In Chile's Atacama desert, stargazers search for alien life and 'dark
energy'
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[November 02, 2021]
By Jorge Vega and Fabian Cambero
ATACAMA DESERT, Chile (Reuters) - In
Chile's dry Atacama desert, stargazers are scanning the clear night
skies to detect the existence of life on other planets and study
so-called 'dark energy,' a mysterious cosmic force thought to be driving
the accelerating expansion of the universe.
Central to the race to peer into distant worlds is the Giant Magellan
Telescope (GMT), a $1.8 billion complex being built at the Las Campanas
observatory and which will have a resolution 10 times higher than the
Hubble space telescope.
The telescope, expected to begin operation by the end of the decade,
will compete with the European Southern Observatory's Extremely Large
Telescope - located further north in the same desert - as well as the
Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) being built in Hawaii.
"This new generation of giant telescopes is aimed precisely at detecting
life on other planets and to determine the origin of dark energy," said
Leopoldo Infante, director of the Las Campanas observatory.
"It's a race by these three groups for who makes it first and who makes
the first discovery."
Infante said the new giant telescope would be able to detect organic
molecules in the atmosphere of distant planets.
"That is the expectation," he said. "And whoever detects life on another
planet will win the Nobel Prize, I assure you."
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Technical Operations Manager Francesco di Mille sits inside a
telescope control room at 'Las Campanas' Observatory, located in the
Andes Mountains, in the Atacama Desert area, near Vallenar, Chile,
October 15, 2021. REUTERS/Pablo Sanhueza
The other prize is studying dark energy - separate
from the similarly enigmatic dark matter - which is considered to be
a property of space and is driving the universe's accelerated
expansion. It makes up a huge amount of the universe, but remains
mostly an unsolved mystery.
"There is an energy that is causing the universe to expand, but also
to accelerate that expansion," said Infante, adding scientists knew
that this energy must exist, though they did not understand its
origin.
"So this telescope is designed to be able to study precisely what is
called the dark energy of the universe, to be able to understand
physically what that energy is and where that energy comes from."
(Reporting by Jorge Vega and Fabian Cambero; Editing by Adam Jourdan
and Richard Chang)
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