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"New #research of oldest light _confirms age of the #Universe"

- Conclusion:
- New research suggest the universe is about 13.8
billion years old, according to researchers using observations from the
Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) in Chile.
Just how old is the universe? Astrophysicists have been debating this
question for decades. In recent years, new scientific measurements have
suggested the universe may be hundreds of millions of years younger than
its previously estimated age of approximately 13.8 billions of years.
*Now new research published in a series of papers by an international
team of astrophysicists, including Neelima Sehgal, PhD, from Stony Brook
University, suggest the universe is about 13.8 billion years old. By
using observations from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) in Chile,
their findings match the measurements of the Planck satellite data of
the same ancient light.
*The ACT research team is an international collaboration of scientists
from 41 institutions in seven countries. The Stony Brook team from the
Department of Physics and Astronomy in the College of Arts and Sciences,
led by Professor Sehgal, plays an essential role in analyzing the
*cosmic microwave background (CMB) -- the afterglow light from the Big
Bang.
"In Stony Brook-led work we are restoring the 'baby photo' of the
universe to its original condition, eliminating the wear and tear of
time and space that distorted the image," explains Professor Sehgal, a
co-author on the papers. "Only by seeing this sharper baby photo or
image of the universe, can we more fully understand how our universe was
born."
*Obtaining the best image of the infant universe, explains Professor
Sehgal, helps scientists better understand the origins of the universe,
how we got to where we are on Earth, the galaxies, where we are going,
how the universe may end, and when that ending may occur.
The ACT team estimates the age of the universe by measuring its
oldest light. Other scientific groups take measurements of galaxies to
make universe age estimates.
*The new ACT estimate on the age of the universe matches the one
provided by the standard model of the universe and measurements of the
same light made by the Planck satellite. This adds a fresh twist to an
ongoing debate in the astrophysics community, says Simone Aiola, first
author of one of the new papers on the findings posted to arXiv.org.
"Now we've come up with an answer where Planck and ACT agree," says
Aiola, a researcher at the Flatiron Institute's Center for Computational
Astrophysics in New York City. "It speaks to the fact that these
difficult measurements are reliable."
*In 2019, a research team measuring the movements of galaxies
calculated that the universe is hundreds of millions of years younger
than the Planck team predicted. That discrepancy suggested that a new
model for the universe might be needed and sparked concerns that one of
the sets of measurements might be incorrect.
*The age of the universe also reveals how fast the cosmos is
expanding, a number quantified by the Hubble constant. The ACT
measurements suggest a Hubble constant of 67.6 kilometers per second per
megaparsec. That means an object 1 megaparsec (around 3.26 million
light-years) from Earth is moving away from us at 67.6 kilometers per
second due to the expansion of the universe. This result agrees almost
exactly with the previous estimate of 67.4 kilometers per second per
megaparsec by the Planck satellite team, but it's slower than the 74
kilometers per second per megaparsec inferred from the measurements of
galaxies.
"I didn't have a particular preference for any specific value -- it
was going to be interesting one way or another," says Steve Choi of
Cornell University, first author of another paper posted to arXiv.org.
"We find an expansion rate that is right on the estimate by the Planck
satellite team. This gives us more confidence in measurements of the
universe's oldest light."
*As ACT continues making observations, astronomers will have an even
clearer picture of the CMB and a more exact idea of how long ago the
cosmos began. The ACT team will also scour those observations for signs
of physics that doesn't fit the standard cosmological model. Such
strange physics could resolve the disagreement between the predictions
of the age and expansion rate of the universe arising from the
measurements of the CMB and the motions of galaxies
- Thank You.....! Stay Tuned for more Updates.
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