Galaxy Clusters' Stunted Growth Confirms Dark Energy
A new study of 86 galaxy clusters in the early universe has provided independent confirmation of the existence of dark energy. In its absence, gravity's pull should have caused the number of clusters to increase by a factor of 50 over the last 5.5 billion years. What is observed is a factor of 10 increase. "Together with earlier observations... the new data strengthen the suspicion — but do not prove — that dark energy is a weird antigravity called the cosmological constant that was hypothesized and then abandoned by Albert Einstein as a 'blunder' almost a century ago. If that is true, the universe is fated to empty itself out eventually, and all but the Milky Way's closest neighbors will eventually be out of sight. ... Adam Riess of Johns Hopkins and the Space Telescope Science Institute, said: 'If this was a fox hunt and dark energy was the fox, I think they have closed off another escape route. But there is still a lot of terrain left for the fox, and we've seen little more than a glimmer of fur.'"
Yes, what an impossible thing. To think, that humans, the pathetic little barely-smarter-than-a-chimp creatures on a rock in the middle of nowhere might have... *gasp* limits ;)
Until they find yet another force we didn't know about, and the model changes again... Hopefully this will keep happening over and over, because all of these different end-of-the-universe theories are morbidly fascinating.
I believe that our knowledge about the universe is quite limited. I can imagine the scientists of the future will laugh about how we could seriously consider dark matter and dark energy. I think it is quite possible that gravity behaves differently over great distances (and I know about the latest "evidence" of dark matter where the dark matter was "imaged" but it is an indirect evidence, there may be other things up in the universe's sleeve which causes this).
I believe there will be another Einstein who will shed light upon this "mistery" and everything will be simple again.
Government cannot make man richer, but it can make him poorer. - Ludwig von Mises
So let me get this straight...we have Dark Matter because there's not enough gravity within a galaxy to explain the observations, and Dark Energy because there's too much gravity between galaxies to explain the observations.
Surely Occam's Razor comes into play here? Surely it's obviously simpler to say 'we've got the maths wrong for gravity beyond solar system scale' and start again at the chalkboard?
Business/App ideas are like arseholes: everyone's got one, they're mostly shit, but very rarely they contain a diamond
Instead of proving the existence of Dark Energy, perhaps what this finding really does is prove that our models are wrong.
I often wonder if we're looking in the wrong place for an explanation...flaws in our cosmology sound more plausible to me than weird forms of matter and energy.
With the technology available in his time, not only was it impossible for him to verify atomism, but in fact if he had tried to do so experimentally, then the only reasonable conclusion would have been that atomism is highly unlikely, since matter can easily be subdivided indefinitely to the limit of visual perception. As such, steadfastly maintaining the truth of atomism would mark him out as a crackpot nowadays, although in his time the standards of rigour were of course much different.
Democritus' atomism was an ancestor of atomic theory in the same sense that "a broken clock is right twice a day".
Isn't dark energy a general name for whatever it is that causes our universe do things that aren't explained by our equations?
So I guess this confirms Dark Energy even more because it invalidates even more equations than before. So it isn't the old equations that are wrong; it is only because part of the equation does not include variable D.