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ANU astronomer Professor Brian
Schmidt has topped a prestigious list of Australia's top
scientists for his research into the expansion of the universe.
He was number one of the nation's top ten scientists according to
an expert panel brought together by The Bulletin
magazine for its 2004 Smart 100 issue. (Photo courtesy of The Bulletin)
Professor Schmidt led an international project called the High-Z
SN Search that found the expansion of the universe was speeding
up, not slowing down (the commonly held view). The project involved
studying a class of exploding stars called Type1a supernovae.
Because the exploding star is so far away it offers the
first tantalising observational evidence that gravity was once slowing
down the universe's expansion, but now has been overcome by a
repulsive form of matter or Dark Energy, according to
Professor Schmidt.
Before the research led by Professor Schmidt, it had been assumed the
universe was dominated by gravitating matter. But the High-Z SN Search
indicated that only a quarter of the universe gravitates, with the
other three-quarters made up of the repulsive anti-gravity.
According to The Bulletin: [Professor
Schmidt] led and international astronomical survey which confirmed
that a mysterious anti-gravity [first proposed
by Albert Einstein] force permeates the universe
and he
predicts the universe will go on expanding forever.
Professor Schmidt completed his PhD in astronomy at Harvard University
in 1993 and in 1995 took up a postdoctoral fellowship at the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics (RSAA),
based at Mt Stromlo Observatory (MSO).
He is currently an Australian Research
Council Professorial Fellow at Mt Stromlo Observatory.
His primary research interest
is in exploding stars known as supernovae, integral to his research
into the expansion of the universe, but also in the gamma ray bursts,
dark matter and distant asteroids.
Most recently at ANU, Professor Schmidt has led the team designing the
new hi-tech SkyMapper telescope (being built
at Siding Spring Observatory (SSO)) and
will lead the Southern Sky
Survey the first complete map of the Southern sky.
The fully automated $11 million telescope will map the sky faster than
any other telescope in the world, implementing a unique design devised
jointly by the research team at the University's Mt Stromlo
Observatory and Queanbeyan company, Electro Optic Systems Pty Ltd.
Every minute it operates, the SkyMapper will be able to
image a patch of sky five square degrees in area 25 times
the size of the full moon at a depth 1 million times
fainter than the human eye can attain, Professor Schmidt
said.
The survey will be used by astronomers across Australia
and around the world in a wide range of astronomy projects including
identifying the most distant objects known in the universe
quasars, spotting nearby asteroids and pinpointing the
first stars to have formed in our Galaxy.
Further Information
Tim Winkler Media Liaison Tel: 02 6125 5001 / 0416 249 231 Email: Tim.Winkler@anu.edu.au
Amanda Morgan Media Liaison Tel: 02 6125 5575 / 0416 249 245 Email: Amanda.Morgan@anu.edu.au
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