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우주 팽창에 대한 획기적인 측정은 오랜 논쟁을 재구성합니다.

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Deungjeong Kyungsoon
Deungjeong Kyungsoon
"경순은 통찰력 있고 사악한 사상가로, 다양한 음악 장르에 깊은 지식을 가지고 있습니다. 힙스터 문화와 자연스럽게 어우러지는 그의 스타일은 독특합니다. 그는 베이컨을 좋아하며, 인터넷 세계에서도 활발한 활동을 보여줍니다. 그의 내성적인 성격은 그의 글에서도 잘 드러납니다."

이 이미지는 거대한 은하단 MACS J1149.5+223을 보여줍니다. MACS J1149.5+223의 빛은 우리에게 도달하는 데 50억 년 이상이 걸렸습니다. 성단의 거대한 질량은 멀리 있는 물체의 빛을 굴절시킵니다. 이 물체에서 나오는 빛은 중력 렌즈 효과에 의해 확대되고 왜곡되었습니다. 동일한 효과는 동일한 원거리 물체의 여러 이미지를 생성하는 것입니다. 출처: NASA, 유럽 우주국, S.A.E. Rodney(John Hopkins University, USA) 및 Frontier SN Team; T. Treu(University of California, Los Angeles, USA), P. Kelly(UC Berkeley, USA) 및 GLASS 팀; Lotus(STScI) 및 Frontierfields 팀; 중. Postman(STScI) 및 CLASH 팀 및 Z. Levay(STScI)

미네소타 대학이 이끄는 연구는 우주의 나이를 더 정확하게 결정하는 데 도움이 될 수 있습니다.

미네소타 쌍둥이 도시 대학(University of Minnesota Twin Cities)이 이끄는 팀은 우주의 팽창 속도를 측정하기 위해 최초의 기술을 사용하여 우주의 나이를 더 정확하게 결정하고 물리학자와 천문학자가 더 잘 이해하는 데 도움이 되는 통찰력을 제공했습니다. 코스모스.

확대된 다중 이미지 초신성 데이터를 사용하여 미네소타 쌍둥이 도시 대학(University of Minnesota Twin Cities)의 연구원이 이끄는 팀은 우주의 팽창률을 측정하는 최초의 기술을 사용하는 데 성공했습니다. 그들의 데이터는 이 분야에서 오랜 논쟁에 대한 통찰력을 제공하고 과학자들이 우주의 나이를 더 정확하게 결정하고 우주를 더 잘 이해하는 데 도움이 될 수 있습니다.

이 작업은 각각에 게시된 두 개의 논문으로 나뉩니다. 과학세계 최고의 피어 리뷰 학술 저널 중 하나입니다. 그만큼 Big Bang

However, these two measurements differ by about 10 percent, which has caused widespread debate among physicists and astronomers. If both measurements are accurate, that means scientists’ current theory about the makeup of the universe is incomplete.

“If new, independent measurements confirm this disagreement between the two measurements of the Hubble constant, it would become a chink in the armor of our understanding of the cosmos,” said Patrick Kelly, lead author of both papers and an assistant professor in the University of Minnesota School of Physics and Astronomy. “The big question is if there is a possible issue with one or both of the measurements. Our research addresses that by using an independent, completely different way to measure the expansion rate of the Universe.”

The University of Minnesota-led team was able to calculate this value using data from a supernova discovered by Kelly in 2014—the first-ever example of a multiply-imaged supernova, meaning that the telescope captured four different images of the same cosmic event. After the discovery, teams around the world predicted that the supernova would reappear at a new position in 2015, and the University of Minnesota team detected this additional image.

These multiple images appeared because the supernova was gravitationally lensed by a galaxy cluster, a phenomenon in which mass from the cluster bends and magnifies light. By using the time delays between the appearances of the 2014 and 2015 images, the researchers were able to measure the Hubble Constant using a theory developed in 1964 by Norwegian astronomer Sjur Refsdal that had previously been impossible to put into practice.

The researchers’ findings don’t absolutely settle the debate, Kelly said, but they do provide more insight into the problem and bring physicists closer to obtaining the most accurate measurement of the Universe’s age.

“Our measurement is in better agreement with the value from the cosmic microwave background, although—given the uncertainties—it does not rule out the measurement from the local distance ladder,” Kelly said. “If observations of future supernovae that are also gravitationally lensed by clusters yield a similar result, then it would identify an issue with the current supernova value, or our understanding of galaxy-cluster dark matter.”

Using the same data, the researchers found that some current models of galaxy-cluster dark matter were able to explain their observations of the supernovae. This allowed them to determine the most accurate models for the locations of dark matter in the galaxy cluster, a question that has long plagued astronomers.

References:

“Constraints on the Hubble constant from Supernova Refsdal’s reappearance” by Patrick L. Kelly, Steven Rodney, Tommaso Treu, Masamune Oguri, Wenlei Chen, Adi Zitrin, Simon Birrer, Vivien Bonvin, Luc Dessart, Jose M. Diego, Alexei V. Filippenko, Ryan J. Foley, Daniel Gilman, Jens Hjorth, Mathilde Jauzac, Kaisey Mandel, Martin Millon, Justin Pierel, Keren Sharon, Stephen Thorp, Liliya Williams, Tom Broadhurst, Alan Dressler, Or Graur, Saurabh Jha, Curtis McCully, Marc Postman, Kasper Borello Schmidt, Brad E. Tucker and Anja von der Linden, 11 May 2023, Science.
DOI: 10.1126/science.abh1322

“The Magnificent Five Images of Supernova Refsdal: Time Delay and Magnification Measurements” by Patrick L. Kelly, Steven Rodney, Tommaso Treu, Simon Birrer, Vivien Bonvin, Luc Dessart, Ryan J. Foley, Alexei V. Filippenko, Daniel Gilman, Saurabh Jha, Jens Hjorth, Kaisey Mandel, Martin Millon, Justin Pierel, Stephen Thorp, Adi Zitrin, Tom Broadhurst, Wenlei Chen, Jose M. Diego, Alan Dressler, Or Graur, Mathilde Jauzac, Matthew A. Malkan, Curtis McCully, Masamune Oguri, Marc Postman, Kasper Borello Schmidt, Keren Sharon, Brad E. Tucker, Anja von der Linden and Joachim Wambsganss, 11 May 2023, The Astrophysical Journal.
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ac4ccb

This research was funded primarily by NASA through the Space Telescope Science Institute and the National Science Foundation.

In addition to Kelly, the team included researchers from the University of Minnesota’s Minnesota Institute for Astrophysics; the University of South Carolina; the University of California, Los Angeles; Stanford University; the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne; Sorbonne University; the University of California, Berkeley; the University of Toronto; Rutgers University; the University of Copenhagen; the University of Cambridge; the Kavli Institute for Cosmology; Ben-Gurion University of the Negev; University of the Basque Country; the University of Cantabria; Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (the Spanish National Research Council); the Observatories of the Carnegie Institution for Science; the University of Portsmouth; Durham University; the University of California, Santa Barbara; the University of Tokyo; the Space Telescope Science Institute; the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam; the University of Michigan; Australian National University; Stony Brook University; Heidelberg University; and Chiba University.

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