> 
>  NASA And DOE Collaborate On Dark Energy Research
> 
> 
>  ScienceDaily (Nov. 19, 2008) — NASA and the U.S. Department of 
> Energy (DOE) have signed a memorandum of understanding for the 
> implementation of the Joint Dark Energy Mission, or JDEM. The 
> mission will feature the first space-based observatory designed 
> specifically to understand the nature of dark energy.
> 
>  Dark energy is a form of energy that pervades and dominates the 
> universe. The mission will measure with high precision the 
> universe's expansion rate and growth structure. Data from the 
> mission could help scientists determine the properties of dark 
> energy, fundamentally advancing physics and astronomy. 
> "Understanding the nature of dark energy is the biggest challenge 
> in physics and astronomy today," said Jon Morse, director of 
> astrophysics at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "JDEM will be a 
> unique and major contributor in our quest to understand dark energy 
> and how it has shaped the universe in which we live." One of the 
> most significant scientific findings in the last decade is that the 
> expansion of the universe is accelerating. The acceleration is 
> caused by a previously unknown dark energy that makes up 
> approximately 70 percent of the total mass energy content of the 
> universe. This mission has the potential to clarify the properties 
> of this mass energy. JDEM also will provide scientists with 
> detailed information for understanding how galaxies form and 
> acquire their mass. "DOE and NASA have complementary on-going 
> research into the nature of dark energy and complementary 
> capabilities to build JDEM, so it is wonderful that our agencies 
> have teamed for the implementation of this mission," said Dennis 
> Kovar, associate director of the DOE Office of Science for High 
> Energy Physics. In 2006, NASA and DOE jointly funded a National 
> Research Council study by the Beyond Einstein Program Assessment 
> Committee to assist NASA in determining the highest priority of the 
> five proposed missions in its Beyond Einstein program. In September 
> 2007, the committee released its report and noted that JDEM will 
> set the standard in precisely determining the distribution of dark 
> energy in the distant universe. The committee recommended that JDEM 
> be the first of NASA's Beyond Einstein missions to be developed and 
> launched. Following the committee's report, NASA and DOE agreed to 
> proceed with JDEM. The importance of understanding dark energy also 
> has been emphasized in a number of other significant reports from 
> the National Research Council, the National Science and Technology 
> Council, and the Dark Energy Task Force. For more information about 
> JDEM, including the signed memorandum of understanding, visit: 
> http://jdem.gsfc.nasa.gov 
> 
>  Adapted from materials provided by NASA.
> 
>  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/11/081119171826.htm
> 


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