosepipe (CAUTION: This propaganda is laced with hyperbole..)
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To: AntiGuv
Whenever someone brilliant enough comes along to solve the mathematics of String Theory, then we will be able to test it within the empirical world so far as we can observe it.

It's not so simple. Some of the predictions of string theory would require a particle accelerator the size of the moon.
249 posted on 03/16/2006 2:22:02 PM PST by newguy357
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To: MineralMan
"The gravitational force is what keeps matter relatively static in local groupings, while space expands willy-nilly, as it were." - MineralMan

Then why and how was this gravitational force overcome originally back when matter was even closer together than today?" - Southack

"We do not know the answer to that question, but we're working on finding an answer." - MinerMan

You can't have it both ways. You can't claim that gravity holds matter "relatively static" on the one hand and then punt...saying "We don't know" when asked why matter isn't static (e.g. pre-big-bang versus today).

Either we know what gravity does or we don't. Stop trying to have it both ways. Do we know, or not?!

250 posted on 03/16/2006 2:22:50 PM PST by Southack (Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: Southack
You're confusing matter and space.

Lets try again: Space expands. Fine. The matter didn't. Why isn't the matter still inside the space of a marble (held together by an aggregate force of Gravity the likes of which we've never seen)?

I'll take a crack at that one. Because, for example, why is Jupiter the particular size that it is? The size of Jupiter is the result of the balance between the force of gravity pulling the mass together and the outward pressure of the materials that it is made of. If would could constrict jupter to half the size it was now, by somehow lets say wrapping shrink wrap around it and tightening it down. When you release the shrink wrap, Jupiter would revert back to the size it is now because the outward pressure of the gas and the inward pressure of gravity would equialize. (It would temporarily be larger, probably, because of heat generated during the copression)

If you have all matter in the inverse compressed into a tiny speck because that is all the room there is for the matter to be in, when you give the matter more space, the mattr will expand outward due to pressure to fill the additional space. Once the pressure is less of a factor than gravity, gravity begins to cause some of the matter to contract to form galaxies, etc. Admittedly there is much we do not know about the early nano-seconds of the universe, but at least I gave it a shot. Also, we don't know how the force that caused space to expand so rapidly at first may have also affected matter. One could argue that so much mass would have instantly formed a black hole which contained the entire universe, but then one could also argue that that itself was the original state of the universe at the moment of creation, so something must've happened there which is what we call the Big Bang.
251 posted on 03/16/2006 2:26:29 PM PST by Bones75
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To: hosepipe

To the infinite stack of turtles underneath. :)


252 posted on 03/16/2006 2:26:36 PM PST by Netheron
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To: MineralMan

"At the limits of the universe, many, many billions of years ago, we cannot see any further, since we have nothing with which to see. We can see remnants of the original energy that formed the universe, but, beyond that, there is nothing to measure, and nothing we can measure with."
...
"Just think of nothing when you wonder what the universe is expanding into. Simply nothing."

Very well put.

Also, we're not reaching out and looking "at the edge of the universe". What we're really doing is opening up sensors' eyes and detecting whatever from out there is coming to hit us here. It's quite passive, really, although we're accustomed to using the active voice. Really we're seeing a flat picture, and then converting that to a 3-d (or 4-d...or 21-d!) picture. And that might make a difference.

To return to that business of the "grid", the difference between space-time and void nothingness would be that within space-time there's a grid which warps in the presence of matter. Or perhaps it's matter that makes the grid and warps it (voila le gravitron!). Where there's no matter (I'm subsuming all particles of energy into "matter" for this purpose), there's no relative grid at all, because there's nothing to be relative to anything else, and there's no sequence of anything, so no time, and there's no fixed grid to be warped by gravitrons, or gravitrons to make a grid. There's just NOTHING, until something sweeps close enough to structure it.

I've taken a couple of mental trips to nothing. As long as you can look back and see something, anything, it's not nothing. Only when there's nothing to be relative to is there nothing.

WHERE is "nothing"?
It's in the same place that the dream you will have tomorrow night is.



