The international group of researchers, including researchers from the University of Cambridge, is led by the US Department of Energy’s Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. Cambridge and the other five UK universities are supported by the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC).
Combining multiple, independent measurements of the cosmos, the research doubles the precision of previous Dark Energy Survey (DES) studies, while remaining broadly consistent with the standard model of cosmology, the most widely accepted theory of the universe.
The findings combine results from 18 separate studies and, for the first time, bring together four major techniques for studying dark energy within a single experiment, a milestone envisioned when DES was conceived 25 years ago.
The combination of these techniques - weak gravitational lensing (distortions in galaxy shapes), galaxy clustering, supernovae and galaxy clusters – enabled scientists to cross-check their measurements and gain a more robust understanding of how the universe behaves.
Around 100 years ago, scientists discovered that distant galaxies appeared to be moving away from Earth. They found that the further away a galaxy is, the faster it recedes, providing the first key evidence that the universe is expanding.
Researchers initially expected that this expansion would slow down over time due to gravity. However, in 1998, observations of distant supernovae revealed that the universe’s expansion is accelerating rather than slowing down.
To explain this result, scientists proposed the idea of dark energy, which is now thought to drive the universe’s accelerated expansion.
Astrophysicists believe dark energy makes up about 70% of the mass-energy content of the universe, yet we still know very little about it.
The Dark Energy Survey is an international collaboration of more than 400 astrophysicists, astronomers and cosmologists from over 35 institutions, including several from the UK. It is led by the US Department of Energy’s Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.
The other UK universities involved in the collaboration are University College London, University of Edinburgh, University of Nottingham, University of Portsmouth and University of Sussex.
Through STFC, the UK is also supporting research programmes that will advance the work of the DES collaboration in the next generation of astronomical surveys, including Vera C. Rubin Observatory, currently under construction in Chile.
“This research shows the power of long-term international collaboration and UK investment in world-leading science,” said Professor Michele Dougherty, Executive Chair, STFC. “Dark energy remains one of the great unanswered questions in science. Studies like this demonstrate how bringing together different approaches can give us a clearer picture of our universe and where future discoveries may lie.”
To study dark energy, the DES collaboration carried out a deep, wide-area survey of the sky between 2013 and 2019, using a specially constructed 570-megapixel Dark Energy Camera mounted on a telescope at the US National Science Foundation’s Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile.
“This release squeezes an enormous amount of information out of subtle distortions in galaxy images, turning tiny signals into a powerful test of how the Universe works,” said DES team member Calvin Preston, from Cambridge’s Institute of Astronomy. “My role focused on baryonic feedback—understanding and modelling how processes like star formation and energy from supermassive black holes redistribute matter and subtly reshape the large-scale structure we measure. The results are so exciting as we’ve been able to learn so much about the universe and about galaxies themselves.”
Over six years, scientists collected images and data from hundreds of millions of distant galaxies, billions of light-years from Earth, mapping about one-eighth of the sky.
For the latest results, scientists refined how they use subtle distortions in galaxy shapes, known as weak gravitational lensing, to reconstruct the distribution of matter in the universe over six billion years. They did this by measuring both how galaxies cluster together and how similarly their shapes are distorted by gravity.
By reconstructing the universe’s matter distribution across six billion years, these measurements reveal how dark energy and dark matter have influenced the universe’s evolution.
The team compared their observations with two main theories, one in which dark energy remains constant over time (the standard model of cosmology), and another in which dark energy changes as the universe evolves.
DES found that although the data mostly align with the standard model, broadly agreeing with the most widely accepted theory of the universe, there remains a long-standing discrepancy in how matter clusters in the universe, and this has become more pronounced with the inclusion of the full dataset.
Looking ahead, DES will combine these latest findings with results from other dark energy experiments to explore and test alternative ideas about gravity and dark energy.
The work also helps prepare the ground for future breakthroughs at the upcoming Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile for similar work with its Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST).
Calvin Preston is a Member of Robinson College, Cambridge.
Adapted from an STFC media release.
Scientists at the Dark Energy Survey have published their most detailed explanation yet of how the universe has expanded over the last six billion years, thanks to an unprecedented combination of cosmic measurements.
Fermilab via Wikimedia CommonsVictor M. Blanco Telescope in Chile
The text in this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Images, including our videos, are Copyright ©University of Cambridge and licensors/contributors as identified. All rights reserved. We make our image and video content available in a number of ways – on our main website under its Terms and conditions, and on a range of channels including social media that permit your use and sharing of our content under their respective Terms.
