{"id":4460,"date":"2023-12-20T14:52:34","date_gmt":"2023-12-20T09:22:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/adultserviceau.com.au\/blog\/how-analyzing-cosmic-nothing-might-explain-everything\/"},"modified":"2023-12-20T14:52:34","modified_gmt":"2023-12-20T09:22:34","slug":"how-analyzing-cosmic-nothing-might-explain-everything","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/adultserviceau.com.au\/blog\/how-analyzing-cosmic-nothing-might-explain-everything\/","title":{"rendered":"How Analyzing Cosmic Nothing Might Explain Everything"},"content":{"rendered":"<p> [ad_1]<br \/>\n<\/p>\n<div>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\"><span class=\"dropcap\">C<\/span>omputational astrophysicist Alice Pisani put on a virtual-reality headset and stared out into the void\u2014or rather a void, one of many <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.scientificamerican.com\/article\/emptiest-place-in-space-could-explain-mysterious-cold-spot-in-the-universe\/\">large, empty spaces that pepper the cosmos<\/a>. \u201cIt was absolutely amazing,\u201d Pisani recalls. At first, hovering in the air in front of her was a jumble of shining dots, each representing a galaxy. When Pisani walked into the jumble, she found herself inside a large swath of nothing with a shell of galaxies surrounding it. The image wasn&#8217;t just a guess at what a cosmic void might look like; it was Pisani&#8217;s own data made manifest. \u201cI was completely surprised,\u201d she says. \u201cIt was just so cool.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">The visualization, made in 2022, was a special project by Bonny Yue Wang, then a computer science undergraduate at the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York City. Pisani teaches a course there in cosmology\u2014the structure and evolution of the universe. Wang had been aiming to use Pisani&#8217;s <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.scientificamerican.com\/article\/vast-cosmic-voids-merge-like-soap-bubbles\/\">data on voids<\/a>, which can stretch from tens to hundreds of millions of light-years across, to create an augmented-reality view of these surprising features of the cosmos.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">The project would have been impossible a decade ago, when Pisani was starting out in the field. Scientists have known since the 1980s that these fields of nothing exist, but inadequate observational data and insufficient computing power kept them from being the focus of serious research. Lately, though, the field has made tremendous progress, and Pisani has been helping to bring it into the scientific mainstream. Within just a few years, she and an increasing number of scientists are convinced, the study of the universe&#8217;s empty spaces could offer important clues to help solve the <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.scientificamerican.com\/article\/astronomers-might-see-dark-matter-by-staring-into-the-void\/\">mysteries of dark matter<\/a>, <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.scientificamerican.com\/article\/does-dark-energy-really-exist-extreme-physics-special\/\">dark energy<\/a> and the nature of the enigmatic subatomic particles called <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.scientificamerican.com\/article\/the-neutrino-puzzle\/\">neutrinos<\/a>. Voids have even shown that Einstein&#8217;s general theory of relativity probably operates the same way at very large scales as it does locally\u2014something that has never been confirmed. \u201cNow is the right moment to use voids\u201d for cosmology, says David Spergel, former chair of astrophysics at Princeton University and current president of the Simons Foundation. <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/benwandelt.org\/\">Benjamin Wandelt<\/a> of the Lagrange Institute in Paris echoes the sentiment: \u201cVoids have really taken off. They&#8217;re becoming kind of a hot topic.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">The discovery of cosmic voids in the late 1970s to mid-1980s came as something of a shock to astronomers, who were startled to learn that the universe didn&#8217;t look the way they&#8217;d always thought. They knew that stars were gathered into galaxies and that galaxies often clumped together into clusters of dozens or even hundreds. But if you zoomed out far enough, they figured, this clumpiness would even out: at the largest scales the cosmos would look homogeneous. It wasn&#8217;t just an assumption. The so-called cosmic microwave background (CMB)\u2014electromagnetic radiation emitted about 380,000 years after the big bang\u2014is extremely homogeneous, reflecting smoothness in the distribution of matter when it was created. And even though that was nearly 14 billion years ago, the modern universe should presumably reflect that structure.