Science & Technology
Their conclusions were based on analysis of Type Ia supernovae - the spectacular thermonuclear explosion of dying stars - picked up by the Hubble space telescope and large ground-based telescopes. It led to the widespread acceptance of the idea that the universe is dominated by a mysterious substance named 'dark energy' that drives this accelerating expansion.
Now, a team of scientists led by Professor Subir Sarkar of Oxford University's Department of Physics has cast doubt on this standard cosmological concept. Making use of a vastly increased data set - a catalogue of 740 Type Ia supernovae, more than ten times the original sample size - the researchers have found that the evidence for acceleration may be flimsier than previously thought, with the data being consistent with a constant rate of expansion.
The study is published in the Nature journal Scientific Reports.
Professor Sarkar, who also holds a position at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, said, "The discovery of the accelerating expansion of the universe won the Nobel Prize, the Gruber Cosmology Prize, and the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics. It led to the widespread acceptance of the idea that the universe is dominated by "dark energy" that behaves like a cosmological constant - this is now the "standard model" of cosmology."

Figure 1: a) Western India plate boundary zone, includes the Chaman fault and Kabul and b) ground velocity field of the Ghazaband fault and Quetta obtained from SAR imagery of the Envisat satellite.
MIAMI—University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science scientists have revealed alarming conclusions about the earthquake hazard in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region. The new study focused on two of the major faults in the region— the Chaman and Ghazaband faults.
"Typically earthquake hazard research is a result of extensive ground-based measurements," said the study's lead author Heresh Fattahi, a UM Rosenstiel School alumni. "These faults, however, are in a region where the political situation makes these ground-based measurements dangerous and virtually impossible."

