In physical cosmology and astronomy, dark energy is an unknown form of energy that affects the universe on the largest scales. The first observational evidence for its existence came from measurements of supernovae, which showed that the universe does not expand at a constant rate; rather, the expansion of the universe is accelerating. Understanding the evolution of the universe requires knowledge of its starting conditions and its composition. Prior to these observations, it was thought that all forms of matter and energy in the universe would only cause the expansion to slow down over time. Measurements of the cosmic microwave background suggest the universe began in a hot Big Bang, from which general relativity explains its evolution and the subsequent large-scale motion. Without introducing a new form of energy, there was no way to explain how an accelerating universe could be measured. Since the 1990s, dark energy has been the most accepted premise to account for the accelerated expansion. As of 2021, there are active areas of cosmology research aimed at understanding the fundamental nature of dark energy.Assuming that the lambda-CDM model of cosmology is correct, the best current measurements indicate that dark energy contributes 68% of the total energy in the present-day observable universe. The mass–energy of dark matter and ordinary (baryonic) matter contributes 26% and 5%, respectively, and other components such as neutrinos and photons contribute a very small amount. The density of dark energy is very low (~ 7 × 10−30 g/cm3), much less than the density of ordinary matter or dark matter within galaxies. However, it dominates the mass–energy of the universe because it is uniform across space.Two proposed forms of dark energy are the cosmological constant, representing a constant energy density filling space homogeneously, and scalar fields such as quintessence or moduli, dynamic quantities having energy densities that can vary in time and space. Contributions from scalar fields that are constant in space are usually also included in the cosmological constant. The cosmological constant can be formulated to be equivalent to the zero-point radiation of space i.e. the vacuum energy. Scalar fields that change in space can be difficult to distinguish from a cosmological constant because the change may be extremely slow.
Due to the toy model nature of concordance cosmology, some experts believe that a more accurate general relativistic treatment of the structures that exist on all scales in the real universe may do away with the need to invoke dark energy. Inhomogeneous cosmologies, which attempt to account for the back-reaction of structure formation on the metric, generally do not acknowledge any dark energy contribution to the energy density of the Universe.
The Universe is comprised of 75% dark energy, which is thought to be responsible for the accelerating expansion of the Universe at large. Dark energy is pervasive everywhere and unlike dark matter which clumps in specific regions, Dark energy is homogenous and isotropically distributed...
Hey
I have a project about dark energy. Part of it is that I need to make some kind of homework problem with this topic. The article talked about using 1a supernova data to see the expansion of the universe. I was I would first calculate the luminosity or whatever they did. Than using that...
I am not a scientist, however I am very interested in quantum mechanics and string theory at a basic level. One thing when learning about string theory that struck me as being particularly interesting is the branes described by the "M" theory.
Let me start my query with three assumptions...
just to interesting not to share.
http://bit.ly/g6sFMh
i posted a question there which i wish to post also here, and get some insight.
why is this CMB uniform and dark energy and/or dark matter so uniformly spread and are not directly related? i.e. why aren't we saying that the CMB is emitted...
not sure if here or beyond standard model or higher energy physics is the best place -- mods feel free to move to best forum.
suppose dark energy does exist and is part of einstein's cc.
is there a quanta associated with it, and is it boson or fermion? if SUSY, then does this quantum also...
Is there a function of mass that tells us the distance that two objects are no longer gravitationally bound and start moving away from each other due to dark energy? Is mass arbitrary at a certain distance? To make my question broader, can anyone show me equations describing relationships...
Dark Energy Cosmology makes the front page again:
In a new study, a team of researchers led by Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, report that they've calculated how fast the universe is expanding to a greater degree of accuracy than ever before, shrinking the...
I’m sorry, but I find dark matter and dark energy problematic. It’s hard to think of a Universe made up of about 95 % of stuff we have no idea about, except that maybe dark matter and dark energy have some properties.
So I’m thinking maybe there’s something wrong with the data, but I can’t...
The question is: Why does the fact that Galaxies moving away (and accelerating) from the Milky Way, means that the Universe is expanding?
If there was a *gigantic* black hole somewhere far away it would naturally cause this effect.