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">But we can&#8217;t tell whether that&#8217;s the case just by looking up. The night sky appears two-dimensional even through a telescope. To confirm the presumption of homogeneity, astronomers needed to know not only how galaxies are distributed across the sky but how they&#8217;re distributed in the third dimension of space\u2014depth. So they needed to measure the distance from Earth to many galaxies near and far to figure out what&#8217;s in the foreground, what&#8217;s in the background and what&#8217;s in the middle. In 1978 Laird A. Thompson of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Stephen A. Gregory of the University of New Mexico did just that and discovered the first hints of cosmic voids, shaking the presumption that the universe was smooth. In 1981 Harvard University&#8217;s Robert Kirshner and four of his colleagues discovered a <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Bo%C3%B6tes_Void\">huge void<\/a>, about 400 million light-years across, in the direction of the constellation Bo\u00f6tes. It was so big and so empty that \u201cif the Milky Way had been in the center of the Bo\u00f6tes void, we wouldn&#8217;t have known there were other galaxies [in the universe] until the 1960s,\u201d as Gregory Scott Aldering, now at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, once put it.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">In 1986 <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/adsabs.harvard.edu\/full\/1986ApJ...302L...1D\">Margaret J. Geller, John Huchra and Val\u00e9rie de Lapparent<\/a>, all then at Harvard, confirmed that the voids Thompson, Kirshner and their colleagues had found were no flukes. The team had painstakingly surveyed the distance to many hundreds of galaxies spread out over a wide swath of sky and found that voids appeared to be everywhere. \u201cIt was so exciting,\u201d says de Lapparent, now director of research at the <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/www2.iap.fr\/users\/lapparent\/\">Institut d&#8217;Astrophysique de Paris<\/a> (IAP). She had been a graduate student at the time and was spending a year working with Geller, who was trying to understand the large-scale structure of the universe. A cross section of the local cosmos that astronomers had put together earlier showed hints of a filamentary structure consisting of regions either overdense or underdense with galaxies. \u201cMargaret had this impression that this was just an observing bias,\u201d de Lapparent says, \u201cbut we had to check. We wanted to look farther out.\u201d They used a relatively small telescope on Mount Hopkins in Arizona. \u201cI learned to observe on that telescope,\u201d de Lapparent recalls. \u201cI was on my own after a night of training, which was so exciting.\u201d When she was done, she, Geller and Huchra made a map of the galaxies&#8217; locations. \u201cIt was amazing,\u201d she says. \u201cWe had these big, circular voids and these sharp walls full of galaxies.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">\u201cAll of these features,\u201d the researchers wrote in their paper, entitled \u201cA Slice of the Universe,\u201d \u201cpose serious challenges for current models for the formation of large-scale structure.\u201d As later, deeper surveys would confirm, galaxies and clusters of galaxies are themselves concentrated into a gigantic web of concentrated regions of matter connected by streaming filaments, with gargantuan voids in between. In other words, the cosmos today vaguely resembles Swiss cheese, whereas the CMB looks more like cream cheese.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">The question, then, was: What forces made the universe evolve from cream cheese into Swiss cheese? One factor was almost certainly dark matter, the invisible mass whose existence had in the 1980s only recently been accepted by most astrophysicists, despite years of tantalizing evidence from observers such as <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov\/pmc\/articles\/PMC5338491\/\">Vera Rubin<\/a> and <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nature.com\/articles\/d41586-019-02603-7\">Fritz Zwicky<\/a>. It was more massive than ordinary, visible matter by a factor of six or so. That would have made the gravitational pull of slightly overdense regions in the early universe stronger than anyone had guessed. Stars and galaxies would have formed preferentially in these areas of high density, leaving low-density regions largely empty.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">Most observers and theorists continued to explore what would come to be known as the \u201c<a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.science.org\/content\/article\/clues-about-cosmic-web\">cosmic web<\/a>,\u201d but very few concentrated on voids. It wasn&#8217;t for lack of interest; the problem was that there wasn&#8217;t much to look at. Voids were important not because of what they contained but because their very existence, their shapes and sizes and distances from one another, had to be the result of the same forces that gave structure to the universe. To use voids to understand how those forces worked, astrophysicists needed to include many examples in statistical analyses of voids&#8217; average size and shape and separation, yet too few had been found to draw useful conclusions from them. It was analogous to the situation with exoplanets in the 1990s: the first few discovered were proof that planets did indeed orbit stars beyond the sun, but it wasn&#8217;t until the <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.scientificamerican.com\/article\/this-sunday-look-up-and-wave-at-kepler\/\">Kepler space telescope<\/a> began raking them in by the thousands after its 2009 launch that planetary scientists could say anything meaningful about how many and what kinds of planets populated the Milky Way.