NASA wants to mess with dark matter by creating coolest spot in universe – New York Post

NASA wants to create the coolest spot in the universe to better understand matter and the fundamental nature of gravity.

While understanding that atoms behave in surprising ways at super-low temperatures, NASA has never before created or observed this behavior in space.

As such, the space agency will be sending an ice chest-size box to the International Space Station, where Nobel Prize winner Eric Cornell and other scientists will conduct experiments.

The technology, known as the Cold Atom Laboratory (CAL), works by using lasers, a vacuum chamber and an electromagnetic knife to freeze gas atoms to a mere billionth of a degree above absolute zero more than 100 million times colder than the depths of space.

By creating these extremely low temperatures, NASA is able to develop what is known as Bose-Einstein condensate a state in which atoms move in with one another in waveform, as opposed to individual particles.

While these mysterious waveforms are only observable for fractions of a second on Earth because the pull of gravity causes atoms to continually settle toward the ground, creating Bose-Einstein condensates in space means ultra-cold atoms can hold their wavelike forms longer.

Project scientist Robert Thompson predicts the Bose-Einstein condensates could be observable for up to five to 10 seconds with the help of the CAL, with the possibility down the road to make them last hundreds of seconds.

Studying these hyper-cold atoms could reshape our understanding of matter and the fundamental nature of gravity, he said in a statement.

The experiments well do with the Cold Atom Lab will give us insight into gravity and dark energy some of the most pervasive forces in the universe.

Studying these hyper-cold atoms could reshape our understanding of matter and the fundamental nature of gravity.

Cold Atom Lab project manager Anita Sengupta added that if scientists can understand the physics, they can possibly learn to use those for more efficient transfer of energy.

The results of these experiments could also result in a number of improved technologies, including sensors, quantum computers and atomic clocks used in spacecraft navigation.

Deputy project manager Kamal Oudrhiri said the most exciting applications were those related to dark energy detection.

He added that current models of cosmology divide the universe into 27 percent dark matter, 68 percent dark energy and 5 percent ordinary matter.

This means that even with all of our current technologies, we are still blind to 95 percent of the universe, he said.

Like a new lens in Galileos first telescope, the ultra-sensitive cold atoms in the Cold Atom Lab have the potential to unlock many mysteries beyond the frontiers of known physics.

This article originally appeared on News.com.au.

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NASA wants to mess with dark matter by creating coolest spot in universe - New York Post

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