As objects get closer to the black hole they accelerate, and...
Hello everyone
I hope you don't mind me asking a real silly question about the original evidence for dark energy. I've been reading about how Type 1a supernovae provided the initial evidence that the expansion of the universe was accelerating. They are able to do this because they are...
The Wikipedia article on dark energy says "dark energy would need to have a strong negative pressure". In what sense can energy "have" pressure?
Is it that the value of the metric tensor field at an event, when multiplied by the cosmological constant, is a tensor in some way analogous to the...
Hi,
these days. I am reading a lot about dark matter and energy in news papers. i came to know that dark energy/matter constitutes almost 75% of energy of universe ? can it be possible tat, this dark energy is the same as electromagnetic radiation emitted in this universe since big bang ?
according to special relativity mass and energy are equivalent so because vacuum energy has mass so it should exert a gravitational force on matter . so , why can't dark energy be simply vacuum energy ?
In the series "The Universe" Michio Kaku made a statement at the close that, as time progresses and the Universe continues to expand, that our sky would grow dark and depopulated of stars (at least that was the video graphic that accompanied his statement about the lonely end of our universe)...
I was thinking about the dark energy. On one side we have people that calculate huge amount of so called zero point energy, due to the fact that the base state of quantum fields have non-zero energy. And there are other people who look through the telescopes and measure a very small vacuum...
Quoting Kaku in Parallel Worlds (page 12), " If we take the latest theory of subatomic particles and compute the value of dark energy, we find a number that is off by 10 to the 120 power." What is the calculation and the experimental evidence he is referring to?
hi,
which phenoma are known in quantum mechanics to cause a repulsive gravity due to negative pressure? as far as i understand, the vacuum energy of the time energy uncertainty has a very low energy density but it should have a positive pressure because it can only push and not pull. am i...
1. Is it possible that dark energy didnt originate from bigbang but from another that precedes the bigbang?
2. Are dark energy and dark matter in our solar system?
Thank you very much
Hello all,
I'm new and this is my first post here, I don't expect my idea to be plausible because I'm more of a curious than a scientist.
I was thinking a lot about dark energy and it's origins lately, and have come up with this pseudo-theory that the Big Bang could have occurred in a...
I would like to know the difference between dark energy and dark matter. The way i understand it they are both detected by the effect the have on other ojbects. So why are they different?
Thanks
I apologize, I know this all has to be answered in other threads, but when reading through I'm still missing "it"...
The whole concept of Dark Energy not conserving energy is of course bothersome. My simple mind has only considered ~3 mechanisms that would give rise to this. Would someone be...
What would a cosmological model without dark matter and dark energy look like?
This requires imagining that the observational evidence for dark matter and dark energy are explainable by other means. In other words, absent of the idea that the universe is filled with 25%DM and 70%DE, but...
The BBc just publsihed this story:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11030889
The conclusion is:
"Professor Priyamvada Natarajan of Yale University, a leading cosmologist and co-author of this study, said that the findings finally proved "exactly what the fate of the Universe...
Doesn't the expansion of the universe defy conservation of energy, as the universe expands more dark energy is being created. That means the total energy in the universe isn't stable and is increasing.
When matter is transformed into light energy within a star, the gravity associated with the matter is now associated with the light's energy. As space expands, the redshift is dilluting the light's energy and reducing the gravity associated with that energy. Would the energy dillution further...
A very simple way to explain the observable universe expanding:
Perhaps there is just a bunch of matter surrounding the observable universe and all the observable stars/galaxies are moving per the gravitational field created by matter outside that we have not yet seen. Thoughts?
How it's possible to discern dark matter from dark energy?
Why do we need both things? How we can tell so accuratelly that the universe
is made up 71.3% of dark energy and 27.4% of a combination of
dark matter and baryonic matter.
Thanks for answer.
Okay so dark energy repels mass, but why is that? The reason why masses repel other masses when brought together is the electromagnetic force, but dark energy also doesn't interact at all with electromagnetic waves, and if it exhibited electromagnetic force it would interact with electromagnetic...
If Dark Matter and Dark Energy are so abundant wasn't to be expected that they should be found on Earth?