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">Another issue with studying voids was raised in 1995 by Barbara Ryden of the Ohio State University and Adrian L. Melott of the University of Kansas. Galaxy surveys, they pointed out, are conducted in \u201credshift space,\u201d not actual space. To understand what they meant, consider that as the universe expands, light waves are stretched from their original wavelengths and colors into longer, redder wavelengths. The farther away something is from an observer, the more its light is stretched. The James Webb Space Telescope was designed to be sensitive to infrared light in part so it can see the very earliest galaxies, whose light has been stretched all the way out of the visible spectrum\u2014it&#8217;s redder than red. And the CMB, the most distant light we can detect, has been stretched so much that we now perceive it in the form of microwaves. \u201cMeasuring the physical distances to galaxies is difficult,\u201d Ryden and Melott wrote in a paper in the <em><a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/ui.adsabs.harvard.edu\/abs\/1996ApJ...470..160R\/abstract\">Astrophysical Journal<\/a><\/em>. \u201cIt&#8217;s much easier to measure redshifts.\u201d But, they noted, redshifts can distort the actual distances to galaxies that enclose a void and thus give a misleading idea of their size and shape. The problem, explains <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.usm.uni-muenchen.de\/people\/hamaus\/\">Nico Hamaus<\/a> of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, is that as a void expands, \u201cthe near side is coming toward us, and the far side is streaming away.\u201d That differential subtracts from the redshift on the near side and adds to it on the far side, making the void look artificially elongated.<\/p>\n<figure data-responsive-image=\"responsive-image\" data-original-class=\"article-media\" class=\"article__image-EQ52t\" data-block=\"sciam\/image\">\n<div class=\"article-media__object \"><a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" aria_label=\"Open image in new tab\" href=\"https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_d.jpg?w=2000&amp;disable=upscale\"><picture><source media=\"(min-width: 768px) and (max-width: 1023px)\" sizes=\"(min-width: 900px) 900px, (min-resolution: 3dppx) 50vw, (min-resolution: 2dppx) 75vw, 100vw\" srcset=\"https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_d.jpg?w=600 600w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_d.jpg?w=750 750w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_d.jpg?w=900 900w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_d.jpg?w=1000 1000w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_d.jpg?w=1200 1200w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_d.jpg?w=1350 1350w\"\/><source media=\"(max-width: 767px)\" sizes=\"(min-resolution: 3dppx) 50vw, (min-resolution: 2dppx) 75vw, 100vw\" srcset=\"https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_m.jpg?w=600 600w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_m.jpg?w=750 750w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_m.jpg?w=1000 1000w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_m.jpg?w=1200 1200w\"\/><img alt=\"A sphere holds 6,432 voids discovered by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey\u2014along with a selection of 16 previously named voids\u2014mapped in space using the galactic coordinate system.\" decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" sizes=\"(min-width: 900px) 900px, (min-resolution: 3dppx) 50vw, (min-resolution: 2dppx) 75vw, 100vw\" src=\"https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_d.jpg?w=900\" srcset=\"https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_d.jpg?w=900 900w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/assets\/Image\/2023\/saw0124Lemo31_d.jpg?w=1350 1350w\"\/><\/picture><\/a><\/div><figcaption class=\"t_caption\">Credit: Martin Krzywinski; Sources: Sofia Contarini\/University of Bologna, Nico Hamaus\/Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and Alice Pisani\/Cooper Union, CCA Flatiron Institute, Princeton University; \u201cCosmological Constraints from the BOSS DR12 Void Size Function,\u201d by Sofia Contarini et\u00a0al., in <em>Astrophysical Journal,<\/em> Vol. 953; August 2023; \u201cPrecision Cosmology with Voids in the Final BOSS Data,\u201d by\u00a0Nico Hamaus