BBC Sky at Night Magazine

Hubble’s legacy: the search for dark energy

Over 20 years ago, Hubble helped uncover a strange force driving the Universe apart – dark energy. Govert Schilling investigat­es a new experiment trying to map out its effect

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A new survey on the riddle of dark energy – discovered by Hubble, which launched 20 years ago

When the Hubble Space Telescope was launched, 30 years ago this month, no one had ever heard about dark energy. But, in part thanks to Hubble, astronomer­s have come to realise that we live in an accelerati­ng Universe, in which empty space is expanding ever faster and faster, thanks to this mysterious dark ingredient. This spring, a unique instrument mounted on a venerable telescope in Arizona has started compiling the most detailed 3D-map of the cosmos ever. The goal is to further our understand­ing of the expansion history of the Universe, and – hopefully – to uncover the true nature of dark energy.

As physicists understand it, dark energy is a property of empty space. Like some sort of antigravit­y, it pushes empty space away from itself, accelerati­ng the expansion that started 13.8 billion years ago with the Big Bang, and creating ever more space in the process. More space means more dark energy, so the effect is self-reinforcin­g. The discovery of the accelerati­ng expansion of the Universe, by two competing teams of astronomer­s in 1998, was awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics. But after two decades of additional research, the true nature of dark energy is still a complete mystery.

Stretching the rules

But how do you discover that the present-day Universe is expanding faster than it did one or two billion years ago? The trick is to study galaxies a couple of lightyears away. The light of these distant galaxies arrives on Earth with a longer (redder) wavelength, because the space it’s been travelling through has been expanding, stretching the light along with it. Galaxy redshifts therefore provide you with their light travel times. If you also know their correspond­ing distances, it becomes possible to reconstruc­t the cosmic expansion history.

Back in 1998, teams led by astronomer­s Saul Perlmutter, Brian Schmidt and Adam Riess used a specific type of supernova explosion to gauge

distances. These Type Ia supernovae have wellknown luminositi­es and by comparing those to their observed apparent brightness in the sky, it becomes possible to derive their distances. The Hubble Space Telescope greatly added to this work by discoverin­g and measuring dozens of extremely remote supernovae. However, supernovae are difficult to study as they are so far away and cannot be summoned at will, so astronomer­s can only study where they happen to appear.

If astronomer­s really want to understand this mysterious effect, then they need a global map to track how the Universe’s accelerati­on changed over time – not just over the last few billion years, but right back to the Big Bang.

That’s where the new instrument comes in. Called DESI (for Dark Energy Spectrosco­pic Instrument), it uses a very different cosmic yardstick that can be studied throughout the observable Universe. All you need to do is create a detailed 3D map of tens of millions of galaxies. And that’s exactly what DESI’s job is over the next five years, using the light-gathering power of the old 4m Mayall Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observator­y (KPNO) in southern Arizona. ‘DESI is giving the 47-year-old telescope a new lease of life,’ says KPNO telescope scientist Dick Joyce.

Cosmic scaffoldin­g

It will do this by looking for something called baryon acoustic oscillatio­ns (BAO). Right after the Big Bang, sound waves propagated through the hot, dense primordial soup, powered by energetic radiation that was still strongly interactin­g with the electrical­ly charged plasma. But, explains DESI co-spokespers­on

Daniel Eisenstein of Harvard University, after

▶ some 380,000 years, neutral atoms formed, and the Universe became transparen­t. Radiation no longer pushed matter around, and the sound wave pattern became ‘frozen in’. When slightly denser regions subsequent­ly started to attract more and more matter, galaxies preferenti­ally formed along this (expanding) cosmic scaffoldin­g.

The end result is that the current distributi­on of galaxies in the Universe is not completely random. ‘The effect is much too small to detect by eye,’ says Eisenstein, ‘but by statistica­lly studying millions of galaxies, it becomes evident.’ These fluctuatio­ns are BAO. As the pattern changes over time, they can be used to gauge cosmic distances, which can then be compared to redshift measuremen­ts to disentangl­e the expansion history of the Universe and the effects of dark energy.

Using the 2.5m Sloan Digital Sky Survey telescope in New Mexico, Eisenstein and his colleagues have already produced a 3D-map of over 1.5 million galaxies that clearly showed the BAO signal. Their BOSS programme (for Baryon Oscillatio­n Spectrosco­pic Survey) was completed in 2014. However, it was a slow and cumbersome process. For each new exposure, a thousand optical fibres had to be manually positioned on a custom-made focal plane plate, in which holes had been drilled at specific positions to catch the light of the many galaxies in the field of view. As a result, at most three exposures could be made on any clear night.

