NASA And DOE Collaborate On Dark Energy Research

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Nov. 19, 2008

Dwayne Brown 
Headquarters, Washington                           
202-358-1726 
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx 

Jeff Sherwood 
DOE Headquarters, Washington 
202-586-5806 
jeff.sherwood@xxxxxxx 
RELEASE: 08-300

NASA AND DOE COLLABORATE ON DARK ENERGY RESEARCH

WASHINGTON -- 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 

	
-end-



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