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Science (non-SETI) :
Astronomers detect signal from the dawn of the universe.
Message board moderation
Author | Message |
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Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 19 Aug 99 Posts: 13853 Credit: 208,696,464 RAC: 304 |
A tiny signal, dating back to the birth of the first stars in our universe, has been detected by astronomers for the first time. They have picked up a radio signature produced just 180 million years after the Big Bang using a simple antenna in the West Australian outback. The ground breaking discovery, reported today in the journal Nature, sheds light on a period of time known as the "cosmic dawn", when radiation from the first stars started to alter the primordial gas soup surrounding them. It could also completely revolutionise our understanding about dark matter, the invisible structure that makes up the bulk of our universe today. "The signal confirms our expectations for when stars show up in the universe," said the study's lead author Judd Bowman of Arizona State University. Grant Darwin NT |
Stargate (SA) Send message Joined: 4 Mar 10 Posts: 1854 Credit: 2,258,721 RAC: 0 |
Thanks for posting Grant, very interesting reading.. |
tullio Send message Joined: 9 Apr 04 Posts: 8797 Credit: 2,930,782 RAC: 1 |
If I go the "Nature" online article I cannot read it without paying. But if I go to theregister.co.uk and click on the post related to this subject and then click on the article, I can read it through Springer Verlag SharedIt. Tullio This also on Le Scienze, Italian edition of Scientific American. It looks like I cannot read "Nature" directly but I have to go to another site,which has a link to "Nature". |
moomin Send message Joined: 21 Oct 17 Posts: 6204 Credit: 38,420 RAC: 0 |
If I go the "Nature" online article I cannot read it without paying. But if I go to theregister.co.uk and click on the post related to this subject and then click on the article, I can read it through Springer Verlag SharedIt. Maybe Nature have something like a 10 articles a month limit. I can read this Nature article published today without paying. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-02620-y And this. Astronomers detect light from the Universe’s first stars, from 28 february 2018 https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-02616-8 |
tullio Send message Joined: 9 Apr 04 Posts: 8797 Credit: 2,930,782 RAC: 1 |
Yes,but they are not the articles published by scientists with full test and images. Tullio |
tullio Send message Joined: 9 Apr 04 Posts: 8797 Credit: 2,930,782 RAC: 1 |
A couple of guys with a radio telescope no bigger than a table have discovered one of the earliest stars, with results that can change cosmology but also physics. There is a trend in elementary particle physics to forget about bigger accelerators and go to tabletop experiments which cost much less and give impressive results. So the"spiral of high energies" described by Angelo Baracca and Silvio Bergia in a book by that name in the Seventies would finally be broken. Tullio |
Bob DeWoody Send message Joined: 9 May 10 Posts: 3387 Credit: 4,182,900 RAC: 10 |
This topic doesn't look like it relates to seti@home subjects but rather astronomy in general. Bob DeWoody My motto: Never do today what you can put off until tomorrow as it may not be required. This no longer applies in light of current events. |
Lynn Send message Joined: 20 Nov 00 Posts: 14162 Credit: 79,603,650 RAC: 123 |
This topic doesn't look like it relates to seti@home subjects but rather astronomy in general. I agree. |
tullio Send message Joined: 9 Apr 04 Posts: 8797 Credit: 2,930,782 RAC: 1 |
It should go to Science (non SETI) Tullio |
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