Fundamental constant didn't vary after all.A few years ago, observations of distant quasars Proper naming of quasars are by Catalogue Entry, Qxxxx±yy using B1950 coordinates, or QSO Jxxxx±yyyy using J2000 coordinates. This page lists quasars.
In such studies, scientists investigate which wavelengths of light are absent from quasar spectra because they had been absorbed by clouds of gas lying between the quasars and Earth. The radiation passed through some of these clouds billions of years ago. Researchers know that the constant under scrutiny, called the fine-structure constant or alpha, determines the wavelengths of light that atoms can absorb. John K. Webb of the University of New South Wales The University of New South Wales, also known as UNSW or colloquially as New South, is a university situated in Kensington, a suburb in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. in Sydney, Australia, and his colleagues have been investigating differences between wavelengths absorbed by clouds and wavelengths soaked up by atoms in a laboratory. In 2001, Webb's group interpreted quasar spectra recorded at the Keck I telescope in Hawaii as evidence that alpha Was slightly smaller in the early universe than it is today (SN: 10/6/01, p. 222). In the new study, Patrick Petitjean of the Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris The Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris is an astronomy research institute of the CNRS, located at 98bis, Bd Arago in Paris. Among its research priorities, there are strong groups involved in extragalactic astronomy and physical cosmology research. and his colleagues collected spectra at the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope The Very Large Telescope Project (VLT) is a system of four separate optical telescopes (the Antu telescope, the Kueyen telescope, the Melipal telescope, and the Yepun telescope) organized in an array formation. Each telescope has an 8.2 m aperture. in Chile. They purged their data of components that were hard to interpret. While the team's analysis of the remaining data can't rule out extremely small variations of alpha, it suggests that the constant has not changed over the past 12 billion years, Petitjean says. He and his colleagues describe their new result in the March 26 Physical Review Letters Physical Review Letters is one of the most prestigious journals in physics.[1] Since 1958, it has been published by the American Physical Society as an outgrowth of The Physical Review. . |
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