|
Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Supports Dark Energy as Primary Constituent of the Universe
Scientists from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS) announced
that an extensive investigation of the distribution of material
in the universe strongly supports the idea that “Dark Energy,” and
not matter, is the primary constituent of the universe. Two of
the coauthors of the study are members of Penn State’s Department
of Astronomy and Astrophysics: professor Donald
Schneider, who
is the Chair of the SDSS Quasar Science group and the SDSS Scientific
Publications Coordinator, and research associate Daniel
Vanden Berk.
Sloan Digital Sky Survey measurements of gas between the
galaxies bolster the case for inflation and dark energy, and improves
the case limiting neutrino mass.
Using observations of 3,000 quasars,
scientists have made the most precise measurement to date of the
cosmic clustering of diffuse hydrogen gas. These quasars—100
times more than have been used in such analyses in the past—are
at distances of eight to ten billion light years, making them among
the most distant objects known.
Filaments of gas between the quasars
and the Earth absorb light in the quasar’s spectra, allowing
researchers to map the gas distribution and to measure how clumpy
the gas is on scales of one million light years. The degree of
clumping of this gas, in turn, can answer fundamental questions
such as whether neutrinos have mass and what the nature of dark
energy is, hypothesized to be driving the accelerated expansion
of the universe.
“Scientists have long studied the clustering
of galaxies to learn about cosmology,” explained Uros Seljak
of Princeton University, one of the SDSS researchers. “However,
the physics of galaxy formation and clustering is very complicated.
In particular, because most of the mass of the universe is made
up of dark matter, an uncertainty arises from our lack of understanding
of the relation between the distribution of galaxies, which we
see, and the dark matter, which we can’t see but the cosmological
models predict.” The
gas filaments seen in the quasar spectra are thought to be distributed
very much like the dark matter, removing this source of uncertainty.
“We
have known for several years that quasar spectra are a unique tool
for studying the distribution of dark matter in the early universe,
but the quantity and quality of the SDSS data have made that vision
a reality,” said David Weinberg of Ohio
State University,
a member of the SDSS team. “It’s amazing that we can
learn so much about the structure of the universe 10 billion years
ago.”
Seljak and his collaborators on the SDSS combined the
analysis of the quasar spectra with measurements of galaxy clustering,
gravitational lensing, and ripples in the Cosmic Microwave Background
observed by NASA’s Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP).
This gives the best determination to date of the clustering of
matter in the universe from scales of one million light years to
many billions of light years. This comprehensive view allows detailed
comparison with theoretical models for the history and constituents
of the universe.
“This is the most rigorous test to date
of the predictions of the cosmological model of inflation; inflation
passes with flying colors,” added Seljak.
Inflationary theory
states that right after the Big Bang the universe underwent a
period of extremely rapid acceleration, during which tiny fluctuations
were transformed into astronomical-sized wrinkles in space-time,
ultimately observable in the clumping of astronomical objects.
The theory of inflation predicts a very specific dependence of
the degree of clustering with scale, which the current analysis
strongly supports. Other scenarios, such as the cyclic universe
theory, make very similar predictions and are also in agreement
with the latest results.
Early analyses by the WMAP team and others had hinted
at deviations in cosmic clustering from the prediction of inflation.
If correct, this would have required a major revision of the current
paradigm for origin of structure in the universe.
“The new data
and the corresponding analysis substantially improves the observational
precision of this test,” said Patrick
McDonald of Princeton University and one of the finding’s
authors. “The
new results are in nearly perfect agreement with inflation.”
“The
clustering of matter is a precise and powerful test of cosmological
models, and the present analysis is consistent with, and extends,
our previous studies,” agreed Adrian Pope of Johns
Hopkins University, who led an earlier analysis of the clustering
of SDSS galaxies.
The new analysis also provides the best information
on the mass of the neutrino. Terrestial experiments—resulting
in the 2002 Nobel
Prize in Physics—have definitively
shown that neutrinos have mass, but these experiments could
only measure the difference in mass between the three different
types of neutrinos known. The presence of neutrinos would affect
the cosmic clustering on million-light-year scales, exactly
the scales probed with the quasar spectra.
The new analysis
suggests that the lightest neutrino mass has to be less than
two times the previously measured mass difference. The new
measurements also eliminate the possibility of an additional
massive neutrino family suggested by some terrestrial experiments.
“Cosmology,
the science of the very large, is able to tell us about properties
of fundamental particles, such as neutrinos,” said
Lam Hui of the U.S.
Department of Energy’s Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory, who has been carrying out an independent
analysis of these data, together with Scott Burles of Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and others.
The new analysis also provides
further support for the existence of dark energy, and suggests
that dark energy is unchanging in time. This analysis provides
the best limits on its time evolution to date.
“No evidence
of dark energy changing in time has emerged so far, and the
possibility that the universe will be torn apart by a big rip
in the future is substantially reduced by these new results,” said
Alexey Makarov of Princeton University, who also took part
in this research.
Gary S. Ruderman, Sloan Digital Sky Survey
|