YesLicence type: Attribution
Friday 13 February 2026
Cambridge - 21 days ago
Scientists release the most detailed analysis yet on the expansion of the universe
House, Senate committees advance bills to establish NIL framework for UH student-athletes
- Hawai’i at MānoaEmory School of Nursing to launch a new health professions program, the Master of Science in Clinical Nutrition
- EmoryEmory University Hospital Midtown designated a Level III Neonatal Center, the first in metro Atlanta
- EmoryForeign Interference in Canada’s Democracy: What are we doing about it? with Dr. Lori Turnbull
- Queen’sDegree apprentice Evie has her eyes on moving up the marketing ladder thanks to new University of Northampton course
- NorthamptonTwo professors receive grants from Schmidt Sciences to use AI to accelerate humanities research
- PrincetonSpreading her professional wings: Laura ‘counts’ the benefits of an apprenticeship in Accounting and Finance with University of Northampton
- NorthamptonRiconoscimenti internazionali: Flavia Manzo Margiotta, dottoranda in Medicina Traslazionale, ha ricevuto il Young Investigator Award all’European Hidradenitis Suppurativa Foundation (EHSF) Congress
- Sant’AnnaStudent Friends of the Princeton University Library: Visit to Friends Private Collections in New York City
- PrincetonSeven-day injectable, daily tablet buprenorphine equally effective for ED patients with opioid use disorder
- YaleUConn Professor Sir Cato T. Laurencin Attends The World Academy of Sciences Conference
- Connecticut
New Line of Bovine Embryonic Stem Cells Shows Promise for Lab-Grown Meat, Biomedical Applications
- Connecticut
Olympic officiating: Western staff member leads women’s hockey refs at 2026 Winter Games
- Western Ontario
University of Ouagadougou - QS World University Rankings - Sub-Saharan Africa 2026
- topuniversities
Universite Marien Ngouabi - QS World University Rankings - Sub-Saharan Africa 2026
- topuniversities
Governance d’impresa e gestione dei rischi: a Roma un convegno sugli adeguati assetti organizzativi per le piccole e medie imprese
- Sant’AnnaThe Erosion of Opposition to Hate Crimes against Religious Minorities in the United States
- PrincetonN.J. Legislature marks its 250th anniversary with ceremonial session and ‘return home’ to Princeton’s Nassau Hall
- Princeton Barcelona
Copenhagen
Gordon
Aberdeen
acenet
Agricultural Sciences
Alabama
Arizona
Autonomous
Bath
Bergen
Bern
Bloomington
Boston
Bozen-Bolzano
Brandeis
Buffalo
Calgary
Cambridge
Central European
Charité
Chester
Colorado Boulder
Connecticut
Copenhagen
Duisburg-Essen
Duke
Dundee
École
Eindhoven
Emory
Estadual de Campinas
Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Florida
Frankfurt am Main
Galway
Geneva
Goethe
Groningen
Harvard
Hawai’i at Mānoa
Hong Kong
Hongkong
Imperial
James Cook
Keele
Kingston
KTH
Laval
Leiden
Liège
Liverpool
Lomonosov Moscow
Luxembourg
Macquarie
Mancunion
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
MMU
Montreal
Nacional de Colombia
Newcastle
Northampton
Nuremberg
Ohio
Ottawa
Oxford
Paris-Sud
Princeton
Purdue
qswownews
Quaid-i-Azam
Queensland
Queen’s
Radboud
Riverside
Ruhr
Rush
Rutgers
RWTH Aachen
Santa Barbara
Santa Cruz
Sant’Anna
São Paulo
Sciences Po
Scuola
SOAS
South Australia
South Florida
Southampton
St-andrews
St. Louis
Stanford
Stirling
Stockholm
Stony Brook
Stuttgart
Surrey
Sussex
SUU
Swansea
Sydney
Syracuse
Texas
Texas A&M
Texas at Dallas
Tokyo
topuniversities
Trento
Tufts
Ulm
USnews/Education
Utah
Utrecht
Wageningen
Waikato
Warwick
Waseda
Washington
Western Australia
Western Ontario
Wilhelms-University Munster
William & Mary
Wollongong
Würzburg
Yale
Yeshiva
⁞
Copenhagen
Gordon
Aberdeen
acenet
Agricultural Sciences
Alabama
Arizona
Autonomous
Bath
Bergen
Bern
Bloomington
Boston
Bozen-Bolzano
Brandeis
Buffalo
Calgary
Cambridge
Central European
Charité
Chester
Colorado Boulder
Connecticut
Copenhagen
Duisburg-Essen
Duke
Dundee
École
Eindhoven
Emory
Estadual de Campinas
Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Florida
Frankfurt am Main
Galway
Geneva
Goethe
Groningen
Harvard
Hawai’i at Mānoa
Hong Kong
Hongkong
Imperial
James Cook
Keele
Kingston
KTH
Laval
Leiden
Liège
Liverpool
Lomonosov Moscow
Luxembourg
Macquarie
Mancunion
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
MMU
Montreal
Nacional de Colombia
Newcastle
Northampton
Nuremberg
Ohio
Ottawa
Oxford
Paris-Sud
Princeton
Purdue
qswownews
Quaid-i-Azam
Queensland
Queen’s
Radboud
Riverside
Ruhr
Rush
Rutgers
RWTH Aachen
Santa Barbara
Santa Cruz
Sant’Anna
São Paulo
Sciences Po
Scuola
SOAS
South Australia
South Florida
Southampton
St-andrews
St. Louis
Stanford
Stirling
Stockholm
Stony Brook
Stuttgart
Surrey
Sussex
SUU
Swansea
Sydney
Syracuse
Texas
Texas A&M
Texas at Dallas
Tokyo
topuniversities
Trento
Tufts
Ulm
USnews/Education
Utah
Utrecht
Wageningen
Waikato
Warwick
Waseda
Washington
Western Australia
Western Ontario
Wilhelms-University Munster
William & Mary
Wollongong
Würzburg
Yale
Yeshiva