Cosmologists like an argument, and one of the biggest surprises of the last decade has been the slow с emergence of a disagreement between various methods of measuring the Hubble Constant, the speed of the Universe's expansion. Two camps exist. There are those who study the cosmic microwave background, light emitted just 400,000 years after the Big Bang, and extrapolate forward to work out the Constant. They get consistently higher values than their rivals, who measure expansion directly by observing the present-day Universe. As each set of measurements has grown more accurate, this difference - euphemistically known as the 'Hubble tension' - has only increased.
Bu hikaye BBC Sky at Night Magazine dergisinin February 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye BBC Sky at Night Magazine dergisinin February 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Could We Find Aliens by Looking for Their Solar Panels?- Designed to reflect ultraviolet and infrared, the panels have a unique fingerprint
Researchers searching for life beyond Earth spend a lot of time thinking about what telltale signs might be detectable astronomically. Forms of unambiguous evidence for the presence of life on another world are known as biosignatures. By extension, techno signatures are indicators of activity by intelligent, civilisation-building life.
Antimatter- In our continuing series, Govert Schilling looks at antimatter, the strange counterpart to most of the matter filling our Universe
Particles and corresponding antiparticles are very much alike, except they have opposite electrical charges. For instance, the antiparticle of the electron - known as the positron - has the same tiny mass, but while electrons carry a negative electrical charge, positrons are positively charged.
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The Big Bang produced a Universe filled almost exclusively with hydrogen and helium; all other elements - what astronomers call metals - were produced by stars, supernovae and everything that happens later. So if you can pick out a pristine star with no metals polluting it from among the billions in the Milky Way, then you are likely to have a star dating from our Galaxy's earliest days.
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