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The Universe Is Accelerating…and No One Knows Why

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REFERENCES
How black holes may be responsible for Dark Energy • How BLACK HOLES May be Responsible for DAR…
Is Dark Energy made of particles? • Is Dark ENERGY made of PARTICLES? The Quin…
What is Dark Energy made of? • What is Dark Energy made of? Quintessence?… CHAPTERS 0:00 The 70% mystery 0:58 How Dark Energy was discovered? 4:26 What could be causing Dark Energy? 6:58 Repulsive Gravity? 10:16 What is the energy made of? 11:56 Evolving Dark energy? Quintesssence 14:18 Could Dark Energy be a particle? 16:43 Could Black Holes cause Dark Energy? SUMMARY Dark energy is one of the greatest mysteries in modern physics. It appears to make up nearly 70% of the universe, yet scientists still do not know what it is. Unlike matter, it does not clump together. Unlike radiation, it does not dilute as space expands. Instead, it causes the expansion of the universe to accelerate, pushing galaxies apart faster over time. The discovery of this acceleration came in the late 1990s when astronomers measured distant Type Ia supernovae, which act as reliable “standard candles.” By comparing their brightness and redshift, researchers could determine how fast the universe expanded at different points in cosmic history. Instead of finding that gravity slowed expansion—as expected—they discovered the opposite: the universe was expanding faster and faster. This unexpected result led to the concept of dark energy, the unknown driver behind cosmic acceleration. One possible explanation is that dark energy is a cosmological constant, represented by the Greek letter lambda in Einstein’s equations. In this model, empty space itself contains a constant energy density known as vacuum energy. Quantum mechanics predicts that empty space is not truly empty; quantum fields constantly fluctuate, producing short-lived “virtual particles.” These fluctuations create energy even in a vacuum. Experiments like the Casimir effect provide evidence that vacuum energy is real. However, this explanation has a major problem. When physicists calculate vacuum energy using quantum theory, the predicted value is about 10¹²⁰ times larger than what observations of the universe allow. This enormous mismatch is widely considered the worst prediction in physics. In general relativity, cosmic acceleration can occur if the universe contains energy with negative pressure. In the Friedmann equation, expansion accelerates when pressure is sufficiently negative relative to energy density. Dark energy appears to have exactly this property, effectively producing a form of repulsive gravity that stretches spacetime. Another possibility is that dark energy is not constant but comes from a dynamic field known as quintessence. In quantum theory, fields can have particle-like excitations, meaning dark energy might correspond to extremely weakly interacting particles. If the strength of this field changes over time, the acceleration of the universe could grow stronger. In extreme scenarios, this could eventually lead to a catastrophic future known as the Big Rip, where galaxies, stars, atoms, and even spacetime itself are torn apart. A more speculative idea suggests a connection between supermassive black holes and dark energy. Some recent studies have observed that black holes appear to grow more massive over billions of years than expected from normal matter accretion alone. Researchers have proposed that black holes might somehow be linked to dark energy, though current evidence only shows a correlation and not a confirmed causal explanation. #darkenergy For now, dark energy remains an observed phenomenon with multiple possible explanations. Whether it is a property of empty space, a new field of physics, or something even deeper, it stands as one of the most profound open questions in cosmology.

CHAPTERS
0:00 The 70% mystery
0:58 How Dark Energy was discovered?
4:26 What could be causing Dark Energy?
6:58 Repulsive Gravity?
10:16 What is the energy made of?
11:56 Evolving Dark energy? Quintesssence
14:18 Could Dark Energy be a particle?
16:43 Could Black Holes cause Dark Energy?

SUMMARY
Dark energy is one of the greatest mysteries in modern physics. It appears to make up nearly 70% of the universe, yet scientists still do not know what it is. Unlike matter, it does not clump together. Unlike radiation, it does not dilute as space expands. Instead, it causes the expansion of the universe to accelerate, pushing galaxies apart faster over time.

The discovery of this acceleration came in the late 1990s when astronomers measured distant Type Ia supernovae, which act as reliable “standard candles.” By comparing their brightness and redshift, researchers could determine how fast the universe expanded at different points in cosmic history. Instead of finding that gravity slowed expansion—as expected—they discovered the opposite: the universe was expanding faster and faster. This unexpected result led to the concept of dark energy, the unknown driver behind cosmic acceleration.

One possible explanation is that dark energy is a cosmological constant, represented by the Greek letter lambda in Einstein’s equations. In this model, empty space itself contains a constant energy density known as vacuum energy. Quantum mechanics predicts that empty space is not truly empty; quantum fields constantly fluctuate, producing short-lived “virtual particles.” These fluctuations create energy even in a vacuum. Experiments like the Casimir effect provide evidence that vacuum energy is real.

Classical physics can explain quantum weirdness, study shows

When you throw a ball in the air, the equations of classical physics will tell you exactly what path the ball will take as it falls, and when and where it will land. But if you were to squeeze that same ball down to the size of an atom or smaller, it would behave in ways beyond anything that classical physics can predict.

Or so we’ve thought.

