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Sun, 20 Jan 91 02:19:12 -0500 (EST)
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Date: Sun, 20 Jan 91 02:19:06 -0500 (EST)
Subject: SPACE Digest V13 #063
SPACE Digest Volume 13 : Issue 63
Today's Topics:
Re: Voyager Update - 01/16/91
Re: THE BLUE PLANET
Galileo Update - 01/17/91
Re: What is cosmological constant?
MAJOR SOLAR FLARE ALERT
NASA Headline News for 01/18/91 (Forwarded)
Magellan Update - 01/18/91
Re: US buys Soviet reactor
Re: space news from Dec 17 AW&ST
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In article <27917.27932f81@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu>, mcginnis@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu writes:
|> Can someone give me a brief explanation of "cosmological constant"?
|> I have the understanding that this is a base energy density for
|> "empty" space; as opposed to a base energy level (vacuum energy level)
|> for "empty" space. Is this correct? To what would this base energy
|> level be due? Uncertainty leading to a background cloud of paired
|> virtual particles?
|>
|> Thanks.
|>
|> Mike McGinnis "Rust never sleeps."
|> Academic Computing Center -The Second Law of
|> University of Kansas Thermodynamics
|> Lawrence, Kansas 66045
The cosmological constant was originally introduced by Einstein in order to
allow a steady-state universe. As the universe turned out to be expanding, it
turned out to be one of Einstein's biggest mistakes.
Then particle physicists realized that the universe should be filled with lots
of virtual particles, who, individually have a negligible gravitational effect, but taken collectively should have a huge effect. (There was recently an article in Scientific American, or a similar magizine about this.) These virtual particles can have one of two effects, something like positive or negative curvature, and it should be HUGE. For one effect, light should be seriously deflected after travelling only 100m or so. The other effect was equally obvious, and is equally unobserved. One real big
question in cosmology is why is it so small. If you can answer that question, you can probably get a Nobel prize.