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On Jan. 12, 1998, just before leaving for his honeymoon, astronomer Adam Riess e-mailed his colleagues that the universe appeared to be completely dark and utterly repulsive. Fortunately, he was talking about a matter of gravity. http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20080202/bob10.asp<br /><br /> <br /><br />NASA/STScI, E. Roell<br /> <br /><br />Riess was part of a team of astronomers viewing distant supernovas to study the expansion of the universe. Researchers have known since the 1920s that the universe is expanding, with distant galaxies fleeing from each other at a rate proportional to their distance. That expansion, driven by the energy released during the Big Bang, ought to have been decelerating ever since, braked by the mutual gravity of all the matter in the cosmos. <br /><br />But that's not what Riess, along with astronomers from a rival team, had found. Instead of slowing, cosmic expansion was speeding up. Gravity had somehow transformed from an attractor to a repeller, forcing matter to fly apart at an ever-faster rate. <br /><br />"I still recall feeling very excited—excited that it was true and also very anxious, because most things you discover in science are wrong," says Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore. <br /><br />But with another team, led by Saul Perlmutter of the Lawrence Berkeley (Calif.) National Laboratory, coming to the same conclusion, astronomers had to accept—and even embrace—the notion that gravity has a flip side. <br /><br />Some kind of invisible, mysterious substance—which University of Chicago cosmologist Michael Turner dubbed dark energy—fills the universe, turning gravity's pull into a comic push. This mystery material, thought to pervade all of space, comprises 74 percent of the universe's mass and energy. <br /><br />Understanding dark energy "is the most profound problem in all of science," says Turner. Solving it even might unite qua