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  • The universe is a big place, and it’s getting bigger all the time.

  • Space itself is stretching out, expanding in all directions.

  • But exactly how fast it’s expanding is still hotly debated,

  • and that number is vital to understanding the scale, size, and age of our universe.

  • The speed at which the universe is growing is called the Hubble Constant,

  • named after American astronomer Edwin Hubble.

  • In 1925, Hubble was the first to observe that objects astronomers once thought were spiral nebulae

  • were actually entire galaxies outside our Milky Way, and that space was much bigger than we thought.

  • Most of those other galaxies were red-shifted,

  • meaning the light they emitted was tinted red because their wavelengths had been stretched out.

  • So astronomers also realized that they were heading away from us.

  • In 1929, Hubble published a paper asserting the farther away a galaxy is, the faster it’s speeding off.

  • He’s long been given credit for this revelation, though it must be said he wasn’t the only one to have the idea.

  • A Belgian priest and cosmologist named Georges Lemaître

  • had come to the same conclusion two years earlier, but at the time his work was overlooked.

  • Establishing that the universe was expanding was the easy part,

  • but pinning down the rate it’s doing so has proven trickier.

  • There are two approaches to solving the problem.

  • One way is by examining the cosmic microwave background radiation,

  • the afterglow still lingering from the big bang.

  • By looking at how the matter in this early snapshot of the universe was distributed

  • and matching it up with features we see today, like galaxies and galaxy clusters,

  • we can determine the rate the universe expanded.

  • The other approach is to look for yardsticks out in the cosmos that will help us determine

  • how far distant objects are.

  • If we know how far away something is and determine its speed by how red its light is shifted,

  • that’s another way to arrive at the Hubble constant, denoted as H0.

  • Now, it’s not like we can pull out a tape measurer that’s millions of light years long,

  • so instead we look for what are called standard candles, objects with known brightnesses.

  • One standard candle often used is a category of stars called cepheids.

  • Cepheids grow brighter and dimmer at regular intervals, and the longer the interval, the brighter the star.

  • When we spot that telltale cycle of a cepheid, we can figure out how bright the star actually is,

  • and then figure out its distance from us since the apparent brightness drops over distance.

  • We even recently used these stars to map out our whole galaxy.

  • Now, here’s where the debate arises: these two methods both produce significantly different numbers.

  • Scientists who studied an extremely detailed map of cosmic microwave background radiation

  • concluded that the universe is expanding at a rate of about 67 kilometers per second per megaparsec.

  • That is, for every megaparsec about 3.26 million light years away an object is,

  • it zooms away from us 67 kilometers per second faster.

  • But by using cepheids and white dwarf supernovae to calculate H0,

  • a team of astronomers called SH0ESbecause scientists can’t resist a punny acronym

  • came up with the figure 74 kilometers per second per megaparsec.

  • Another team with the puntastic name H0LiCOW used quasars viewed through gravitational lenses

  • to arrive at an H0 of roughly 73 kilometers per second per megaparsec.

  • Most recently, another group of astronomers decided to identify a new type of standard candle altogether.

  • They looked for red giants that were just about to hit the predictable point

  • when they would start fusing helium in their cores and dim.

  • Using the brightest red giants as mileposts,

  • the team arrived at an H0 just under 70 kilometers per second per megaparsec.

  • That number is almost in the middle of the results produced by past studies.

  • Whether it’s the right number will take more research and debate.

  • The good news is were bickering over a difference of only a few kilometers per second.

  • Hubble’s first predicted rate of expansion was over 500 kilometers per second per megaparsec.

  • We haven’t concluded what H0 is just yet, but were much closer than we were 90 years ago.

  • It may be nice to hear that Lemaître finally got the recognition he deserves.

  • In 2018, the International Astronomy Union voted to recognize

  • what was known as the Hubble Law, by a new name.

  • They now call the idea that space is expanding the Hubble-Lemaître Law.

  • While were staring out into space, were also learning how life may have started.

  • Check out my video on a complex carbon atom we just spotted for the first time here.

  • For more science videos be sure to subscribe, and I’ll see you next time on Seeker.

The universe is a big place, and it’s getting bigger all the time.

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科学者たちが宇宙の膨張速度の解明に一歩近づくかもしれない (Scientists May Be One Step Closer to Figuring Out How Fast the Universe is Expanding)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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