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Recent measurements with telescopes and space probes
have shown that a mysterious forcea dark energyfills
the vacuum of empty space, accelerating the universe's
expansion. We don't know what dark energy is, or why it
exists. On the other hand, particle theory tells us
that, at the microscopic level, even a perfect vacuum
bubbles with quantum particles that are a natural source
of dark energy. But a naïve calculation of the dark
energy generated from the vacuum yields a value 10120
times larger than the amount we observe. Some unknown
physical process is required to eliminate most, but not
all, of the vacuum energy, leaving enough left to drive
the accelerating expansion of the universe. A new theory
of particle physics is required to explain this physical
process.
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Rocky Kolb, of Fermilab/University of Chicago, addresses the mystery of dark energy. View the Video |
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Particle physics data point to another mysterious
component of empty space, the Higgs field, that gives
particles the property of mass. Without the Higgs field,
electrons would fly at the speed of light, and atoms would
instantly disintegrate. Are dark energy and the Higgs field
related? The discovery of supersymmetry would provide
crucial evidence of a possible connection. Supersymmetry
provides both a natural context for the Higgs field and a
possible explanation for the small but finite value of dark
energy.
The dramatic discovery of dark energy showed that empty
space is filled with a mysterious energy that increases
as the universe expands. While Einstein initially proposed
a cosmological constant that could explain the dark energy,
it is the amount of dark energy that is difficult to understand.
The natural source of such a dark energy field, quantum
fluctuations of the vacuum, gives a density of dark energy
10120 times larger than observed levels.
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| We live in a cold and empty universe, in a time when energies are so low that we can no longer see what space contained in the fiery instants when the universe was born... read more |  |
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A far-reaching program is in place to study the properties
of dark energy. Measurements of the amplitude and
fluctuations of the cosmic microwave background from WMAP,
combined with data from worldwide astronomical facilities,
especially supernova measurements, suggest that dark energy
is consistent with a cosmological constant. Future
measurements of supernovae, gravitational lensing and
clusters of galaxies from a Large Synoptic Survey Telescope,
LSST, and the Joint Dark Energy Mission, JDEM, will reveal
definitively whether dark energy behaves like Einstein's
cosmological constant or like some new substance that changes
with time as the universe evolves.
To determine what dark energy is and why it exists requires
connecting the cosmic reality of dark energy to a better
fundamental understanding of microscopic quantum physics. At
the microscopic scale, physicists have long known that "empty"
space is not empty; it is filled by a field that gives quarks
and leptons their mass. In the Standard Model, this field is
called the Higgs; experiments at the LHC will find the
corresponding Higgs particle.
At present, we expect the Higgs to be accompanied by
a whole new sector of fundamental physics. This Higgs
sector may involve many new particles and interactions.
Initial Higgs discoveries will occur at the LHC; a Linear
Collider will be essential to explore the landscape of
Higgs physics.
Dark energy may have relationships to both supersymmetry
and the Higgs sector, implying a new emphasis on the quantum
consistency of Higgs physics, including Higgs self-interactions.
Such measurements will present additional challenges for the
experimental program of the Linear Collider and may provide a
foundation to explore the origin of dark energy.
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