Astronomers are announcing today that they have acquired the first direct
evidence that gravitational waves rippled through our infant universe during an
explosive period of growth called inflation. This is the strongest confirmation
yet of cosmic inflation theories, which say the universe expanded by 100
trillion trillion times, in less than the blink of an eye.
The findings were made with the help of NASA-developed detector technology on
the BICEP2 telescope at the South Pole, in collaboration with the National
Science Foundation.
"Operating the latest detectors in ground-based and balloon-borne experiments
allows us to mature these technologies for space missions and, in the process,
make discoveries about the universe," said Paul Hertz, NASA's Astrophysics
Division director in Washington.
Our universe burst into existence in an event known as the Big Bang 13.8
billion years ago. Moments later, space itself ripped apart, expanding
exponentially in an episode known as inflation. Telltale signs of this early
chapter in our universe's history are imprinted in the skies, in a relic glow
called the cosmic microwave background. Recently, this basic theory of the
universe was again confirmed by the Planck satellite, a European Space Agency
mission for which NASA provided detector and cooler technology.
But researchers had long sought more direct evidence for inflation in the
form of gravitational waves, which squeeze and stretch space.
"Small, quantum fluctuations were amplified to enormous sizes by the
inflationary expansion of the universe. We know this produces another type of
waves called density waves, but we wanted to test if gravitational waves are
also produced," said project co-leader Jamie Bock of NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., which developed the BICEP2 detector technology.
Bock has a joint appointment with the California Institute of Technology, also
in Pasadena.
The gravitational waves produced a characteristic swirly pattern in polarized
light, called "B-mode" polarization. Light can become polarized by scattering
off surfaces, such as a car or pond. Polarized sunglasses reject polarized light
to reduce glare. In the case of the cosmic microwave background, light scattered
off particles called electrons to become slightly polarized.
The BICEP2 team took on the challenge to detect B-mode polarization by
pulling together top experts in the field, developing revolutionary technology
and traveling to the best observing site on Earth at the South Pole. The
collaboration includes major contributions from Caltech; JPL; Stanford
University, Stanford, Calif.; Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.; and the
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
As a result of experiments conducted since 2006, the team has been able to
produce compelling evidence for the B-mode signal, and with it, the strongest
support yet for cosmic inflation. The key to their success was the use of novel
superconducting detectors. Superconductors are materials that, when chilled,
allow electrical current to flow freely, with zero resistance.
"Our technology combines the properties of superconductivity with tiny
structures that can only be seen with a microscope. These devices are
manufactured using the same micro-machining process as the sensors in cellphones
and Wii controllers," said Anthony Turner, who makes these devices using
specialized fabrication equipment at JPL's Microdevices Laboratory.
The B-mode signal is extremely faint. In order to gain the necessary
sensitivity to detect the polarization signal, Bock and Turner developed a
unique array of multiple detectors, akin to the pixels in modern digital cameras
but with the added ability to detect polarization. The whole detector system
operates at a frosty 0.25 Kelvin, just 0.45 degrees Fahrenheit above the lowest
temperature achievable, absolute zero.
"This extremely challenging measurement required an entirely new
architecture," said Bock. "Our approach is like taking a camera and building it
on a printed circuit board."
The BICEP2 experiment used 512 detectors, which sped up observations of the
cosmic microwave background by 10 times over the team's previous measurements.
Their new experiment, already making observations, uses 2,560 detectors.
These and future experiments not only help confirm that the universe inflated
dramatically, but are providing theorists with the first clues about the exotic
forces that drove space and time apart.
The results of this study have been submitted to the journal Nature
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