Research Reinforces the Role
of
Supernovae in Clocking the Universe
By Greg Borzo
New research by cosmologists at theUniversity
of Chicago and Wayne
State University
confirms the accuracy of Type
Ia supernovae in measuring the
pace at which the universe expands. The findings support a widely held theory
that the expansion of the universe is accelerating and such acceleration is
attributable to a mysterious force known as dark energy. The findings counter
recent headlines that Type Ia supernova cannot be relied upon to measure the
expansion of the universe.
Using light from an exploding star as bright as entire galaxies to determine cosmic distances led to the 2011 Nobel Prize in physics. The method relies on the assumption that, like lightbulbs of a known wattage, allType Ia
supernovae are thought to have nearly the same maximum brightness when they
explode. Such consistency allows them to be used as beacons to measure the
heavens. The weaker the light, the farther away the star. But the method has
been challenged in recent years because of findings the light given off by Type Ia
supernovae appears more inconsistent than expected.
“The data that we examined are indeed holding up against these claims of the demise ofType Ia supernovae as a tool for measuring the
universe,” said Daniel Scolnic, a postdoctoral scholar at UChicago’s Kavli
Institute for Cosmological Physics and co-author of the new research
published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
“We should not be persuaded by these other claims just because they got a lot
of attention, though it is important to continue to question and strengthen our
fundamental assumptions.”
One of the latest criticisms ofType
Ia supernovae for measurement
concluded the brightness of these supernovae seems to be in two different
subclasses, which could lead to problems when trying to measure distances. In
the new research led by David Cinabro, a professor at Wayne
State , Scolnic, Rick Kessler, a senior
researcher at the Kavli Institute, and others, they did not find evidence of
two subclasses of Type Ia supernovae in data examined from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Supernovae Search
and Supernova Legacy Survey. The recent papers challenging the effectiveness of
Type Ia
supernovae for measurement used different data sets.
A secondary criticism has focused on the wayType Ia
supernovae are analyzed. When scientists found that distant Type Ia
supernovae were fainter than expected, they concluded the universe is expanding
at an accelerating rate. That acceleration is explained through dark energy,
which scientists estimate makes up 70 percent of the universe. The enigmatic
force pulls matter apart, keeping gravity from slowing down the expansion of
the universe.
Yet a substance that makes up 70 percent of the universe but remains unknown is frustrating to a number of cosmologists. The result was a reevaluation of the mathematical tools used to analyze supernovae that gained attention in 2015 by arguing that Type Ia supernovae don’t even show dark energy exists in the first place.
Scolnic and colleague Adam Riess, who won the 2011 Nobel Prices for the discovery of the accelerating universe, wrote an article for Scientific American Oct. 26, 2016, refuting the claims. They showed that even if the mathematical tools to analyzeType
Ia supernovae are used
“incorrectly,” there is still a 99.7 percent chance the universe is
accelerating.
The new findings are reassuring for researchers who useType Ia
supernovae to gain an increasingly precise understanding of dark energy, said
Joshua A. Frieman, senior staff member at the Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory who was not involved in the research.
“The impact of this work will be to strengthen our confidence in usingType Ia
supernovae as cosmological probes,” he said.
Citation: “Search forType Ia
Supernova NUV-Optical Subclasses,” by David Cinabro and Jake Miller (Wayne State University ); and Daniel Scolnic and Ashley Li (Kavli
Institute for Cosmological Physics at the University
of Chicago ); and Richard Kessler
(Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics at University
of Chicago and the Department of
Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University
of Chicago ). Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Society, November 2016. DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stw3109
Supernovae in Clocking the Universe
By Greg Borzo
University of Chicago
– January 3, 2017 -- How
much light does a supernova shed on the history of universe?
New research by cosmologists at the
Using light from an exploding star as bright as entire galaxies to determine cosmic distances led to the 2011 Nobel Prize in physics. The method relies on the assumption that, like lightbulbs of a known wattage, all
“The data that we examined are indeed holding up against these claims of the demise of
One of the latest criticisms of
A secondary criticism has focused on the way
Yet a substance that makes up 70 percent of the universe but remains unknown is frustrating to a number of cosmologists. The result was a reevaluation of the mathematical tools used to analyze supernovae that gained attention in 2015 by arguing that Type Ia supernovae don’t even show dark energy exists in the first place.
Scolnic and colleague Adam Riess, who won the 2011 Nobel Prices for the discovery of the accelerating universe, wrote an article for Scientific American Oct. 26, 2016, refuting the claims. They showed that even if the mathematical tools to analyze
The new findings are reassuring for researchers who use
“The impact of this work will be to strengthen our confidence in using
Citation: “Search for
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