When I report science news, discuss new discoveries, and get excited about new results, it can be difficult to hear that little voice in the back of my mind that says ‘reproducible results.’ It’s the voice of the pure scientist that reminds me to be critical of the things I read, and be open to critical review for the things I write and say. Any result isn’t worth the paper it’s printed on unless it can be independently reproduced. This is a key to scientific advancement. If the result can’t be reproduced, then something is wrong. It may be an error with...
A direct consequence of Einstein’s theory of general relativity, and an observational way to prove it, is gravitational lensing. It requires a powerful gravitational source to work, such as a galaxy or cluster of galaxies. It works in a similar way to a lens of glass, where rays of light are bent toward a single source, increasing the brightness. In this case, instead of glass, the bending of the rays is due to the curvature of space. Light rays coming from the source would otherwise miss Earth, but instead are bent toward us when there is a massive object in front of it. It’s...
Space seems dark to our weak human eyes. Most of the night sky is the blackness between stars. But in this darkness lies an endless number of photons, travelling in all different directions. These photos form background radiation, in three wavelengths in particular. You’ve likely heard of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB), it there is also a Cosmic Optical Background (COB) and a Cosmic Infrared Background (CIB). The COB is explained by the immense number of stars in the Universe. It’s a diffuse glow across the entire sky. The CMB is the leftover radiation from hot plasma that existed when the Universe...