MIT scientists have now shown that certain mathematical ideas from everyday classical physics can be used to describe the often weird and nonintuitive behavior that occurs at the quantum, subatomic scale.

Particle thought to break physics followed rules all along, research reveals

A tiny discrepancy in particle physics has loomed for decades as an exciting possible crack in one of science’s most successful theories, hinting at unknown forces or quantum objects. Now, an international team led by a Penn State physicist has published the most precise study yet to reveal the discrepancy was a fluke in calculation, not nature.

More than half a century of measurements of a fundamental property of the muon—the more massive, short-lived cousin of the electron—did not line up with theoretical predictions, raising hopes that new physics might be behind the unexplained inconsistency.

In a paper published in the journal Nature, a team led by a Penn State researcher describes one of the most precise calculations ever performed in particle physics, showing that the Standard Model—the theory describing the known building blocks of matter—still holds.

Laser-plasma ‘mirror’ unlocks a new path to extreme light intensities

An international team of physicists has achieved a significant advance in laser science, demonstrating for the first time a practical route to dramatically boosting the intensity of high-power laser light.

The results, published in Nature, could unlock the route towards creating the most intense light ever produced in a laboratory, opening the door to experiments that probe the fundamental laws of physics by directly interacting light with the quantum vacuum.

The work was led by Professor Peter Norreys and Dr. Robin Timmis at the University of Oxford, working in close collaboration with Professor Brendan Dromey and Dr. Mark Yeung at Queen’s University Belfast, and scientists from the Science and Technology Facilities Council’s Central Laser Facility (CLF).

Quantum simulations that bypass resolution limits offer insights into high-temperature superconductivity

A new method developed at LMU overcomes fundamental resolution limits and may provide insights into high-temperature superconductivity. Physicist Dr. Sebastian Paeckel has developed a method that can be used to calculate spectral functions of complex quantum systems much more precisely than was possible previously. His approach reconstructs precise energy spectra without requiring lengthy calculations.

This reveals previously hidden details, as Paeckel reports in the journal Physical Review Letters. He conducts research at the Faculty of Physics at LMU and at the Munich Center for Quantum Science and Technology (MCQST).

Do decoherence, gravity, dark matter and dark energy all originate from quantum corrections?

Only about 5% of the universe is composed of normal matter that we can directly observe, while the remaining 95% is widely believed to consist of dark matter and dark energy. Paradoxically, however, the nature of these dark components remains unknown. Is this due to limitations in our observational capabilities, or does it reflect a more fundamental incompleteness in the classical laws of physics that have long underpinned our understanding of the universe?

In a recent study published in the International Journal of Modern Physics D, I proposed that dark matter and dark energy may not correspond to physically existing substances, but could instead emerge as effective phenomena arising from the quantum nature of gravity.

Soundwaves settle debate about elusive quantum particle

It was a head-spinning discovery. In 2018, researchers in Japan claimed to find concrete evidence of an elusive particle, a Majorana fermion, in a quantum spin liquid called ruthenium trichloride. Majoranas are highly sought-after by quantum materials scientists because when a pair are localized, or trapped, they can securely encode information and form a stable qubit—the building block of quantum computing.

Some researchers heralded the finding and used it to launch their own studies, while others believed the breakthrough—which was made by measuring what’s called the thermal Hall effect—was actually a mirage caused by defects in the material sample.

Cornell researchers have now waded into the debate and their findings, published in Nature, show both camps were wrong. By measuring the movement of sound waves rather than the flow of heat, the team discovered the thermal Hall effect was caused by rotating lattice vibrations called chiral phonons.

Why does life prefer one ‘hand’ over the other? New study points to electron spin

A team of scientists has identified a new physical mechanism that could help explain one of the most persistent mysteries in science: why life consistently uses one “handed” version of its molecules and not the other. In a new study led by Prof. Yossi Paltiel of the Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology at Hebrew University and Prof. Ron Naaman of the Weizmann Institute, researchers show that electron spin, a fundamental quantum property, can cause mirror-image molecules to behave differently during dynamic processes, even though they are otherwise identical. The work appears in Science Advances.

Many molecules essential to life come in two mirror-image forms, known as enantiomers. Chemically, these forms are nearly indistinguishable. Yet in living systems, only one version is typically used: amino acids are almost exclusively one type, while sugars follow the opposite pattern.

This phenomenon, known as homochirality, has puzzled scientists for more than a century. Existing explanations have struggled to account for why one specific version was selected globally.

Kyber ransomware gang toys with post-quantum encryption on Windows

A new Kyber ransomware operation is targeting Windows systems and VMware ESXi endpoints in recent attacks, with one variant implementing Kyber1024 post-quantum encryption.

Cybersecurity firm Rapid7 retrieved and analyzed two distinct Kyber variants in March 2026 during an incident response. Both variants were deployed on the same network, with one targeting VMware ESXi and the other focusing on Windows file servers.

“The ESXi variant is specifically built for VMware environments, with capabilities for datastore encryption, optional virtual machine termination, and defacement of management interfaces,” explains Rapid7.

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