How do you observe that the Universe is expanding? In 2011, the Nobel Prize in Physics was awar
How do you observe that the Universe is expanding? In 2011, the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Saul Perlmutter, Brian Schmidt and Adam Riess for discovering that the Universe is expanding at an accelerating rate. We’d known for a while that the Universe has been expanding ever since its birth - but we didn’t know whether the expansion was slowing down, staying the same, or speeding up. So, how exactly do you discover something like this? Perlmutter, Schmidt, and Riess did it by observing a special type of supernovae: Type Ia supernovae. Supernovae are the explosive deaths of large stars, and they usually occur when a star runs out of fuel and collapses under its own weight, generating a shockwave that blasts its material out into space. However, this only happens when a star is big enough - the initial star has to have a critical, threshold mass, called the Chandrasekhar limit. Our sun, for example, won’t go supernova because the Chandrasekhar limit happens to be around 1.4 solar masses. When it runs out of fuel, our sun will instead gently blow off its outer layers and quietly become a dense core of carbon and oxygen, called a white dwarf. But here’s the kicker: not all white dwarfs stay white dwarfs. Some white dwarfs exist as one half of a binary system, where two stars orbit each other in a perpetual celestial dance. In some situations, the white dwarfs can actually “steal” matter from their partner star, siphoning it off and guzzling it up to grow more and more massive. Eventually, when their mass hits the Chandrasekhar limit, the white dwarf is ripped apart in a supernova. Image CreditThis happens in binary systems all across the Universe, and because these white dwarfs all go supernova at exactly the same mass, this means we know exactly how bright the supernovae are. When they’re observed through telescopes, some look brighter and some look fainter depending on their distance - but because we know their actual intrinsic brightness, we can work out how far away they really are. (You could do this yourself using a more earthly standard candle.) For this reason, Type Ia supernovae are called “standard candles”. In their observations, Perlmutter, Schmidt, and Riess realised that far away supernovae were more redshifted than the supernovae close by. “Redshift” is essentially a measure of how much the Universe has expanded since the light left the supernovae, so by comparing the distance and the redshift of the supernovae, they could create an “expansion history” of the Universe. This showed pretty clearly that the universe isn’t just expanding, it’s accelerating - i..e, everything’s flying apart more quickly than it was yesterday, or a century, or a billion years ago. Why? Dark energy. -- source link
#science#astronomy#astrophysics#cosmology#physics#nobel prize