‘This is huge, as big as it gets.’

Dennis Overbye:

Reaching back across 13.8 billion years to the first sliver of cosmic time with telescopes at the South Pole, a team of astronomers led by John M. Kovac of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics detected ripples in the fabric of space-time — so-called gravitational waves — the signature of a universe being wrenched violently apart when it was roughly a trillionth of a trillionth of a trillionth of a second old. They are the long-sought smoking-gun evidence of inflation, proof, Dr. Kovac and his colleagues say, that Dr. Guth was correct.

Inflation has been the workhorse of cosmology for 35 years, though many, including Dr. Guth, wondered whether it could ever be proved.

If corroborated, Dr. Kovac’s work will stand as a landmark in science comparable to the recent discovery of dark energy pushing the universe apart, or of the Big Bang itself. It would open vast realms of time and space and energy to science and speculation.

The Times piece I’m linking to above is a little longer, a little more jargon-y, but it includes this wonderful layman’s breakdown:

Click to enlarge.

This piece from The New Yorker’s Elements blog is a bit more, no pun intended, down to earth.

Either way—sounds like today is a big day. I’m sure it’ll be all over the evening news.

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