et\u00a0al., <em>in Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics,<\/em> No. 12; December 2020 (<em>void data<\/em>)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">Despite the difficulties, astrophysicists began to feel more equipped to tackle voids by the late 2000s. Projects such as the <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/classic.sdss.org\/\">Sloan Digital Sky Survey<\/a> had probed much more deeply into the cosmos than the map made by Geller, Huchra and de Lapparent and confirmed that voids were everywhere you looked. Independent observations by two teams of astrophysicists, meanwhile, had revealed the existence of <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.scientificamerican.com\/article\/dark-energy-confirmed\/\">dark energy<\/a>, a kind of negative gravity that was forcing the universe to expand faster and faster rather than slowing down from the mutual gravitational attraction of trillions of galaxies. Voids seemed to offer astronomers a promising way of studying what might be driving dark energy.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">These developments caught Wandelt&#8217;s eye. His specialty has always been trying to understand how the large-scale structure of the modern universe came to be. One of the aspects of voids that he found attractive, he says, was that \u201cthese underdense regions are much quieter in some ways, more amenable to modeling\u201d than the clusters and filaments that separate them. Galaxies and gases are crashing into each other in nonlinear and complicated interactions, Wandelt says. There&#8217;s \u201ca chaos\u201d that erases the information about their formation. Further complicating things, the gravitational attraction between galaxies is strong enough on smaller scales that it counteracts the general expansion of the universe\u2014and even counteracts the extra oomph of dark energy. Andromeda, for example, the nearest large galaxy to our own, is actually drawing closer to the Milky Way; in four billion years or so, <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nasa.gov\/mission_pages\/hubble\/science\/milky-way-collide.html\">they&#8217;ll merge<\/a>. Voids, in contrast, \u201care dominated by dark energy,\u201d Wandelt says. \u201cThe biggest ones are actually expanding faster than the rest of the universe.\u201d That makes them ideal laboratories for getting a handle on this still puzzling force.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">And it&#8217;s not just an understanding of dark energy that could emerge from this line of study; voids could also cast light (so to speak) on the nature of dark matter. Although voids have much less dark matter in them than the clusters and filaments of the cosmic web do, there&#8217;s still some. And unlike the chaotic web, with its swirling hot gases and colliding galaxies, the voids are calm enough that the particles astrophysicists think make up dark matter might be detectable. They wouldn&#8217;t show up directly, because they neither absorb nor emit light. But the particles should occasionally collide, resulting in tiny bursts of gamma rays. They would also probably decay eventually, releasing gamma rays in that process as well. A sufficiently sensitive gamma-ray telescope in space would theoretically be able to detect their collective signal. Nicolao Fornengo of the University of Turin in Italy, co-author of a <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/arxiv.org\/abs\/2205.03360\">preprint study<\/a> laying out this rationale, says that \u201cif dark matter produces [gamma rays], the signal should be in there.\u201d<\/p>\n<figure data-original-class=\"image-captioned\" class=\"article__image-EQ52t\" data-block=\"sciam\/image\"><a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" aria_label=\"Open image in new tab\" href=\"https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/cache\/file\/67585ED3-F2F7-4D4F-AF5EA94A36D054C7_medium.jpg?cacheID=670EA207-0FA1-4CEC-BDC82FDA236E8076&amp;w=1536\"><img alt=\"A landscape view with telescope at sunset.\" decoding=\"async\" height=\"1152\" loading=\"lazy\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 900px) 900px, (min-resolution: 3dppx) 50vw, (min-resolution: 2dppx) 75vw, 100vw\" src=\"https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/cache\/file\/67585ED3-F2F7-4D4F-AF5EA94A36D054C7_medium.jpg?cacheID=670EA207-0FA1-4CEC-BDC82FDA236E8076&amp;w=900\" srcset=\"https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/cache\/file\/67585ED3-F2F7-4D4F-AF5EA94A36D054C7_medium.jpg?cacheID=670EA207-0FA1-4CEC-BDC82FDA236E8076&amp;w=600 600w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/cache\/file\/67585ED3-F2F7-4D4F-AF5EA94A36D054C7_medium.jpg?cacheID=670EA207-0FA1-4CEC-BDC82FDA236E8076&amp;w=750 750w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/cache\/file\/67585ED3-F2F7-4D4F-AF5EA94A36D054C7_medium.jpg?cacheID=670EA207-0FA1-4CEC-BDC82FDA236E8076&amp;w=900 900w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/cache\/file\/67585ED3-F2F7-4D4F-AF5EA94A36D054C7_medium.jpg?cacheID=670EA207-0FA1-4CEC-BDC82FDA236E8076&amp;w=1000 