Berliner Boersenzeitung - Time appears five times slower in early universe: study

EUR -
AED 3.857576
AFN 71.468972
ALL 97.945793
AMD 407.899953
ANG 1.887325
AOA 956.768148
ARS 1057.642257
AUD 1.623854
AWG 1.890468
AZN 1.788374
BAM 1.948121
BBD 2.114316
BDT 125.13675
BGN 1.956264
BHD 0.395904
BIF 3093.646897
BMD 1.05026
BND 1.410015
BOB 7.236613
BRL 6.086888
BSD 1.047143
BTN 88.269389
BWP 14.286957
BYN 3.427026
BYR 20585.099959
BZD 2.1109
CAD 1.478777
CDF 3014.246506
CHF 0.931683
CLF 0.037139
CLP 1024.68611
CNY 7.622996
CNH 7.6248
COP 4616.901837
CRC 535.075615
CUC 1.05026
CUP 27.831895
CVE 109.832076
CZK 25.287322
DJF 186.471437
DKK 7.458365
DOP 63.129959
DZD 140.333108
EGP 52.114124
ERN 15.753903
ETB 131.046404
FJD 2.39251
FKP 0.828988
GBP 0.835675
GEL 2.86709
GGP 0.828988
GHS 16.441506
GIP 0.828988
GMD 74.568531
GNF 9023.432445
GTQ 8.081989
GYD 219.082274
HKD 8.173303
HNL 26.485853
HRK 7.491778
HTG 137.43761
HUF 410.914351
IDR 16702.287992
ILS 3.828004
IMP 0.828988
INR 88.518455
IQD 1371.766801
IRR 44202.828808
ISK 145.292953
JEP 0.828988
JMD 165.35821
JOD 0.744952
JPY 161.284236
KES 135.609646
KGS 91.188878
KHR 4203.511118
KMF 492.519883
KPW 945.233784
KRW 1465.296775
KWD 0.323154
KYD 0.872677
KZT 522.869056
LAK 22915.8909
LBP 93777.451442
LKR 304.942206
LRD 187.97265
LSL 18.94897
LTL 3.101146
LVL 0.635292
LYD 5.123852
MAD 10.497821
MDL 19.137929
MGA 4889.7726
MKD 61.580453
MMK 3411.204168
MNT 3568.78411
MOP 8.394073
MRU 41.652612
MUR 49.697925
MVR 16.226408
MWK 1815.808073
MXN 21.646283
MYR 4.681534
MZN 67.108241
NAD 18.94879
NGN 1767.488579
NIO 38.538826
NOK 11.70715
NPR 141.230624
NZD 1.801764
OMR 0.404321
PAB 1.047182
PEN 3.951699
PGK 4.221221
PHP 61.928612
PKR 290.958293
PLN 4.311904
PYG 8171.944362
QAR 3.81815
RON 4.976978
RSD 116.981145
RUB 111.60666
RWF 1442.84025
SAR 3.945668
SBD 8.812303
SCR 14.282519
SDG 631.731822
SEK 11.533406
SGD 1.415119
SHP 0.828988
SLE 23.84048
SLL 22023.436279
SOS 598.452483
SRD 37.184471
STD 21738.265714
SVC 9.162883
SYP 2638.810116
SZL 18.953929
THB 36.476031
TJS 11.189401
TMT 3.686413
TND 3.309219
TOP 2.459814
TRY 36.391337
TTD 7.120003
TWD 34.110145
TZS 2777.9378
UAH 43.509997
UGX 3879.7442
USD 1.05026
UYU 44.624106
UZS 13419.360611
VES 48.925574
VND 26692.363033
VUV 124.689002
WST 2.931897
XAF 653.393967
XAG 0.034536
XAU 0.0004
XCD 2.838381
XDR 0.801027
XOF 653.381574
XPF 119.331742
YER 262.486264
ZAR 19.109062
ZMK 9453.602349
ZMW 28.876453
ZWL 338.183357
  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    61

    +1.33%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    8.89

    -0.22%

  • CMSC

    -0.1650

    24.565

    -0.67%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    6.8

    +0.44%

  • SCS

    -0.1450

    13.575

    -1.07%

  • AZN

    -0.4000

    66

    -0.61%

  • NGG

    -0.6800

    62.58

    -1.09%

  • GSK

    -0.2300

    33.92

    -0.68%

  • RIO

    -1.0250

    61.955

    -1.65%

  • RELX

    0.2350

    46.805

    +0.5%

  • CMSD

    -0.1050

    24.475

    -0.43%

  • BP

    -0.4700

    28.85

    -1.63%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    26.7

    -1.2%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    13.26

    -0.83%

  • BCC

    -4.3650

    148.135

    -2.95%

  • BTI

    0.1950

    37.525

    +0.52%

Time appears five times slower in early universe: study
Time appears five times slower in early universe: study / Photo: M. KORNMESSER - European Southern Observatory/AFP/File

Time appears five times slower in early universe: study

Time appears to run five times slower in the early universe, scientists said on Monday, for the first time using extraordinarily bright cosmic objects called quasars as "clocks" to confirm this strange phenomenon.

Text size:

Einstein's theory of relativity predicts that because space is expanding, "we should see the distant universe run in slow motion," said Geraint Lewis, an astrophysicist at the University of Sydney and the lead author of a new study.

Researchers had previously used observations of very bright exploding stars called supernovas as cosmic clocks to show that time ran twice as slowly back when the universe was half its current age.

The new study used even brighter quasars to peer further back into the history of the 13.8-billion-year-old universe.

Just over a billion years after the Big Bang, time appeared to flow five times slower, according to the study in the journal Nature Astronomy.

While "everything looks like it's slowed down" from here, Lewis emphasised that the experience of time in these distant places was not different.

"If I could magically transport you back 10 billion years and drop you next to one of these quasars, and you've got a stopwatch, time would just be normal," he told AFP.

"One second would be one second."

- Cosmic clocks -

Aiming to measure this phenomenon, which is called cosmological time dilation, Lewis and University of Auckland statistician Brendon Brewer analysed data from 190 quasars collected over two decades.

Quasars -- supermassive black holes at the centres of distant galaxies -- are thought to be the brightest and most powerful objects in the universe.

This makes them "useful beacons for charting the universe," Lewis said.

But they have proved more difficult to turn into cosmic clocks than supernovas, which provide a reliable single flash as a "tick".

Previous attempts to use quasars to measure time dilation had failed, leading to some "strange suggestions," Lewis said.

These included theories that perhaps quasars were not as distant as had been thought -- or even that "something fundamental was broken" in cosmology, he said.

But the new research "puts everything back in the right place," Lewis said.

It also confirmed that "Einstein is right again," he added.

The researchers were able to succeed where other attempts had fallen short because they had far more data on quasars, according to Lewis. Recent advances in the statistical understanding of randomness also helped.

To turn quasars into clocks with measurable ticks, the researchers had to make sense of the turbulent explosions that occurred as the black holes swallowed material.

Lewis compared it to watching a fireworks display, in which the great flashes seem random but different elements are "brightening and fading on their own kind of timescales".

"What we have done is unravel this firework display, showing that quasars, too, can be used as standard markers of time for the early universe."

(H.Schneide--BBZ)