Monday, August 2, 2010

New Technique for Studying Dark Energy

ScienceDaily (July 23, 2010) — Pioneering observations with the National Science Foundation's giant Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT) have given astronomers a new tool for mapping large cosmic structures. The new tool promises to provide valuable clues about the nature of the mysterious "dark energy" believed to constitute nearly three-fourths of the mass and energy of the Universe.

Dark energy is the label scientists have given to what is causing the Universe to expand at an accelerating rate. While the acceleration was discovered in 1998, its cause remains unknown. Physicists have advanced competing theories to explain the acceleration, and believe the best way to test those theories is to precisely measure large-scale cosmic structures.

Sound waves in the matter-energy soup of the extremely early Universe are thought to have left detectable imprints on the large-scale distribution of galaxies in the Universe. The researchers developed a way to measure such imprints by observing the radio emission of hydrogen gas. Their technique, called intensity mapping, when applied to greater areas of the Universe, could reveal how such large-scale structure has changed over the last few billion years, giving insight into which theory of dark energy is the most accurate.

"Our project mapped hydrogen gas to greater cosmic distances than ever before, and shows that the techniques we developed can be used to map huge volumes of the Universe in three dimensions and to test the competing theories of dark energy," said Tzu-Ching Chang, of the Academia Sinica in Taiwan and the University of Toronto.

To get their results, the researchers used the GBT to study a region of sky that previously had been surveyed in detail in visible light by the Keck II telescope in Hawaii. This optical survey used spectroscopy to map the locations of thousands of galaxies in three dimensions. With the GBT, instead of looking for hydrogen gas in these individual, distant galaxies -- a daunting challenge beyond the technical capabilities of current instruments -- the team used their intensity-mapping technique to accumulate the radio waves emitted by the hydrogen gas in large volumes of space including many galaxies.

"Since the early part of the 20th Century, astronomers have traced the expansion of the Universe by observing galaxies. Our new technique allows us to skip the galaxy-detection step and gather radio emissions from a thousand galaxies at a time, as well as all the dimly-glowing material between them," said Jeffrey Peterson, of Carnegie Mellon University.

The astronomers also developed new techniques that removed both man-made radio interference and radio emission caused by more-nearby astronomical sources, leaving only the extremely faint radio waves coming from the very distant hydrogen gas. The result was a map of part of the "cosmic web" that correlated neatly with the structure shown by the earlier optical study. The team first proposed their intensity-mapping technique in 2008, and their GBT observations were the first test of the idea.

"These observations detected more hydrogen gas than all the previously-detected hydrogen in the Universe, and at distances ten times farther than any radio wave-emitting hydrogen seen before," said Ue-Li Pen of the University of Toronto.

"This is a demonstration of an important technique that has great promise for future studies of the evolution of large-scale structure in the Universe," said National Radio Astronomy Observatory Chief Scientist Chris Carilli, who was not part of the research team.

National Radio Astronomy Observatory (2010, July 23). New technique for studying dark energy. ScienceDaily. Retrieved August 2, 2010, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2010/07/100721132627.htm

Why you should always secure your wireless network

Wireless is great and has changed the way we use the internet forever. There was once a time where we were confined to our desks and sitting out in the sun while browsing the web was just a pipe dream.

Nowadays this is a reality and many of use at home are using wireless to get access to our internet. Whilst wireless does offer a huge convenience and flexibility it also comes with a downside. Since the nature of wireless communication is based on the principal that data is travelling freely across airwaves it makes it susceptible to being compromised.

Many of us are fully aware of this and there are many options for securing our networks nowadays that we need not worry about eavesdropping. Sadly though there are still plenty of wireless users out there who are totally uneducated on wireless security and choose to leave their networks wide open. The implications of this can often be disastrous.

With an open wireless network, anybody in range can freely connect and use your internet connection to do what they want. You can probably already see the first major problem. Your internet connection is at the mercy of anybody who wants to use it, and this includes the use of it for illegal or immoral activity. Legal implications can and have happened in the past where open wireless networks were used for illegal activities that results in the owner of internet connection to be prosecuted.

Not only that but your personal data is at great risk if you choose to leave your wireless network insecure. There are many ways for your data to be intercepted as it travels between you and your wireless router. This information can include the web pages you are visiting, your email addresses, usernames, password and potentially all the files that reside on your laptop.

This alone should be enough reason for you to want to secure your wireless network. You should always opt for a good security algorithm such as WPA or WPA2, with a strong enough passphrase your wireless network will be secure enough to prevent any unauthorised use and to keep your data safe!

If you want to see some real life examples of how your data can be compromised on an unsecure wireless network then check out my article on the dangers of unsecured wireless networks. by Cyrus Jackson