Artist's illustration of Planet Nine, a world about 10 times more massive than Earth that may lie undiscovered in the outer solar system.
The hypothetical giant planet, which is thought to be about 10 times more massive than Earth, will be discovered within 16 months or so, astronomer Mike Brown predicted.
"I'm pretty sure, I think, that by the end of next winter — not this winter, next winter — I think that there'll be enough people looking for it that ... somebody's actually going to track this down," Brown said during a news conference Wednesday (Oct. 19) at a joint meeting of the American Astronomical Society's Division for Planetary Sciences (DPS) and the European Planetary Science Congress (EPSC) in Pasadena, California. Brown said that eight to 10 groups are currently looking for the planet.
Comment: Here at SOTT, we have been postulating the existence of a twin sun, a brown dwarf, to account for anomalies that could be explained by our solar system being a 'binary star system'.
The consequences of such an object (nemesis) smashing in and out through the Oort Cloud and the Kuiper Belt are chronicled in our Fire in the Sky section, and our Comets and Catastrophes series. The historical consequences can be reviewed in the book series, The Secret History of the World, by Laura Knight Jadczyk.
Below is a video we have published on the subject:
The researchers behind the finding say it is the biological equivalent of discovering a new continent.
Our cells regularly break down proteins from our own bodies and from foreign bodies, such as viruses and bacteria. Small fragments of these proteins, called epitopes, are displayed on the surface of the cells like little flags so that the immune system can scan them. If they are recognised as foreign, the immune system will destroy the cell to prevent the spread of infection.
In a new study, researchers have discovered that around one third of all the epitopes displayed for scanning by the immune system are a type known as 'spliced' epitopes.
These spliced epitopes were thought to be rare, but the scientists have now identified thousands of them by developing a new method that allowed them to map the surface of cells and identify a myriad of previously unknown epitopes.
The findings should help scientists to better understand the immune system, including autoimmune diseases, as well as provide potential new targets for immunotherapy and vaccine design.
The Schiaparelli reached the Mars surface, but the European Space Agency (ESA) is yet not sure about its current condition, journalists were told during a press conference on Thursday. Nevertheless the craft translated a huge amount of data from its sensors to the orbiter during the descent. The ESA said that since the landing was meant as a technology test, it considered it's the Schiaparelli part of the mission a success despite the loss of signal.
The landing sequence deviated from the nominal expectations during the transition from the parachute phase to the breaking thruster firing phase, about 50 seconds before the planned soft landing. The thrusters did fire for several seconds, observation from the orbit confirmed, but the ESA was not sure whether all of them fired as planned, the agency told journalists.
Even if Harris is found innocent, he isn't the only parent who will have to live with knowing his son would still be alive had Harris been more cognizant that day. About 37 children die annually of heatstroke after being left in a car - and the number has already climbed to 35 this year, according to the advocacy group KidsAndCars.org.
A ninth-grader from Acworth, Georgia, wants to ensure that other children won't become part of these statistics.
Sara Makboul, an outgoing, 15-year-old finalist in this year's Discovery Education 3M Young Scientist Challenge, has created a system that could save an infant or child if he or she is left alone in a sweltering car.
Other people, including many young scientists, are trying to solve the same problem as Makboul, but they haven't been very successful, she tells U.S. News. "I realized after my research that people were not actually using [these scientists' inventions] and they weren't actually working."
Previous reviews have concluded that people following a vegan diet may require additional vitamin B12 supplementation to reduce an excess risk of heart disease. Now there's a test that may help.
Vitamin B12 deficiency is associated with an increased risk of dementia and Alzheimer's disease and such a device would enable the tracking of vitamin B12 levels in high-risk patients and early intervention.
It is hoped this will help overcome the limitations of current testing methods which the researchers believe are time-consuming and costly.
The research, developed by academics at the University of Adelaide, uses biophotonics - optical technologies - to analyse and measure biological material.
Using a recently developed technology for analyzing DNA, the scientists found dozens of genes and two major biological pathways that are likely involved in the development of the disorder but had not been uncovered in previous genetic studies of schizophrenia. The work provides important new information about how schizophrenia originates and points the way to more detailed studies -- and possibly better treatments in the future.
Schizophrenia is a chronic, disabling mental illness whose symptoms can include hallucinations, delusions and cognitive problems. The illness afflicts about 1 percent of the human population -- more than 50 million people worldwide. Because the causes of schizophrenia are poorly understood, current medications can help diminish the symptoms but do not cure the disorder.
The study, which is published online in the journal Nature, is likely to have an impact beyond schizophrenia research because it demonstrates a general and potentially powerful new strategy for illuminating the mechanisms of human disease.
Comment: Separate from the genetic causes of schizophrenia, there is much research to suggest that certain types of diet and supplementation could very well help ameliorate its effects now:
- Schizophrenia and Gluten Sensitivity - Is There a Connection?
- How a high fat, low carbohydrate diet could help treat schizophrenia
- How Food Affects The Brain: Omega 3 Especially Important
- Gluten & Schizophrenia: Maternal Gluten Sensitivity Linked to Schizophrenia Risk in Children
- Levels of B12 in the brain found to be significantly lower in the elderly and those with autism or schizophrenia

The Shenzhou-11 manned spacecraft carrying astronauts Jing Haipeng and Chen Dong successfully docked at the orbiting Tiangong-2 space lab early on Wednesday, 19 October
The Beijing Aerospace Control Center (BACC) said the spacecraft began to approach the Tiangong-2 space lab automatically at 1.11am Beijing time on Wednesday (6.11pm BST on Tuesday) and made contact with the space lab at 3.24am. The spacecraft docked at 3.31am, the centre added.
Comment: 'Made in China' is not what it used to mean!
Just one month after getting the lab into orbit, they're sending astronauts there. And by 2023, China could have its own space station. What takes others decades, China seems capable of doing in just years.
The discovery was made during an electrochemical process of reversing combustion, using copper and carbon nanospikes. The scientists were attempting to turn carbon dioxide, a waste byproduct of burning fossil fuels, into an organic element, when they realized that the first step of the experiment did the entire job. "We discovered somewhat by accident that this material worked," said ORNL's Adam Rondinone, lead author of the study. "We were trying to study the first step of a proposed reaction when we realized that the catalyst was doing the entire reaction on its own."












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