New research: Dark Energy might not exist after all(phys.org)
phys.org
New research: Dark Energy might not exist after all
https://phys.org/news/2019-11-evidence-anisotropy-cosmic.html
50 comments
So if the universe is flat does that make the earth flat as well? :-D
It's a matter of perspective. It is certainly not flat from the perspecticve of our 5 basic senses.
I think it is flat in the sense that our 3D space has no curvature beyond the provided by gravity.
Of course this is totally different than saying it is 2D flat. We know this because of cats.
Of course this is totally different than saying it is 2D flat. We know this because of cats.
lagadu(1)
https://physicsworld.com/a/dark-energy-debate-reignited-by-c...
According to this article, using the model from this paper with more up to date data sets completely reverses their results.
According to this article, using the model from this paper with more up to date data sets completely reverses their results.
Sorry, but the article you linked says nothing about "reversing the results" of the OP article, it is about the same research as the OP article... Which at best you might say reverses the results from the 90s which originally found acceleration of cosmic expansion.
According to Riess, however, the supernovae data used by Sarkar’s group are out of date. He says that he and some colleagues, including D’Arcy Kenworthy of Johns Hopkins University, plugged data from a sample of about 1300 supernovae with lower systematic uncertainties into the model used in the latest work. The results, he says, were unambiguous, with the existence of a dipole rejected at more than 4σ and cosmic acceleration confirmed at over 6σ.
More importantly, says Riess, the objections against Sarkar and colleagues’ original statistical analysis still stand, as do the criticisms of neglecting other data. “The evidence for cosmic acceleration and dark energy are much broader than only the supernovae Ia sample, and any scientific case against cosmic acceleration needs to take those into account,” he says.
More importantly, says Riess, the objections against Sarkar and colleagues’ original statistical analysis still stand, as do the criticisms of neglecting other data. “The evidence for cosmic acceleration and dark energy are much broader than only the supernovae Ia sample, and any scientific case against cosmic acceleration needs to take those into account,” he says.
Oh yeah, toward the end of the article it does mention that... but those results by Adam Riess are unpublished, so it's just a spurious claim by a guy with a lot of vested interest for now.
Why do you think he has a vested interest? If he could get similar, convincing results on a larger data set, that would be a career-making paper. It’s not like there is a dark energy industry trying to cover up a hoax.
"Vested interest" doesn't have to be financial. They are not going to take away his Nobel price if it turns out that the expansion of the Universe is not accelerating, but nobody wants to spend the rest of their life saying "I got a Nobel price for X, but it turns out X was wrong." That's some pretty heavy psychological "vested interest", I think.
Yeah, r/physics doesn’t have a good opinion of this either: https://www.reddit.com/r/Physics/comments/e01bxe/dark_energy...
I would love to see a PBS SpaceTime video explaining all of this. They do a fantastic job with new papers such as this one.
I would love to see a PBS SpaceTime video explaining all of this. They do a fantastic job with new papers such as this one.
OK, looking at the comments, I have to note that Dark Matter[1] and Dark Energy[2] are two different but related hypotheses. The basic existence of Dark Matter is on a fairly strong footing experimentally and afaik this article doesn't cast doubt on its existence (it has been observed, on the cosmic scale, as accurately as many form ordinary matter, for example). Again, this is the dark energy issue. Just sayin'
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_matter [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_energy
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_matter [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_energy
'Dark Matter' is physicist code for: gravitating stuff that we cannot see.
'Dark Energy' is physicist code for: anti-gravitating non-stuff that we cannot see.
(i.e. Dark Energy, aka Einstein's Cosmological Constant, is a property of the vacuum.)
'Dark Energy' is physicist code for: anti-gravitating non-stuff that we cannot see.
(i.e. Dark Energy, aka Einstein's Cosmological Constant, is a property of the vacuum.)
Another important difference is that:
Dark Matter is not uniformly distributed, for example if forms big blobs that surround the visible parts of the galaxies.
Dark Energy is uniformly distributed, but the (equivalent?) density is very small, so the effect is important in the very empty space between galaxies.
Dark Matter is not uniformly distributed, for example if forms big blobs that surround the visible parts of the galaxies.
Dark Energy is uniformly distributed, but the (equivalent?) density is very small, so the effect is important in the very empty space between galaxies.
As my physics lab teacher taught us, all breakthroughs in physics happen after new better measuring instruments become available. Modern cosmology is starved of such new equipment, hence devoid of any real progress, having to wallow in theoretical bogmires instead. I would suggest all those funds and scientists be instead diverted to researching nuclear fusion, which is the more pressing goal for humanity right now.
taneq(1)
acollins1331(2)
So, "never mind" the supposed 70+% of the universe's mass-energy, now attributable entirely to local motion?
Who awards these Nobel Prizes, anyway?
(My first thought when I heard about this Dark Energy thing was, "which part of Occam's Razor don't you get?")
Who awards these Nobel Prizes, anyway?
(My first thought when I heard about this Dark Energy thing was, "which part of Occam's Razor don't you get?")
"Please don't post shallow dismissals, especially of other people's work. A good critical comment teaches us something."
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
This is not a dismissal. The work posted is important.
> (My first thought when I heard about this Dark Energy thing was, "which part of Occam's Razor don't you get?")
Well, you would know.
Well, you would know.
It was an application of Occam's razor. Dark energy arises automatically in the Standard Model. That is, you don't put it in by hand -- it emerges no matter what you do. In fact, we often get too much of it; this is the cosmological constant problem.
MOND is epistemologically far stronger.
Occam's Razor is not a law.
It might exist it might not exist.
Papers published anyway.
Papers published anyway.
A paper containing only things we already knew for sure is not a real scientific paper at all.
It's easy to sit back and feel smug because physicists might be wrong -- but it's impossible to do anything worthwhile without taking on that risk.
It's easy to sit back and feel smug because physicists might be wrong -- but it's impossible to do anything worthwhile without taking on that risk.
> A paper containing only things we already knew for sure is not a real scientific paper at all.
It could be. Confirming results is part of the scientific process.
It could be. Confirming results is part of the scientific process.
Things that are “known for sure” don't need confirmation; they are already as confirmed as can be.
Of course, very little ever meets that description.
Of course, very little ever meets that description.
There are also a ton of other reasons to think that the universe is flat (see the CMB [2]) and to think that there is dark energy (large scale structure [3]).
We still have no idea what DE is and it might not be an "Energy" but rather some modification of gravity or something else. But we're pretty confident in the phenomenology - there is something there that appears to be pulling things apart.
[1] https://arxiv.org/pdf/1911.06456.pdf [2] https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/439535/why-does-... [3] https://www.darkenergysurvey.org/supporting-science/large-sc...