We can find elements such as uranium on our planet, which is one of the rarest elements fused on Stars, Dark Matter being estimated to account for roughly 20% of the total mass of the...
So Hubbles observations showed that the further away a galaxy is the faster it is moving meaning that older galaxies are moving away faster from us than younger, closer ones. But dark energy says that the rate of expansion is increasing,meaning the closer, younger galaxies would be traveling...
Can dark energy be the fifth force?
We know 4 fundamental forces (3 if you don't take gravity), electromagnetism, gravity, strong and weak nuclear force. So can Dark Energy be the fifth force. All we know about dark energy is that it accelerates the expanding universe and it works on larger...
Personally, I really don't buy it. To me, it seems fair more likely that either:
1) The universe is expanding but the explanation lies somewhere in the equations we already understand.
2)The universe is expanding and our theories need correction, but no new physical phenomenon that we label...
Well what is the apparent force applied on two bodies of mass m1 and m2 due to Cosmological Constant?
First of all, what is the meaning of a constantly accelerating expansion of universe? Is the second time derivative of volume constant or that of the diametric size of universe?
Well in a...
Hello.
I've looked on the internet a lot about this: what is the zero-point energy and dark energy? From what I gathered, they both mean the same thing. Is that so?
Also these two energies represent minimal energy densities *in* space. But what about energy *of* space itself. I mean here...
From National Geographic: Daily News, by John Roach, March 22, 2010
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/03/100322-dark-flow-matter-outside-universe-multiverse/"
As if Dark Matter and Dark Energy aren't weird enough, now it seems we have verified proof of "Dark Flow".
From the...
matter in The universe is thought to be made up of 75 percent hydrogen and helium is thought to make up 25 percent of helium; Dark matter is thought to make up 25 percent of the universe and 75 percent dark energy; that's an interesting coincidence. , and currently physicists are not certain...
Why all these prejudices against a constant? ("dark energy" is a fake probem)
==sample quote==
It is especially wrong to talk about a mysterious “substance” to denote dark energy. The expression “substance” is inappropriate and misleading. It is like saying that the centrifugal force that...
Hi Clever People,
I've been watching an amazing program about dark matter, dark energy and dark flow. I thought there were questions that should have been asked, but then I'm a website designer - what do I know!
So... as an interested non-physicist, my apologies if this question is...
I think this is a rather interesting paper: http://arxiv.org/abs/1002.4278
Edit: I see this is already being discussed in BTSM. Never mind this post then.
Hi!
Well, I have a problem, I'm writing Extended Project For Applied Science about Death of the Universe, I am stuck. I am really desperate so I decided to put it on forum.
First:
The Universe is accelerating so, according to Lorentz's Factor, its mass should be increasing
m = \gamma m_{0} =...
Dark energy is observed to constitute about 72% of the mass density of the universe, dark matter about 23%, and regular matter about 5%. Is this proportion always like this or does it change over time? If it does change, how does one reconcile it with the requirement that the cosmological...
If dark energy is a property of space-time, and more dark energy is created as space-time increases, and the additional dark energy accelerates the expansion of space-time, what is left of the notion of the conservation of energy or of mass-energy?
Does energy conservation become a purely...
First off, let me say that while I am an avid astronomer, I know very little about the mathematics of astrophysics. My specialty falls more under mechanical engineering. While initially they may not seem all that related, history shows that the mixing of varying disciplines often sparks...
Hello,
Recent observations claims that Dark Energy is effecting the expansion of universe and increasing the anisotropy in the cosmic microwave background (CMB). Do you agree??
what about cosmic magnetic field and its effects on the expansion and CMB ? If it is increasing the...
I am a layman in these matters, but hear me out... The Universe was ejected from the primordial singularity, and that's all the dark energy there was. Light that is coming out of a gravity well is red-shifted. ‘Long ago’ and ‘far away’ mean the same thing. So, the Universe is bounded by its...
In Lee Smolin's book, The Trouble with Physics, pages 15 and 16, he states:
Can someone explain how this works?
Does this mean that modifications to gravity causing tension at large intergalactic scales could account for the accelerating expansion of the universe as well?