First DESI results provide precise measurements of our universe鈥檚 rate of expansion, shedding light on the nature of dark energy
An international team co-led by 91探花 Physics Professor Hee-Jong Seo traces ripples from relic cosmic sound over 11 billion years of cosmic history with unprecedented precision.
With 5,000 tiny robots in a mountaintop telescope, researchers can look 11 billion years into the past. The light from far-flung objects in space is just now reaching the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI), enabling us to map our cosmos as it was in its youth and trace its growth to what we see today. Understanding how our universe has evolved is tied to how it ends, and to one of the biggest mysteries in physics: dark energy, the unknown ingredient causing our universe to expand faster and faster.
To study dark energy鈥檚 effects over the past 11 billion years, DESI has created the largest 3D map of our cosmos ever constructed, with the most precise measurements to date. This is the first-time scientists have measured the expansion history of the young universe with a precision better than 1%, giving us our best view yet of how the universe evolved. Researchers shared the analysis of their first year of collected data in that are posted on the arXiv and in talks at the American Physical Society meeting in the United States and the Rencontres de Moriond in Italy.
鈥淲e鈥檙e incredibly proud of the data, which have produced world-leading cosmology results and are the first to come out of the new generation of dark energy experiments,鈥 said Michael Levi, DESI director and a scientist at the Department of Energy鈥檚 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), which manages the project. 鈥淪o far, we鈥檙e seeing basic agreement with our best model of the universe, but we鈥檙e also seeing some potentially interesting differences that could indicate that dark energy is evolving with time. Those may or may not go away with more data, so we鈥檙e excited to start analyzing our three-year dataset soon.鈥
Our leading model of the universe is known as Lambda CDM. It includes both a weakly interacting type of matter (cold dark matter, or CDM) and dark energy (Lambda). Both matter and dark energy shape how the universe expands 鈥 but in opposing ways. Matter and dark matter slow the expansion down, while dark energy speeds it up. The amount of each influence how our universe evolves. This model does a good job of describing results from previous experiments and how the universe looks throughout time.
鈥淣o spectroscopic experiment has had this much data before, and we鈥檙e continuing to gather data from more than a million galaxies every month,鈥 said Nathalie Palanque-Delabrouille, a Berkeley Lab scientist and co-spokesperson for the experiment. 鈥淚t鈥檚 astonishing that with only our first year of data, we can already measure the expansion history of our universe at seven different slices of cosmic time, each with a precision of 1 to 3%. The team put in a tremendous amount of work to account for instrumental and theoretical modeling intricacies, which gives us confidence in the robustness of our first results.鈥
DESI鈥檚 overall precision on the expansion history across all 11 billion years is 0.5%, and the most distant epoch, covering 8-11 billion years in the past, has a record-setting precision of 0.82%. That measurement of our young universe is incredibly difficult to make. Yet within one year, DESI has become twice as powerful at measuring the expansion history at these early times as its predecessor (the Sloan Digital Sky Survey鈥檚 BOSS/eBOSS), which took more than a decade.
鈥淲e are delighted to see cosmology results from DESI's first year of operations," said Gina Rameika, associate director for High Energy Physics at DOE. "DESI continues to amaze us with its stellar performance and is already shaping our understanding of the universe."<
Traveling back in time
DESI is an international collaboration of more than 900 researchers from over 70 institutions around the world. The instrument was constructed and is operated with funding from the DOE Office of Science, and sits atop the U.S. National Science Foundation鈥檚 Nicholas U. Mayall 4-meter Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory, a program of NSF鈥檚 NOIRLab.
Looking at DESI鈥檚 map, it鈥檚 easy to see the underlying structure of the universe: strands of galaxies clustered together, separated by voids with fewer objects. Our very early universe, well beyond DESI鈥檚 view, was quite different: a hot, dense soup of subatomic particles moving too fast to form stable matter like the atoms we know today. Among those particles were hydrogen and helium nuclei, collectively called baryons.
