A new analysis of astronomical data suggests unknown physics is at work assisting dark energy in acting almost as ...
The latest Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument results fall short of the discovery threshold but strengthen evidence for ...
Not everything we knew about the universe is wrong. But not not everything. The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) ...
The new findings come from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI), which sits on a telescope at the Kitt Peak ...
Imagine rewinding the clock to the very beginning of the universe. What would you see? Not the glittering galaxies captured ...
According to the Standard Model of Cosmology, the expansion of our universe is driven by the simplest possible version of ...
Here’s how it works. New results from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) suggest that the unknown force accelerating the expansion of the universe isn't what we believed it to be.
Dark energy, a mysterious force that scientists believe is behind the accelerated expansion of the universe, is weakening — which could result in the universe over the course of billions of ...
Dark energy, an invisible force making up about 70% of the universe, remains one of science’s greatest mysteries, accounting for 25%, it leaves just 5% of the universe made up of visible matter ...
Recently, two major research groups—the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) and the Dark Energy Survey (DES)—have collected massive amounts of data by observing millions of galaxies.
The universe has been expanding ever since the Big Bang almost 14 billion years ago, and astronomers believe a kind of invisible force called dark energy is making it accelerate faster. If the ...
Dark energy makes up roughly 70% of the universe, yet we know nothing about it. Around 25% of the universe is the equally mysterious dark matter, leaving just 5% for everything that we can see and ...