TIME AND SPACE
Final Planck Data Strongly Supports Standard Cosmological Model
by Staff Writers
Paris, France (SPX) Jul 18, 2018

Maps of the direction of polarisation of primordial light represented by rods whose length is proportional to the intensity of the polarisation. Temperature anisotropies are shown in the background in colour. The all-sky map only shows large scales. The two square maps are successive enlargements of the regions bounded by a black contour (around the south ecliptic pole), which shows that Planck measured cosmological signals at scales much smaller than those that can be shown on an all-sky map.

In 2013, ESA's Planck mission unveiled a new image of the cosmos: an all-sky survey of the microwave radiation produced at the beginning of the universe. This first light emitted by the universe provides a wealth of information about its content, its rate of expansion, and the primordial fluctuations in density that were the precursors of the galaxies. The Planck consortium publishes the full and final version of these data and associated articles on the ESA website on 17 July 2018.

The corresponding articles have been submitted to the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics. With its increased reliability and its data on the polarisation of relic radiation, the Planck mission corroborates the standard cosmological model with unrivalled precision for these parameters, even if some anomalies still remain.

For this work the Planck consortium called upon some three hundred researchers, in particular from CNRS, CNES (the French national space agency), CEA (the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission) and several universities in France.

Launched in 2009, ESA's Planck satellite mapped the cosmic microwave background, microwave radiation emitted 380,000 years after the Big Bang, when the universe was still a hot, almost completely homogeneous gas. Tiny variations in its temperature provide information about its content, its rate of expansion and the properties of the primordial fluctuations that gave rise to the galaxies.

An initial analysis of the data set was published in 2015, in the form of eight all-sky maps that included the polarisation of the cosmic microwave background, which determines how the waves that make up light vibrate on tiny scales. This key information bears the imprint of the last interaction between light and matter in the primordial universe. However, only a preliminary analysis had been carried out on it.

The polarisation of relic radiation produces a signal 50 to 100 times weaker than that of its temperature and 10 to 20 times weaker than that emitted by the polarized emission of galactic dust. Thanks to its HFI (High Frequency Instrument), the Planck satellite nonetheless obtained an extremely precise map of primordial polarisation across the entire sky. This was a world first and provides us with a wealth of information.

Comprehensive, definitive and more reliable, the data published on 17 July 2018 confirms the preliminary findings, supporting a model which provides an excellent description of the content of the universe in terms of ordinary matter, cold dark matter and dark energy (whose nature is unknown), with an inflation phase at its very beginning.

This cosmological model can now be derived using temperature or polarisation data independently, with comparable accuracy. This considerably reinforces the standard model of cosmology, however surprising this may be. The results are described in a set of a dozen scientific papers, involving around three hundred researchers (see list of French laboratories involved below).

However, some anomalies and limitations remain. In particular, the rate of expansion of the universe differs by a few percent depending on whether the data from the Hubble Space Telescope or from the Planck mission are used. This question is still an open one, and a host of telescopes will be marshaled in an attempt to resolve the issue.

+ Planck at CNES


Related Links
Centre National De La Recherche Scientifique
Understanding Time and Space

TIME AND SPACE
Centenary of cosmological constant lambda
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 12, 2018
Physicists are now celebrating the 100th anniversary of the cosmological constant. On this occasion, two papers recently published in EPJ H highlight its role in modern physics and cosmology. Although the term was first introduced when the universe was thought to be static, today the cosmological constant has become the main candidate for representing the physical essence believed to be responsible for the accelerated expansion of our universe. Before becoming widely accepted, the cosmologic ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

TIME AND SPACE
Saudi Arabia intercepts Yemen rebel missile: coalition

US wants Turkey to buy Patriot missiles, not Russian system

Lockheed contracted for Aegis missile defense development

AEGIS Weapons System sale to Spain approved by State Department

TIME AND SPACE
State Department approves sale of AMRAAM missiles to Denmark

Saudi Arabia says Yemen rebel missile intercepted

NATO successfully tests upgraded Sea Sparrow missile

Finnish navy to acquire Gabriel anti-ship missiles

TIME AND SPACE
Israel Patriot missile intercepts unarmed drone from Syria: army

Fire Scout unmanned helicopter finishes first flight tests from LCS

Rolls-Royce awarded $420M contract for drone engines

Facebook halts production of drones for internet delivery

TIME AND SPACE
IntelsatOne FlexAir Coming This Summer for Government Aircraft Operations

Intelsat General Delivers Programming For American Forces Network

Altamira receives $25 million contract for radio frequency research

New Land Mobile Technology Driving The Need For Modern Satcom Capabilities

TIME AND SPACE
U.S. Army to introduce new physical fitness test

Army Futures Command to be located in Austin, Pentagon announces

Honeywell tapped for M1 tank engine refurbishment

Rheinmetall tapped for laser light for Bundeswehr assault rifles

TIME AND SPACE
NATO allies agree to partner for joint weapons purchases

Trump piles pressure on NATO over defence spending

Trump hails 'tremendous progress' on NATO defence spending

NATO summit in crisis over Trump spending demands

TIME AND SPACE
Tornado Trump rips diplomatic swathe across Europe

At historic summit, Trump refuses to confront Putin on vote row

Trump attacks US 'foolishness' heading into Putin showdown

Calling EU a US foe is 'fake news': Tusk barb at Trump

TIME AND SPACE
Physicists uncover why nanomaterial loses superconductivity

Squeezing light at the nanoscale

A new way to measure energy in microscopic machines

AI-based method could speed development of specialized nanoparticles