A new study in Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society by researchers including István Szapudi of the
University of Hawaiʻi Institute for
Astronomy suggests the universe
may rotate—just extremely slowly. The finding could help solve one of
astronomy’s biggest puzzles.
“To paraphrase the Greek philosopher
Heraclitus of Ephesus, who famously said “Panta Rhei”—everything moves, we
thought that perhaps Panta Kykloutai—everything turns,” said Szapudi.
Current models say the universe expands
evenly in all directions, with no sign of rotation. This idea fits most of what
astronomers observe. But it doesn’t explain the so-called “Hubble tension”—a
long-standing disagreement between two ways of measuring how fast the universe
is expanding.
Supernovae,
Big Bang
One method looks at distant exploding
stars or supernovae, to measure the distances to galaxies, and gives an
expansion rate for the universe throughout the past few billion years. The
other method uses the relic radiation from the Big Bang and gives the expansion
rate of the very early Universe, about 13 billion years ago. Each gives a
different value for the expansion rate.
Szapudi’s team developed a mathematical
model of the universe. First, it followed standard rules. Then they added a
tiny amount of rotation. That small change made a big difference.
“Much to our surprise, we found that our
model with rotation resolves the paradox without contradicting current
astronomical measurements. Even better, it is compatible with other models that
assume rotation. Therefore, perhaps, everything really does turn. Or, Panta
Kykloutai!” noted Szapudi.
Their model suggests the universe could
rotate once every 500 billion years—too slow to detect easily, but enough to
affect how space expands over time.
The idea doesn’t break any known laws of
physics. And it might explain why measurements of the universe’s growth don’t
quite agree.
The next step is turning the theory into
a full computer model—and finding ways to spot signs of this slow cosmic spin.
Source: https://manoa.hawaii.edu/news/article.php?aId=13844
Source: UH astronomer finds the universe could be spinning – Scents of Science
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