http://www.nsf.gov/cgi-bin/getpub?pr0138
NSF-Supported Teams Provide New Data on Early Moments of the Universe
 Antarctic-based instruments support each other's results

  Two teams of cosmologists today released new findings
  about the nature of the universe in its infancy. Their
  spectacular images of the cosmic microwave
  background (CMB), taken with instruments operating
  from Antarctica, reveal the strongest evidence to date
  for the theory of inflation, the leading model for the
  formation of the universe.

  The announcement represents the first release of data
  from the Degree Angular Scale Interferometer (DASI),
  a 13-element ground-based instrument operating since
  last year at the National Science Foundation (NSF)
  Amundsen Scott South Pole Station. Scientists also
  released similar results from further analysis of data
  from the Balloon Observations of Millimetric
  Extragalactic Radiation and Geophysics
  (BOOMERANG) project, obtained in 1998 and first
  reported last year.

 "These spectacular results represent a payback from
 the significant national investment in research in the
 polar regions," said Karl Erb, director of the NSF Office
 of Polar Programs. "The Antarctic environment provides
 exceptional clarity for astrophysical observations, and the
 U.S. Antarctic Program provides unmatched support for world-class
 research."

 Both analyses, unveiled at the American Physical Society
 meetings in Washington, D.C., support the model that the
 universe experienced a tremendous spurt of growth shortly after
 the Big Bang.  Cosmologists believe the structures that formed
 in the very first moments of the cosmos left their imprint
 as a very faint pattern of variations in the temperature of
 the CMB, the radiation left over from the intense heat that filled
 the embryonic universe during the initial growth spurt. Some 12-15
 billion years later, these temperatures have become detectable from
 Earth with highly sensitive instruments.

 "With these new data, inflation looks very strong," said DASI lead
 scientist John Carlstrom, professor of astronomy and astrophysics
 at the University of Chicago. "It's always been theoretically
 compelling. Now it's on very solid experimental ground."

 Multiple teams supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) have
 probed the CMB for these minute temperature variations, including the
 two teams operating from the polar region. Two other teams
 using instruments in the continental United States also released data.

 "This is an outstanding example of how NSF supports multiple scientific
 projects, leading to rapid, new results," said NSF senior science associate
 Morris Aizenman. "It took more than a decade to get the initial
 observations of the cosmic microwave background with the COBE satellite,
 and in only a few short years, the progress in sharpening those
 observations has been truly astounding."

 The teams used independent methods and two different technologies
 to obtain detailed observations of the CMB. The observations have
 provided so much data that new methods had to be invented to analyze
 them. As the data analyses continue, they are providing precise
 measurements of parameters that cosmologists have long used to
 describe the early evolution of the universe, but in the past could only
 illustrate with models.

 NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite provided the first
 detailed images of tiny variations in the CMB radiation in 1992.
 Last year, the BOOMERANG team published the first high- resolution
 images of the CMB, obtained with a telescope suspended from a balloon
 that circumnavigated the Antarctic at an altitude of almost 37
 kilometers (120,000 feet). A third team obtained high-resolution
 images with the Millimeter Anisotropy Experiment Imaging Array
 (MAXIMA), flown with a high-altitude balloon over the continental
 United States. The intricate images from the independent projects
 showed the very beginnings of structure in the universe and provided
 evidence for the prediction that the universe was "flat," a term
 that refers to the curvature of space.

 The inflation theory also predicted that the imprint of early
 structures would feature harmonic-like "peaks" in the temperature
 variations of the CMB. But detection of those features was beyond
 the ability of the technology until recently.

 The results reported at today's meeting by members of BOOMERANG
 and DASI appear to confirm the predicted peaks. The peaks were observed
 as variations in the temperature of the CMB as small as 100 millionths
 of a degree.

 MAXIMA data presented at the meeting are consistent with the existence
 of the peaks, as are the data of a fourth NSF-supported team, using
 the Cosmic Background Imager (CBI) at the California Institute of
 Technology. The CBI team reported their findings in the March 1 issue
 of the Astrophysical Journal.

 The DASI, BOOMERANG, MAXIMA, DASI and CBI projects are supported by NSF
 through NSF Science and Technology Centers, NSF's U.S. Antarctic Program,
 and individual grants. BOOMERANG and MAXIMA were also supported by NASA's
 National Scientific Balloon Facility, and BOOMERANG received support from
 the governments of Italy, the United Kingdom and Canada.

                                    -NSF-

 For more information see the individual project websites at:
 DASI - astro.uchicago.edu/dasi/
 BOOMERANG - www.physics.ucsb.edu/~boomerang/
 MAXIMA - cfpa.berkeley.edu/group/cmb/index.html
 CBI - www.astro.caltech.edu/~tjp/CBI/

 For background information on scientific research in Antarctica, see:
 www.nsf.gov/od/opp/antarct/usap.htm
 www.wff.nasa.gov/pages/scientificballoons.html

 For background on the cosmic microwave background, see:
 www.physics.ucsb.edu/~boomerang/press_images/cmbfacts/cmbfacts.html










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