川村クリニック千葉市 緑区 あすみが丘 土気駅前すぐ 内科・胃腸科 楽な鼻から胃カメラ(経鼻内視鏡検査)の川村クリニック
■院長の役に立つ話  〜Invisible realm〜 一覧へ戻る
人体に関するビデオはしばらくわきに置いて、今回から宇宙に目を向けてみたいと思う。とても面白いテーマだ。しばらくシリーズで見ていきたい。かつて「Dr.Kのぶらり独り言」でも注目したことがあるが、近年の物理学の進歩は凄まじい。その最先端が、かの有名な超ひも理論。さらに、研究者たちは宇宙に目を転じ、この宇宙の誕生とその実体の解明に迫ろうとしている。我々人類の5感では感知し得ない領域の解明に着手し始めたのだ。我々の目に見えるこの世界は、全被造物のごくごく一部なのかもしれない。広大なサイエンスファンタジーだ。

Matter, as we know it, atoms, stars and galaxies, planets and trees, rocks, and us.

This matter accounts for less than five percent of the known universe.

About twenty five percent is dark matter, and seventy percent, dark energy.

Both of which are invisible.

This is kind of strange because it suggests that everything we experience is really only a tiny fraction of reality.

But it gets worse.

We really have no clue what dark matter and energy are, or how they work?

We are pretty sure they exists though.

So, what do we know? 

Dark matter is the stuff that makes it possible for galaxies to exist.

When we calculated why the universes structured the way it is, it quickly became clear that there’s just not enough normal matter.

The gravity of the visible matter is not strong enough to form galaxies and complex structures.

The stars would more likely be scattered all over the place and not form galaxies.

So we know there is something else inside and around them.

Something that doesn’t admit or reflects light, something dark.

But besides being able to calculate the existence of dark matter, we can see it, kind of.

Places with the high concentration of dark matter, bend light passing nearby, so we know there’s something there that interacts with gravity.

Right now, we have more ideas about what dark energy is not than what it is.

We know dark matter is not just clouds of normal matter without stars because it would’ve meant particles we could detect.

Dark matter is not anti-matter because anti-matter produces unique gamma rays when it reacts with normal matter.

Dark matter is also not made up of black halls.

Very compact objects that they violently affect their surroundings, while dark matter seems to be scattered all over the place.

Basically, we only know three things for sure.

One: something is out there.

Two: it interacts with gravity.

Three: there is a lot of it.

Dark matter is probably made up of a complicated exotic particle that doesn’t interact with light and matter in a way we expect, but right now, we just don’t know.

Dark energy is even more strange and mysterious.

We can’t detect it, we can’t measure it and we can’t taste it.

But we do see its effects very clearly.  

In 1929, Edward Hubble examined how the wavelength of light emitted by distant galaxies shifts toward the red end of the electromagnetic spectrum as it travels through the place.

He found that fainter, more distant galaxies showed a large degree of redshift, closer galaxies, not so much.

Hubble determined that this was because the universe itself is expanding.

The redshift occurs because the wavelength of light are stretched as the universe expands.

More recent discoveries have shown that the expansion of the universe is accelerating.

Before that, it was thought that the photon and gravity would cause the expansion to either slow down or even retract and collapse in on itself at some point.

Space doesn’t change its properties as it expands.

There’s just more of it.

New space is constantly created everywhere.

Galaxies are tight bound clusters of stuff helped together by gravity so we don’t experience this expansion in our daily lives but we see it everywhere around us.

Wherever there is empty space in the universe, more is forming every second.

So dark energy seems to be some kind of energy intrinsic to empty space.

Energy that is stronger than anything else we know and it keeps getting stronger as time passes by.

Empty space has more energy than everything else in the universe combined.

We have multiple ideas about what dark energy might be.

One idea is that dark energy is not a thing but just a property of space.

Empty space is not nothing, it has its own energy.

It could generate more space and it’s quite active.

So as the universe expands, it could be that just more and more space appears to fill the gaps and this leads to a faster expanding universe.

This idea is close to an idea that Einstein had back in 1917 of a concept of a cosmological constant, a force that counteracted the force of gravity.

The only problem is that when we try to calculate the amount of this energy, the result was so wrong and weird that it only added to the confusion.

Another idea is that empty space is actually full of temporary, virtual particles that spontaneously and continually form from nothing and then disappear into nothing again.

The energy from those particles could be dark energy.

Or maybe dark energy is an unknown kind of dynamic energy fluid of field which permeates the entire universe but somehow has the opposite effect on the universe than normal energy and matter.

But if it exists, we don’t know how and where or how we could detect it.

So there are still a lot of questions to answer.

Our theories about dark matter and dark energy are still just that, theories.

On the one hand, this is kind of frustrating.

On the other hand, this is frontier science, making it very exciting.

It shows us that no matter how we feel we’re on top of things, we’re still very much apes with smartphones on a tiny fragile island in space, looking into the sky wondering how our universe works.

There is so much left to learn and that is awesome.