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Gamma-ray bursts shed light on the nature of dark energy

Using the properties of these blasts as a new distance-measuring method, scientists can examine the density of dark energy in various periods after the Big Bang.
By University of Warsaw, Poland Published: September 20, 2011
explosion of a star
An artistic image of the explosion of a star leading to a gamma-ray burst. Credit: FUW/Tentaris/Maciej Frolow
What is the nature of dark energy, a recently discovered dominant constituent of the universe today? Is expansion-accelerating dark energy an intrinsic property of space-time itself or rather a field unknown to science? A new distance-measuring method developed by scientists from the Faculty of Physics, University of Warsaw (FUW), Poland, and the University of Naples Federico II, Italy, can provide the answer. “We are able to determine the distance of an explosion on the basis of the properties of the radiation emitted during gamma-ray bursts,” said Marek Demianski from FUW. “Given that some of these explosions are related to the most remote objects in space that we know about, we are able for the first time to assess the speed of space-time expansion even in the relatively early periods after the Big Bang.” The method was used to verify models of the structure of the universe containing dark energy.

In 1998, during the analysis of the brightness of type Ia supernovae, it was discovered that the most remote explosions seemed to be too weak. Type Ia supernovae appear in binary systems. One of the stars is a white dwarf, a relic of an evolutionary cycle of stars similar to the Sun. When the second star of the system enters the red giant phase and swells up, its external layers, containing mainly hydrogen, begin to fall onto the white dwarf, which gradually grows in mass. The white dwarf explodes and is completely torn apart when it reaches 1.4 solar masses. Because the conditions that trigger the explosion are similar every time, type Ia supernovae always release more or less the same amount of energy. Astronomers rely on this property to measure distances in space.

The fainter brightness of remote type Ia supernovae was a clear indication that they were even more distant than assumed. Instead of slowing down the expansion, the universe was accelerating. A new form of mass-energy — dark energy — needed to be introduced into the theory in order to reconcile the previous models of the universe with the observations. The calculations indicate the existence of a huge amount of dark energy, nearly 20 times greater than the amount of mass-energy related to the world accessible to human senses. “Overnight, dark energy became, quite literally, the greatest mystery of the universe,” said Demianski.

To this day, no one knows exactly what dark energy is. There are two models explaining its nature. According to the first one, dark energy is a property described by the famous cosmological constant introduced by Albert Einstein. According to the second model, the accelerated expansion is caused by some unknown scalar field. “In other words, it is either-or — either space-time expands by itself or is expanded by a scalar physical field inside it,” said Demianski.

Examining the density of dark energy in various periods after the Big Bang can help choose the correct model. If the density remained constant, it would mean that dark energy is related to the cosmological constant, that is to say, the property of space-time. But if the acceleration of the universe is caused by a scalar field, then, given the swelling-up of space-time, the density of dark energy should change. “This used to be a problem. In order to assess the changes in the density of dark energy immediately after the Big Bang, one needs to know how to measure the distance to very remote objects. So remote that even type Ia supernovae connected to them are too faint to be observed,” said Demianski.

The group of Polish and Italian astrophysicists suggested using gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), the most powerful explosions observed in the universe today, to measure the largest distances in the universe. They analyzed the long bursts that probably arise during the collapse of the core of a large star. The process leads to the formation of a black hole. The gamma radiation emitted at that time is so intense that even objects that exploded 400 million years after the Big Bang can be observed.

The main problem was how to assess the total energy of a burst. To that end, the scientists analyzed databases of previous gamma explosions. It turned out that a part of the explosions occurred in galaxies the distance that could be measured using other methods, for example, by means of type Ia supernovae. “We focused on those instances. We knew the distance to the galaxy, and we also knew how much energy of the burst reached Earth. This allowed us to calibrate the burst, that is to say, to calculate the total energy of the explosion,” said Demianski.

The next step was to find statistical dependencies between various properties of the radiation emitted during a GRB and the total energy of the explosion. Such relations were discovered. “We cannot provide a physical explanation of why certain properties of GRBs are correlated,” said Demianski, “but we can say that if registered radiation has such and such properties, then the burst had such and such energy. This allows us to use bursts as standard candles to measure distances.”

The team of scientists from the universities in Warsaw and Naples, headed by Ester Piedipalumbo, analyzed data gathered by astronomers. Extremely remote GRBs are quite rare. The Amanti catalog listed 95 such phenomena and failed to provide enough clues as to the exact nature of dark energy. “It is quite a disappointment. But what is important is the fact that we have in our hands a tool for verifying hypotheses about the structure of the universe. All we need to do now is wait for the next cosmic fireworks,” said Demianski.

The insufficient amount of observational data remains the main problem in the data analysis of GRBs. For this reason, many groups of astronomers and astrophysicists combine their efforts in order to register them in the fastest and most accurate manner possible. One of such projects is “Pi of the Sky,” a system of robotic telescopes for real-time monitoring of large areas of the sky, co-organized by the Faculty of Physics, University of Warsaw.

