• WMAP team releases final results, based on nine years of observations.
    3 replies, posted
[quote] [quote] [IMG]http://www.astro.wisc.edu/~dalit/RevisedWebsite/WMAP.jpg[/IMG] ============================================================ WMAP's image of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation. [/quote] In short, when used alone (with no other measurements), WMAP observations have made our knowledge of those six parameters above about 68,000 times more precise, thereby converting cosmology from a field of often wild speculation to a precision science. Now, two years after the probe "retired," Bennett and the WMAP science team are releasing its final results, based on a full nine years of observations. "It is almost miraculous, says Bennett, Alumni Centennial Professor of Physics and Astronomy and Johns Hopkins Gilman Scholar at the Johns Hopkins University's Krieger School of Arts and Sciences. "The universe encoded its autobiography in the microwave patterns we observe across the whole sky. When we decoded it, the universe revealed its history and contents. It is stunning to see everything fall into place." WMAP's "baby picture of the universe" maps the afterglow of the hot, young universe at a time when it was only 375,000 years old, when it was a tiny fraction of its current age of 13.77 billion years. The patterns in this baby picture were used to limit what could have possibly happened earlier, and what happened in the billions of year since that early time. The (mis-named) "big bang" framework of cosmology, which posits that the young universe was hot and dense, and has been expanding and cooling ever since, is now solidly supported, according to WMAP. [B]SEE SOURCE FOR VIDEO[/B] WMAP observations also support an add-on to the big bang framework to account for the earliest moments of the universe. Called "inflation," the theory says that the universe underwent a dramatic early period of expansion, growing by more than a trillion trillion-fold in less than a trillionth of a trillionth of a second. Tiny fluctuations were generated during this expansion that eventually grew to form galaxies. Remarkably, WMAP's precision measurement of the properties of the fluctuations has confirmed specific predictions of the simplest version of inflation: the fluctuations follow a bell curve with the same properties across the sky, and there are equal numbers of hot and cold spots on the map. WMAP also confirms the predictions that the amplitude of the variations in the density of the universe on big scales should be slightly larger than smaller scales, and that the universe should obey the rules of Euclidean geometry so the sum of the interior angles of a triangle add to 180 degrees. Recently, Stephen Hawking commented in New Scientist that WMAP's evidence for inflation was the most exciting development in physics during his career. The universe comprises only 4.6 percent atoms. A much greater fraction, 24 percent of the universe, is a different kind of matter that has gravity but does not emit any light—called "dark matter". The biggest fraction of the current composition of the universe, 71%, is a source of anti-gravity (sometimes called "dark energy") that is driving an acceleration of the expansion of the universe. "WMAP observations form the cornerstone of the standard model of cosmology, "says Gary F. Hinshaw of the University of British Columbia, who is part of the WMAP science team. "Other data are consistent and when combined we now know precise values for the history, composition, and geometry of the universe." WMAP has also provided the timing of epoch when the first stars began to shine, when the universe was about 400 million old. The upcoming James Webb Space Telescope is specifically designed to study that period that has added its signature to the WMAP observations. WMAP launched on June 30, 2001 and maneuvered to its observing station near the "second Lagrange point" of the Earth-Sun system, a million miles from Earth in the direction opposite the sun. From there, WMAP scanned the heavens, mapping out tiny temperature fluctuations across the full sky. The first results were issued in February 2003, with major updates in 2005, 2007, 2009, 2011, and now this final release. The mission was selected by NASA in 1996, the result of an open competition held in 1995. It was confirmed for development in 1997 and was built and ready for launch only four years later, on-schedule and on-budget. "The last word from WMAP marks the end of the beginning in our quest to understand the Universe," comments fellow Johns Hopkins astrophysicist Adam G. Riess, whose discovery of dark energy led him to share the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics. "WMAP has brought precision to cosmology and the Universe will never be the same." More information: Bennett's webpage: [url]www.cosmos.pha.jhu.edu/bennett/[/url] Hinshaw's webpage: [URL="http://www.phas.ubc.ca/users/gary-hinshaw"]www.phas.ubc.ca/users/gary-hinshaw[/URL] Hawking on WMAP: [URL="http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21628965.700-2013-smart-guide-new-maps-to-rein-in-cosmic-inflation.html"]www.newscientist.com/article/mg21628965.700-2013-smart-guide-new-maps-to-rein-in-cosmic-inflation.html[/URL] ============================================================ Source: [URL]http://phys.org/news/2012-12-wmap-team-results-based-years.html[/URL] [/quote]
Ah, good, I finally have a good map of my empire
This is amazing. And it feels like history repeating itself. There was a time where we thought all we saw was all there were. Then a time where we knew there were more, we just had no clue how much of that there were, Then we slowly observed and drew maps of how we thought the world was in it's entirety, and everithing led to where we are know, where no place in the surfaced world is left undiscovered In millennium time we'll have a complete map of the universe, with no place left unknown. How cool is that?
[QUOTE=lapsus_;38931548]This is amazing. And it feels like history repeating itself. There was a time where we thought all we saw was all there were. Then a time where we knew there were more, we just had no clue how much of that there were, Then we slowly observed and drew maps of how we thought the world was in it's entirety, and everithing led to where we are know, where no place in the surfaced world is left undiscovered In millennium time we'll have a complete map of the universe, with no place left unknown. How cool is that?[/QUOTE] Or we all blow each other up and never even map the local neighborhood of the universe!
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.