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Are astronomers wrong about dark energy? New study casts doubt on universe’s accelerating expansion
A new study casts doubt on the universe’s accelerating expansion, suggesting dark energy might be weakening over time.
New supercomputer simulations hint that dark energy might be dynamic, not constant, subtly reshaping the Universe’s structure. The findings align with recent DESI observations, offering the strongest ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
The Universe’s Expansion May Be Slowing Down, Not Speeding Up, New Research Suggests
Scientists have long held that the universe is expanding at an ever-increasing rate, driven by a mysterious but measurable ...
A new study published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society suggests that the universe’s expansion may be ...
The universe doesn’t revolve around Kitt Peak, but the observatory southwest of Tucson is at the center of what could be the biggest breakthrough in the study of the cosmos in decades. Using an ...
Astronomers are rethinking one of cosmology’s biggest mysteries: dark energy. New findings show that evolving dark energy models, tied to ultra-light axion particles, may better fit the universe’s ...
Quasars acting as strong gravitational lenses are among the rarest finds in astronomy. Out of nearly 300,000 quasars ...
Space.com on MSN
The expansion of our universe may be slowing down. What does that mean for dark energy?
As if dark energy weren't already mysterious and baffling enough, new research suggests that this unknown force may not be driving galaxies apart at an accelerating rate anymore. This remarkable ...
ZME Science on MSN
The Universe Expansion Might Be Slowing Down Now
The universe is expanding. That much is clearer. But it’s less clear whether this expansion is accelerating or slowing down.
The expansion rate of the universe may be slowing down, rather than accelerating at an ever-growing rate, a potentially groundbreaking new study has hinted. The suggestion challenges both the 2011 ...
The universe's expansion may actually have started to slow rather than accelerating at an ever-increasing rate as previously thought, a new study suggests. "Remarkable" findings published today in ...
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