Washington, November 3 (ANI): An international team of scientists has used high-precision measurements to confirm what is cosmologists' standard view of the universe.
These measurements of the cosmic microwave background-a faintly glowing relic of the hot, dense, young universe-put limits on proposed alternatives to the standard model of cosmology and provide further support for the standard cosmological model, confirming that dark matter and dark energy make up 95 percent of everything in existence, while ordinary matter makes up just 5 percent.
"When I first started in this field, some people were adamant that they understood the contents of the universe quite well," said Sarah Church of the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (KIPAC).
"But that understanding was shattered when evidence for dark energy was discovered. Now that we again feel we have a very good understanding of what makes up the universe, it's extremely important for us to amass strong evidence using many different measurement techniques that this model is correct, so that this doesn't happen again," she added.
The researchers focused their measurements on variations in the CMB's (cosmic microwave background) temperature and polarization to learn about the distribution of matter in the early universe.
Polarization is an intrinsic extra "directionality" to all light rays that is at right angles to the light ray's direction of travel.
Although most light is unpolarized-consisting of light rays with an equal mix of all polarizations-the reflection and scattering of a light ray can create polarized light.
This property of light is exploited by polarized sunglasses, which block some of the polarized light to reduce glare on sunny days.
The light from the early universe was initially unpolarized, but became polarized when it struck moving matter in the very early universe.
By creating maps of this polarization, the QUaD team was able to investigate not just where the matter existed, but also how it was moving.
"These new polarization measurements from QUaD are the most sensitive ever made," said Clem Pryke, QUaD team member and assistant professor at the Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics, located at the University of Chicago.
The QUaD results very closely match the temperature and polarization predicted by the existence of dark matter and dark energy in the standard cosmological model, offering further experimental confirmation that the model is correct.
These findings also limit the possibilities of alternative models, reinforcing the view that researchers are on the right rack and need to learn more about the strange nature of dark energy and dark matter if they are to fully understand the orkings of the universe. (ANI)
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