1000w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/cache\/file\/67585ED3-F2F7-4D4F-AF5EA94A36D054C7_medium.jpg?cacheID=670EA207-0FA1-4CEC-BDC82FDA236E8076&amp;w=1200 1200w, https:\/\/static.scientificamerican.com\/sciam\/cache\/file\/67585ED3-F2F7-4D4F-AF5EA94A36D054C7_medium.jpg?cacheID=670EA207-0FA1-4CEC-BDC82FDA236E8076&amp;w=1350 1350w\" style=\"--w: 1536; --h: 1152;\" width=\"1536\"\/><\/a><figcaption>The Vera C. Rubin Observatory, on the Cerro Pach\u00f3n mountain in Chile, will make detailed night-sky surveys that reveal new voids in unprecedented detail. Credit:\u00a0NOIRLab\/NSF\/AURA<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">Voids could even help to nail down the nature of <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.scientificamerican.com\/article\/the-neutrino-puzzle\/\">neutrinos<\/a>\u2014elementary particles, once thought to be massless, that pervade the universe while barely interacting with ordinary matter. (If you sent a beam of neutrinos through a slab of lead one light-year, or nearly six trillion miles, thick, about half of them would sail through it effortlessly.) Physicists have confirmed that the three known types of neutrinos do have masses, but they aren&#8217;t sure why or exactly what those masses are.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">Voids could help them find the answer, says <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/uwaterloo.ca\/astrophysics-centre\/about\/people\/elena-massara\">Elena Massara<\/a>, a postdoctoral researcher at the Waterloo Center for Astrophysics at the University of Waterloo in Canada. They&#8217;re places that have a lack of both luminous matter and dark matter, she explains, \u201cbut they&#8217;re full of neutrinos, which are almost uniformly distributed\u201d through the universe, including in voids.That&#8217;s because neutrinos zip through the cosmos at nearly the speed of light, which means they don&#8217;t clump together under their mutual gravity\u2014or under the gravity of the dark matter concentrations that act as the scaffolding for the cosmic web. Although voids always contain a lot of neutrinos, the particles are only passing through\u2014those that fly out are constantly replenished by more neutrinos streaming in. And their combined gravity can make the voids grow more slowly over time than they would otherwise. The rate of growth\u2014determined through comparison of the average size of voids in the early universe to those in the modern universe\u2014can reveal how much mass neutrinos actually have.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\"><span class=\"dropcap\">V<\/span>oid science has changed a lot since Pisani started studying it as a graduate student working with Wandelt. He offered two or three suggestions for a dissertation topic, she recalls, and one of them was cosmic voids. \u201cI felt that they were the riskiest choice,\u201d she says, \u201cbecause there were very few data at the time. But they were also incredibly challenging,\u201d which she found exciting. The data Pisani and others needed to analyze the voids, however\u2014that is, to test their real-world properties against computer models incorporating dark matter, dark energy, neutrinos and the formation of large-scale structure in the universe\u2014were simply not available. \u201cWhen I started my Ph.D. thesis,\u201d Pisani says, \u201cwe knew of fewer than 300 voids, something like that. Today we have on the order of 6,000 or more.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">That&#8217;s huge, but it&#8217;s still not enough for the comprehensive statistical analysis necessary for voids to be used for serious cosmology\u2014with one exception. In 2020 Hamaus, Pisani, Wandelt and several of their colleagues <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/arxiv.org\/abs\/2007.07895\">published an analysis<\/a> showing that general relativity behaves at least approximately the same way on very large scales as it seems to do in the local universe. Voids can be used to test this question because astrophysicists think they result from the way dark matter clusters in the universe: the dark matter pulls in ordinary matter, creating the cosmic web and leaving empty spaces behind. But what if general relativity, our best theory of gravity, breaks down somehow over very large distances? <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.scientificamerican.com\/article\/is-dark-matter-real\/\">Few scientists expect that<\/a> to be the case, but it has been suggested as a means to explain away the existence of dark matter.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">By looking at the thickness of the walls of matter surrounding voids, however, Hamaus and his colleagues determined that Einstein&#8217;s theory is safe to rely on. To understand why, imagine a void as \u201ca circle whose radius increases with the expansion of the universe,\u201d Wandelt says. As the circle grows, it pushes against the boundaries of galaxies and clusters at its perimeter. Over time these structures aggregate, thickening the \u201cwall\u201d that defines the void&#8217;s edge. Dark energy and neutrinos affect the thickness as well, but because they are smoothly distributed both inside and outside the voids, they have a much smaller effect overall.