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TIME AND SPACE
Nobel Prize Winner Explains Big Bang
by Staff Writers
Moscow, Russia (RIA Novosti) Oct 29, 2009


Dr. John Mather is a senior astrophysicist in the Observational Cosmology Laboratory at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center and an adjunct professor of physics at the University of Maryland, College Park.

The first of a series of lectures to be delivered by the world's topmost scientists, a new Internet project of Dmitry Zimin's Dynasty Foundation and RIA Novosti, has been shown.

The lectures are part of the ongoing project, Science without Borders, organized by the Dynasty Foundation and RIA Novosti's Mosaics of Knowledge club. The first lecturer was Nobel Laureate Dr. John Mather.

Dr. Mather spoke on the Big Bang Theory, the James Webb Space Telescope, and the new Nobel Prize awards.

Dr. John Mather is a senior astrophysicist in the Observational Cosmology Laboratory at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center and an adjunct professor of physics at the University of Maryland, College Park. He led the proposal efforts for the Cosmic Background Explorer (1974-1976). He and his team showed that the cosmic microwave background radiation has a blackbody spectrum within 50 ppm.

Dr. Mather shared the 2006 Nobel Prize for Physics with George Smoot of the University of California for their collaborative work on understanding the Big Bang.

The term Big Bang generally refers to the idea that the universe expanded from a primordial hot and dense initial condition at some finite time in the past (currently estimated to have been approximately 15 billion years ago) and continues to expand and grow cooler to this day.

However, some opponents of this theory argue that the universe is stationary, which rules out any evolution and means that the universe has no beginning and no end.

The team that studied the cosmic microwave background radiation detected anisotropy, that is, hot and cold areas in the cosmic microwave background radiation that are currently considered the initial sources that led to the creation of the universe.

In his opening remarks Mather said that as astronomers "we have the task of understanding the entire history of the universe."

"We have the ideas of how the galaxies and stars were made and how they changed with time. We live in three dimensions of space and one of time."

He briefly considered the role of gravitation in the expansion of the universe.

"Gravitation is able to stop the expansion for regions in the universe that are slightly more dense than average. Some parts, which were initially created in Big Bang material, which are more dense, they will stop expanding, they will turn into galaxies. So, it is possible for the Sun to exist and for the earth to exist," he said.

"We imagine that galaxies were formed from small parts which flowed together as small streams."

Dr. Mather recalled that Albert Einstein, the author of the theory of relativity, at first did not believe in the expansion of the universe, but works by Russian mathematician Alexander Friedman, among others, convinced him that the universe could not be stationary.

"In 1922, the young man Alexander Friedman was working in Leningrad, and he predicted that the universe was expanding from its ancient condition. Therefore, Einstein could not be right," Dr. Mather said.

Mather and Smoot analyzed data from NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE), which studied the pattern of radiation from the first few instants after the universe was formed.

In 1992, the COBE team announced that they had mapped the primordial hot and cold spots in the cosmic microwave background radiation. These spots are related to the gravitational field in the early universe, only instants after the Big Bang, and are the seeds for the giant clusters of galaxies that stretch hundreds of millions of light years across the universe.

The team also showed that the big bang radiation has a spectrum that agrees exactly with the theoretical prediction, confirming the Big Bang theory and showing that the Big Bang was complete in the first instants, with only a tiny fraction of the energy released later.

Mather did not rule out that in 10 to 20 years scientists would be able to obtain the mysterious dark matter and dark energy in their labs.

He said that dark matter and energy make up over 90% of the mass of the universe.

The Nobel Committee has decided that the project to study the cosmic microwave background radiation can also be regarded as the starting point of cosmology as an exact science.

John Mather is a winner of many other prizes and was put on the Time 100 list of The World's Most Influential People in 2007.

Mather, 60, is the senior scientist guiding the James Webb Space Telescope project, which should be launched in 2014 to supersede the Hubble Space Telescope.

Source: RIA Novosti

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TIME AND SPACE
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Garching, Germany (SPX) May 14, 2009
The last tests of the Ariane 5 rocket system have been finished, and ESA's Planck satellite is sitting ready for launch at the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou. Together with ESA's Space Telescope Herschel, Planck will start into space on 14 May to begin its studies of the cosmic microwave radiation and of the clues it gives about the Big Bang, the earliest phases of the cosmic history, and ... read more


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