253 posted on 03/16/2006 2:26:43 PM PST by Vicomte13 (Et alors?)
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To: Red Badger
What is it expanding into?..........

It doesn't need to be expanding into anything.

254 posted on 03/16/2006 2:26:46 PM PST by wideminded
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To: Southack

It is, but the distance between the Sun and us is too small to show any effect.


255 posted on 03/16/2006 2:27:40 PM PST by Netheron
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To: Southack

Are you joking?

He clearly made a statement about what we know as an observed phenomenon in the present and then expressed that we don't have an answer to a different situation in the past.

Kind of like saying we know the bird crashed into the window but we don't know where it took off from. Is that a contradiction?


256 posted on 03/16/2006 2:30:22 PM PST by Bingo Jerry (Bing-freaking-go!)
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To: newguy357

"Time is as fully tangible as our dimensions of size. Entropy gives time its direction. It's unit measure (seconds) is arbitrary just as the unit measure of length is arbitrary (meters), but in both cases the dimensions are fully tangible and provable. There are (at least) four dimensions. Three spatial, one temporal."

The highest speculative science resolves itself on definitions, and reposes in words. Our language, of course, is not made for this stuff, and starts to strain and tear.
Time is mathematically provable.
But it is in no sense whatever "tangible".
"Tangible" means you can touch it.
You can't.
And that matters to what I was saying about dimensions.
You can prove mind too.
And mind is extremely powerful, and has its own strange rules we don't fully understand.
But it's not tangible either.
We don't usually define mind as a "dimension", but we certainly COULD.
And that was my point.
There are things that are more solid than other things.
Three dimensions ARE tangible. We can touch them.
The fourth, time, is speculative. We may be able to prove some things mathematically and make assumptions from observations, but no, time is not tangible.
Which places it on a different plane of certitude than the three geometric dimensions.

Gravity isn't tangible either, at least not until we actually see a gravitron, but the effects are, even to 2 year olds ("Fall down, go boom!")

Time? There is sequentiality, as we describe it. There seems to be "something" there, but it's a concept, much more abstract than mind. Mind is more obvious than electromagnetism, strong or weak force, but we've not even attempted, other than metaphysically, to insert MIND into dimensions or forces. Too hard. It's not tangible either, but it's more obvious than time.


257 posted on 03/16/2006 2:37:10 PM PST by Vicomte13 (Et alors?)
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To: MineralMan

Are there any mathematically defined 'spaces' that we could talk about the universe 'expanding' into?

If I have a two dimensional locally Euclidean surface (a balloon for example) it should be easy to show that it's deformation over time can be embedded in a three dimensional Euclidean space.

Are there any metrics or spaces that can be used to embed a locally Lorentzian space curved by and evolving according to General Relativity?

Maybe we can throw a bone to those of us who need to have a 'space' that space is expanding into.


258 posted on 03/16/2006 2:38:25 PM PST by Netheron
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To: newguy357

Yeah, but at least then you can compute cross-sections.

I think string theory is interesting mathematics too, but if I can't calculate graviton-graviton scattering yet, it's still just mathematics. (Yes, I know you need to choose a vacuum. Pick your favorite.)


259 posted on 03/16/2006 2:42:00 PM PST by Netheron
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To: Southack
One more quick item that I should've mentioned above: My answers are somewhat misleading, because they could be taken to imply that you require String Theory to answer your questions. They don't, necessarily. The problem is that your questions are really swirling around one question: What caused the Big Bang? In other words, what caused the initial expansion. If you simply assume the initial expansion, as physicists necessarily do, then the explanations for your questions simply follow (from General Relativity). However, in order to explain the initial expansion itself, upon which the other questions are ultimately contingent, then you require something more, and that's where String Theory fits in.

Having assumed the initial expansion, however, the answers are what I already gave you: gravity (plus cooling, to put it simply); dark energy (or whatever you want to call it); and physical laws weren't different (the universe didn't 'travel' faster than light; rather, timespace was stretched and light stretched with it).

260 posted on 03/16/2006 2:45:52 PM PST by AntiGuv
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