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Telescope array in Chile will look back to universe's earliest moments ,[url=http://www.isabelmarantsneakersbootss.com/]isabel marant sneakers[/url]
SAN DIEGO, Jan. 10 () -- U.S. physicists working with a massive telescope in Chile say they hope to detect space-time fluctuations produced immediately after the birth of the universe.A team from the University of California, San Diego, has been awarded a $4.3 million grant to build and install two more telescopes to create a three-telescope combination to be known as the Simons Array, after the Simons Foundation, which provided the funds."The Simons Array will inform our knowledge of the universe in a completely new way," physics Professor Brian Keating said in a UCSD release.The researchers said they will search for fluctuations in space-time, also known as "gravitational waves," thought to have imprinted the "primordial soup" of matter and photons of the Big Bang that later coalesced to become gases,[url=http://www.parajumpersjackenoutlet.de/]parajumpers online shop[/url], stars and galaxies and all the structures in the universe we now see.Last year, the first telescope of the Simons Array was set up in Chile's Atacama Desert,[url=http://www.parajumpersjackenoutlet.de/]parajumpers damen[/url], one of the highest and driest places on Earth at 17,000 feet above sea level and considered one of the planet's best locations for such a study."The Simons Array will have the same or better capabilities as a $1 billion satellite, and with NASA's budget constraints, there are no planned space-based missions for this job," Keating said.The project is a collaboration between scientists from UC San Diego, UC Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of Colorado, McGill University in Canada and the KEK Laboratory in Japan. |
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