KPNO’s Dick Joyce calls DESI a major step forward. It could even be described as BOSS on steroids. Mounted on a much larger telescope, it uses 10 sensitive spectrogra­phs, each of which can dissect the light of 500 galaxies at once. Most importantl­y, the 5,000 optical fibres that feed the spectrogra­phs are positioned roboticall­y within just two or three minutes, during the time the telescope slews to a new field. On a clear night, between 20 and 30 20-minute exposures can be made, yielding 10 terabytes of raw observatio­nal data.

Size matters

To achieve a large 3.2˚ field of view (as wide as six full Moons), the Mayall Telescope has been outfitted with a custom-made corrector (pictured, below) – a 3-tonne, barrel-shaped assembly of six lenses, the largest of which measures 1.1m in diameter. Like a giant pizza, the 0.8m-diameter focal plane of the telescope is divided into 10 wedges with 500 optical fibres each. In total, a whopping 240km of optical fibre guides the light of thousands of galaxies in the field of view to the sensitive spectrogra­phs. Before being spread out into a detailed spectrum, the light

is split into three broad wavelength bands: blue, red and infrared.

To prepare for the DESI project, telescopes at Kitt Peak and Cerro Tololo (Chile) have carried out large photograph­ic sky surveys over the past years. These have been combined into the DESI Legacy Imaging Surveys project, which is freely available on www.legacysurv­ey.org. On the basis of this vast collection of deep-sky images, in three colour bands, project scientists have selected the galaxies and quasars (the luminous cores of very distant galaxies) that will be spectrosco­pically observed by DESI.

According to Eisenstein, DESI is the next big step in the study of the large-scale structure of the Universe, and of BAOs in particular. It will map one third of the celestial sky (14,000 square degrees), and collect spectra for 35 million galaxies and 2.4 million quasars, out to distances of 11 billion lightyears. The resulting 3D-map of the Universe is by far the largest ever made. And by studying the characteri­stic size of the BAOs at various redshifts, astronomer­s will be able to reconstruc­t the expansion history of the Universe and the evolving role of dark energy.

First light for DESI was achieved on 22 October 2019.

After a commission­ing phase, the survey is now in full swing. ‘Until 2025, the Mayall Telescope is not going to do anything else,’ says Joyce.

Of course, the wealth of spectrosco­pic data that DESI is going to yield will benefit many research topics beyond the mapping of baryon acoustic oscillatio­ns. Galaxy redshifts also provide informatio­n on proper motions, and thus on the distributi­on of dark matter in groups and clusters. Knowing precise distances to galaxies makes it possible to better interpret their observed characteri­stics. Quasar spectra contain informatio­n on intervenin­g clouds of intergalac­tic hydrogen. Evolutiona­ry models of galaxies – and of the whole Universe – will be put to test. Finally, DESI will also study individual stars in our own Galaxy, the Milky Way.

However, the main goal of the new survey is to solve the riddle of dark energy – that mysterious ingredient that constitute­s over 70 per cent of the total massenergy content of the Universe. Discoverin­g exactly when and how the expansion of the Universe started to accelerate, and whether or not dark energy is evolving over time, may help physicists to understand its true nature. It’s an answer science has been chasing for over two decades. Hopefully, DESI will be able to provide it.

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 ??  ?? ▲ New purpose: the old Mayall Telescope at Arizona’s Kitt Peak is being used by DESI
▲ New purpose: the old Mayall Telescope at Arizona’s Kitt Peak is being used by DESI
 ??  ?? ▶ The further away a galaxy is, the more its light is shifted to longer wavelength­s – an effect known as redshift
▶ The further away a galaxy is, the more its light is shifted to longer wavelength­s – an effect known as redshift
 ??  ?? ▲ The study of baryon acoustic oscillatio­ns (BAOs) reveals the distributi­on of the early Universe imprinted in more modern galaxies
▲ The study of baryon acoustic oscillatio­ns (BAOs) reveals the distributi­on of the early Universe imprinted in more modern galaxies
 ??  ?? ▼ On the rise: DESI’s corrector joins the Mayall Telescope at its Kitt Peak home in 2018
▼ On the rise: DESI’s corrector joins the Mayall Telescope at its Kitt Peak home in 2018
 ??  ?? Govert Schilling is the author of Ripples in Spacetime: Einstein, Gravitatio­nal Waves and the Future of Astronomy
Govert Schilling is the author of Ripples in Spacetime: Einstein, Gravitatio­nal Waves and the Future of Astronomy

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