Will recreate the big explosion in the universe
At a physics conference that took place on Ecuador's Galapagot Island on June 21, international scientists said they would reproduce the immediate consequences of the Big Bang, to discover the mysteries of Space.
At a physics conference that took place on Ecuador's Galapagot Island on June 21, international scientists said they would reproduce the immediate consequences of the Big Bang, to discover the mysteries of Space.
Source: nasa
The conference organizer of the school said the scientific experiment will be carried out in Europe next year, in collaboration with US, Japanese and Russian scientists to increase the knowledge of energy science. dark and dark matter.
Scientists will create a collision between elements similar to what happened after the Big Bang one millisecond to understand the standard model of matter.
The universe is thought to have formed after a massive explosion about 12 to 14 billion years ago and has been expanding ever since, thanks to a mysterious energy called dark energy. It is known that until now, scientists have only understood 4% of the universe's energy and dark matter through a model of explosion regeneration.
The Galapagot Island conference was attended by scientists from many countries and regions around the world such as the US, Japan, Europe and Latin America.
- Identify the universe
- We live in the end of the universe
- Recreate the universe from the world's largest superconducting magnet
- Spectacular picture of the Big Bang
- Spectacular supernova explosions in the universe
- The forgotten model of Einstein predicts the end of the universe
- Development of the universe model before the Bigbang explosion
- The universe will have the largest ever explosion of two black holes
- Learn the beautiful universe through incredible photos
- The new discovery of cosmic explosion creates gold and platinum
Scientists discover a photon traveling back in time Is the moon also affected by the Covid-19 epidemic? NASA shuts down plasma device to save spacecraft 20.5 billion kilometers away Surprised to know the identity of the Russian missile debris 'hunter' A giant meteorite once crashed into Earth, 200 times larger than the meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs. Discovery suggests: Earth may escape after Sun turns into red giant ESA launches Hera spacecraft to study how to protect Earth A star will explode in 2024, visible to the naked eye