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Comment and Space

Why we shouldn't release all we know about the cosmos

By Stuart Clark

3 December 2009

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Europe’s Planck satellite will measure the big bang’s afterglow with unprecedented precision (Illustration: NASA)

COSMOLOGISTS are doing the happy dance. The European Space Agency’s Planck mission is busy surveying the cosmic microwave background, aka the “echo” of the big bang, and in 2013 will release a feast of data that promises to deliver profound new insights into the origin of the universe.

Surely a victory for science? Only, it seems, if cosmologists can resist the temptation to gorge themselves on all those goodies.

A trio of astronomers have warned that, unless we use the information sparingly, we risk squandering a…

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