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WILLY YAMBAO said:
What if the universe is not really expanding but is being suck up by a supermassive region of space that is nearby our universe? The fundamental law of contradictions said that all of nature (including ideas) is a product of contradictions and that it will go on indefinitely. In cosmology, this implies that it is exactly the constantly splitting universe idea or the multiverse notion. So, if that is correct, it follows that the region of space that is full of matter that we call our universe has an equivalent that exists side-by-side with our universe. Others have called this a parallel universe in the last century.
In addition, this implies that there is a probability that there are other universes that existed before our universe. If so, the so-called accelerating expansion is not actually expansion per se but just an effect of the warping of space time in our particular region of space that we call our universe in a multiverse that comprised of several regions of space that are also full matter.
So, in that scenario, there is a possibility that there is a supermassive region of space nearby our region of space thus, there is also a possibility that we are being suck up by this supermassive region of space. This can be likened with the observation that our galaxy is being sucked up and ultimately merged with another galaxy to form a spiral galaxy. We all know now that this is governed by astronomical gravity, which is also the same as the terrestrial gravity.
If this is correct, our universe is not actually expanding per se like an inflating balloon as is portrayed in the old single big bang hypothesis of inflationary cosmology, but our region of space is being ultimately merge with a supermassive universe that is nearby. As we know, there are no real data to support either one of the hypotheses: a single big bang, simultaneous big bangs or a cycle of big bangs, thus, the assumption that the so-called expanding universe that was developed through the single big bang hypothesis is misleading.
5 stars
ROGER MOORE JR from MISSOURI said:
To Dan from California: Wow. I kinda understood that. I'll be re-reading that post a number of times. I smoke and on occasion have blown smoke rings and have witnessed the exact same effects you spoke of. Cool !!!
DAN ECHEGOYEN from CALIFORNIA said:

BLACK HOLES, EXPANSION, AND DARK ENERGY

In the continuum of space and time, exists the dichotomy of matter and energy. All things exist as both matter and energy, but are experienced as one or the other.
As energy, all things exist as wave patterns. Most wave patterns are interferences of simpler wave patterns. The simplest wave forms are those that do not interfere with other waves. These simplest wave forms hold their shape as they propagate. There are three such wave forms.
The first such wave form is seen in three dimensions as the spherical expansion wave of a bomb blast, and in two dimensions as the circular wave of expansion on the water where a rock was tossed in. The second wave form is seen in three dimensions as the cone of sonic boom following an aircraft traveling faster than sound, and in two dimensions as the V-wake on the water where the boat is traveling faster than the water wave. The third wave form is seen in three dimensions as the propagation torus of a smoke ring and is seen in two dimensions as the double vortexes of an oar stroke on the water.
The Torus is a particle of discrete exchange, from one point to another. The object exchanges position and momentum. While the spherical wave shows position, and the conic wave shows momentum, the torus shows both at the same time, and has a dynamic finite unbounded reality. The volumes of the cone, sphere, and torus are mathematically related as static objects.
The Universe is a local density fluctuation. (a wave pulse) On this local density fluctuation wave, lesser wave forms may exist. All simple wave forms are also local density fluctuations, and as such are indeed universes in their own right, where other waves may exist.
Consider the torus as a universe. Einstein said that gravity is indistinguishable from acceleration. There is both linear acceleration and angular acceleration. Although the torus as a whole travels in a straight line, every local point on the torus travels in a circle and experiences angular acceleration.
The rubber sheet model of gravity and curved space translates directly to the propagating torus with angular acceleration. Acceleration is downward on the rubber sheet and outward on the torus. The tension field that separates the inside of the torus from the outside holds its shape as a simple two dimensional field of space and time just as the rubber sheet does.
Experimentally verifiable is that a big fat slow smoke ring generated in a room with very still air will eventually possess a bulge that travels in a circle on the surface of the smoke ring. This bulge, being a gravitational depression, gathers more of the energy of the field toward itself. Finally the bulge gathers enough material to collapse the field and eject a new, smaller smoke ring out in the same direction as the first torus. This collapse is a black hole to the first torus, and a white hole to the second torus, where the axes of space and time in that second torus have reversed.
While gravity tends to draw depressions together locally on a dynamic torus, even to the point of field collapse, other areas on a torus expand and contract globally as the torus propagates along without regard to local phenomenon on the surface. This is quintessence. The inertia of the torus to propagate is its dark energy. This is a two-dimensional example of the process that we experience in three dimensions.

From structureofexistence.com by Dan Echegoyen 951-204-0201
4 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
Well, at least they didn't find out that the big rip was going to hit next week. That would have been bad. They could be working on this dark energy thing for quite some time, like thousands of years.
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