Milky Way Clock Upgrade

Aspects of the universe that have puzzled scientists for decades may soon assume greater clarity now that a University of Chicago researcher has the universe running on uranium/thorium time. Nicolas Dauphas, an Assistant Professor in Geophysical Sciences, developed the new and improved universal clock in order to determine the age of the Milky Way free of the unvalidated assumptions that have plagued previous methods.

Previous measurements have used stellar objects such as white dwarf stars, as cosmic timepieces. “The white dwarf has no source of energy, so it just cools down. If you look at its temperature and you know how fast it cools, then you can approximate the age of the galaxy, because some of these white dwarfs are about as old as the galaxy,” Dauphas said. But these methods depend on assumptions about stellar evolution and nuclear physics that scientists have yet to substantiate to their complete satisfaction.

Dauphas’ latest work has honed the accuracy of the cosmic clock by comparing the decay of two long-lived radioactive elements, uranium-238 and thorium-232.

According to Dauphas’ new method, the age of the Milky Way is approximately 14.5 billion years, plus or minus 2 billion years. Dauphas’ method generally agrees with the previous guesstimate of 12 billion years. “After the big bang, it did not take much time for large structures to form, including our Milky Way galaxy,” he said. Previous estimates of 12 billion years relied on the characteristics of globular clusters and white dwarfs, where both were assumed to be as old as the galaxy itself. The reasoning goes that the only elements in the universe after the big bang, 13.7 billion years ago, were hydrogen, helium and lithium, so the Milky Way’s globular clusters must be nearly as old because they contain mostly hydrogen and helium.

A more direct way to calculate the age of stars and the Milky Way relies on the accuracy of the uranium/thorium clock. Scientists now have the ability to telescopically detect the optical “fingerprints” of chemical elements of stars, and have measured the uranium/thorium ratio in a single old star that resides in the halo of the Milky Way. As with globular clusters and white dwarfs, it is measuring the decay of uranium and thorium that is the important factor, and it is something that scientists can measure. Equally crucial is knowing the ratio of uranium and thorium when the star was formed (the production ratio) then calculating the star’s age becomes a problem with a straightforward solution. Unfortunately, “this production ratio is very poorly known,” Dauphas said.

As Dauphas discovered, the solution lay in making a comparison between the data from the uranium/thorium observations in the halo star with measurements of the uranium/thorium ratio that other scientists had made in meteorites. “If you measure a meteorite, you ultimately have the composition of the material that formed the sun 4.5 billion years ago,” he said. And this material included debris from many generations of other stars, now long dead, that still contains information about their own uranium/thorium composition. “The problem is to set the timer correctly, to know the initial amounts of uranium and thorium. By clever combination of abundances in stars and meteorites, Nicolas provides the important starting value for the uranium/thorium clock,” said Thomas Rauscher, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Basel in Switzerland.

Rauscher envisions many applications for Dauphas cosmic time keeping method, such as determining the age of a variety of interstellar objects and particles, including cosmic rays. These subatomic scraps of matter continually bombard the Earth from all directions, and where they come from has baffled scientists for almost a century. Rauscher claims that Dauphas’ work may also lead to a better understanding of how stars produce gold, uranium and other heavy elements that play an important role in everyday life. “Age determinations are crucial to a fundamental understanding of the universe,” said Rauscher. “The wide range of implications is what makes Nicolas’ work so exciting and important.”

Source: Media release – University of Chicago

, ,

Comments are closed.

LOT MARVEL PRESENTS GUARDIANS of THE GALAXY #6 #8 BRONZE AGE COMIC SILVER SURFER picture

LOT MARVEL PRESENTS GUARDIANS of THE GALAXY #6 #8 BRONZE AGE COMIC SILVER SURFER

$5.99



Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol 1 No 11 Apr 1991 Modern Age (1980 - Now) picture

Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol 1 No 11 Apr 1991 Modern Age (1980 - Now)

$2.85



GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #146 MARVEL COMICS 2018 BAGGED & BOARDED picture

GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #146 MARVEL COMICS 2018 BAGGED & BOARDED

$7.25



Guardians of the Galaxy by Abnett & Lanning: The Complete ... by Pelletier, Paul picture

Guardians of the Galaxy by Abnett & Lanning: The Complete ... by Pelletier, Paul

$12.50



Guardians of the Galaxy #39, Vol. 1 (Marvel Comics, 1993) VF picture

Guardians of the Galaxy #39, Vol. 1 (Marvel Comics, 1993) VF

$3.50



$1.99 - $5.99 COMIC BOOK TRADE PAPERBACKS & HARDCOVERS  pick & choose, flat ship picture

$1.99 - $5.99 COMIC BOOK TRADE PAPERBACKS & HARDCOVERS pick & choose, flat ship

$4.99



Guardians Of The Galaxy Grounded #19 (MARVEL 2017) NM picture

Guardians Of The Galaxy Grounded #19 (MARVEL 2017) NM

$7.50



Guardians of the Galaxy Modern Era Epic Collection Vol 1 Somebody's Got To Do It picture

Guardians of the Galaxy Modern Era Epic Collection Vol 1 Somebody's Got To Do It

$24.00



Guardians of the Galaxy lot #6-58 + 2 annuals + bonus 40 diff avg 7.0 (1990-95) picture

Guardians of the Galaxy lot #6-58 + 2 annuals + bonus 40 diff avg 7.0 (1990-95)

$120.00



Guardians of the Galaxy #41 CGC 9.8 Marvel 1993 1st app of Overweight Thor picture

Guardians of the Galaxy #41 CGC 9.8 Marvel 1993 1st app of Overweight Thor

$107.99



Powered by WordPress. Designed by WooThemes