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">Scientists plan to use voids to learn even more about the universe soon because they expect to rapidly multiply the number of known voids in their catalog. \u201cIn the next five or 10 years,\u201d Pisani says, \u201cwe&#8217;re going to have hundreds of thousands. It&#8217;s one of those fields where numbers really make a difference.\u201d So, Spergel says, do advances in machine learning, which will make it far easier to analyze void properties.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">These exploding numbers won&#8217;t be coming from projects explicitly designed to search for voids. They will arrive, as they did with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, as a by-product of more general surveys. The European Space Agency&#8217;s <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.esa.int\/Science_Exploration\/Space_Science\/Euclid_overview\">Euclid mission<\/a>, for example, which launched in July 2023, will create a 3-D map of the cosmic web with unprecedented breadth and depth. NASA&#8217;s <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.stsci.edu\/roman\/about\">Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope<\/a> will begin its own survey in 2026, looking in infrared light. And in 2024 the ground-based <a rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/rubinobservatory.org\/explore\/lsst\">Vera C. Rubin Observatory<\/a> will launch a 10-year study of cosmic structure, among other things. Combined, these projects should increase the inventory of known voids by two orders of magnitude.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">\u201cI remember one of the first talks I gave on void cosmology, at a conference in Italy,\u201d Pisani says. \u201cAt the end the audience had no questions.\u201d She wasn&#8217;t sure at the time whether the reason was skepticism or simply that the topic was so new to her listeners that they couldn&#8217;t think of anything to ask. In retrospect, she thinks it was a little of both. \u201cInitially, I think the problem was just convincing people that this was reasonable science to look into,\u201d she says.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">That&#8217;s much less of an issue now. For example, Pisani points out, the Euclid voids group has about 100 scientists in it. \u201cI have to say that Alice was one of the fearless pioneers of this field,\u201d Wandelt notes about his former Ph.D. student. When they started writing the first papers on void science, he recalls, some of the leading figures in astrophysics \u201cexpressed severe doubt that you could do anything cosmologically interesting with voids.\u201d The biggest confirmation that they were wrong, he says, is that some of those same people are now enthusiastic.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">Pisani is perhaps the ideal representative for this fast-emerging field. She approaches the topic with absolute scientific rigor but also with infectious enthusiasm. Whenever she talks about voids, she lights up, speaking rapidly, jumping to her feet to draw diagrams on a whiteboard, and fielding questions (of which there are now many) with ease and confidence. She emphasizes that void science won&#8217;t answer all of astrophysicists&#8217; big questions about the universe by itself. But it could do something even more valuable in a way: test ideas about dark matter, dark energy, neutrinos and the growth of cosmic structure independently of the other strategies scientists use. If the results match, great. If not, astrophysicists will have to reconcile their differences to find out what&#8217;s actually going on in the cosmos.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article__block-KZIY9\" data-block=\"sciam\/paragraph\">\u201cI find the idea attractive and even somewhat poetic,\u201d Wandelt says, \u201cthat looking into these areas where there&#8217;s nothing might yield information about some of the outstanding mysteries of the universe.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>[ad_2]<br \/>\n<br \/><a href=\"https:\/\/www.scientificamerican.com\/article\/how-analyzing-cosmic-nothing-might-explain-everything\/\">Source link <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[ad_1] Computational astrophysicist Alice Pisani put on a virtual-reality headset and stared out into the void\u2014or rather a void, one of many large, empty spaces that pepper the cosmos. \u201cIt&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4461,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[38],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-4460","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-sexting"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.7 - 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