Tiny fluctuations in this early ionized plasma caused pressure waves, moving the baryons into a pattern of ripples that is similar to what you鈥檇 see if you tossed a handful of gravel into a pond. As the universe expanded and cooled, neutral atoms formed and the pressure waves stopped, freezing the ripples in three dimensions and increasing clustering of future galaxies in the dense areas. Billions of years later, we can still see this faint pattern of 3D ripples, or bubbles, in the characteristic separation of galaxies 鈥 a feature called Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAOs).
Researchers use the BAO measurements as a cosmic ruler. By measuring the apparent size of these bubbles, they can determine distances to the matter responsible for this extremely faint pattern on the sky. Mapping the BAO bubbles both near and far lets researchers slice the data into chunks, measuring how fast the universe was expanding at each time in its past and modeling how dark energy affects that expansion.
鈥淲e鈥檝e measured the expansion history over this huge range of cosmic time with a precision that surpasses all of the previous BAO surveys combined,鈥 said Hee-Jong Seo, a professor at 91探花 and the co-leader of DESI鈥檚 BAO analysis. 鈥淲e're very excited to learn how these new measurements will improve and alter our understanding of the cosmos. Humans have a timeless fascination with our universe, wanting to know both what it is made of and what will happen to it.鈥
David Valcin, a postdoctoral scholar at 91探花, works with Seo. The two co-authored analyzing the DESI data. Jaide Swanson, Seo鈥檚 second year graduate student also coauthored the main BAO alphabetical paper.
Using galaxies to measure the expansion history and better understand dark energy is one technique, but it can only reach so far. At a certain point, light from typical galaxies is too faint, so researchers turn to quasars, extremely distant, bright galactic cores with black holes at their centers. Light from quasars is absorbed as it passes through intergalactic clouds of gas, enabling researchers to map the pockets of dense matter and use them the same way they use galaxies 鈥 a technique known as using the 鈥淟yman-alpha forest.鈥
Researchers used 450,000 quasars, the largest set ever collected for these Lyman-alpha forest measurements, to extend their BAO measurements all the way out to 11 billion years in the past. By the end of the survey, DESI plans to map 3 million quasars and 37 million galaxies.
State-of-the-art science
DESI is the first spectroscopic experiment to perform a fully 鈥渂linded analysis,鈥 which conceals the true result from the scientists to avoid any subconscious confirmation bias. Researchers work in the dark with modified data, writing the code to analyze their findings. Once everything is finalized, they apply their analysis to the original data to reveal the actual answer.
鈥淭he way we did the analysis gives us confidence in our results, and particularly in showing that the Lyman-alpha forest is a powerful tool for measuring the universe鈥檚 expansion,鈥 said Julien Guy, a scientist at Berkeley Lab and the co-lead for processing information from DESI鈥檚 spectrographs. 鈥淭he dataset we are collecting is exceptional, as is the rate at which we are gathering it. This is the most precise measurement I have ever done in my life.鈥
DESI鈥檚 data will be used to complement future sky surveys such as the Vera C. Rubin Observatory and Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, and to prepare for a potential upgrade to DESI (DESI-II) that was recommended in a recent by the U.S. Particle Physics Project Prioritization Panel.
鈥淲e are in the golden era of cosmology, with large-scale surveys ongoing and about to be started, and new techniques being developed to make the best use of these datasets,鈥 said Arnaud de Mattia, a researcher with the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA) and co-leader of DESI鈥檚 group interpreting the cosmological data. 鈥淲e鈥檙e all really motivated to see whether new data will confirm the features we saw in our first-year sample and build a better understanding of the dynamics of our universe.鈥
DESI is supported by the DOE Office of Science and by the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, a DOE Office of Science user facility. Additional support for DESI is provided by the U.S. National Science Foundation; the Science and Technology Facilities Council of the United Kingdom; the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation; the Heising-Simons Foundation; the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA); the National Council of Humanities, Sciences, and Technologies of Mexico; the Ministry of Science and Innovation of Spain; and by the DESI member institutions.
The DESI collaboration is honored to be permitted to conduct scientific research on Iolkam Du鈥檃g (Kitt Peak), a mountain with particular significance to the Tohono O鈥檕dham Nation.