Interactions News Wire #68-06
21 August 2006
http://www.interactions.org
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Source: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
Content: Press Release
Date Issued: 21 August 2006
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Contact Information:
Neil Calder, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center: 1 (650) 926-8707,
neil.calder@slac.stanford.edu
This press release, with images, is available online at:
http://home.slac.stanford.edu/pressreleases/2006/20060821.htm
DARK MATTER OBSERVED
Most Direct Measurement of Dark Matter Allows Study of its Nature
Dark matter, the illusive stuff that makes up a quarter of the universe,
has been seen in isolation for the first time. Marusa Bradac of the Kavli
Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (KIPAC), located at the
Department of Energy's Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), and her
colleagues made the landmark observations by studying a galaxy cluster 3
billion light years away.
"We had predicted the existence of dark matter for decades, but now we've
seen it in action," said Bradac. "This is groundbreaking."
Dark matter is fundamentally different from normal matter. It is
invisible using modern telescopes because it gives off no light or heat,
and it appears to interact with other matter only gravitationally. In
contrast, luminous matter is everything commonly associated with the
universe: the galaxies, stars, gas and planets.
Past observations have shown that only a very small percentage of mass in
the universe can be explained by regular matter. The new research is the
first to detect luminous matter and dark matter independent of one
another, with the luminous matter clumped together in one region and the
dark matter clumped together in another. These observations demonstrate
that there are two types of matter: one visible and one invisible.
The results also support the theory that the universe contains five times
more dark matter than luminous matter. "A universe that's dominated by
dark stuff seems preposterous, so we wanted to test whether there were any
basic flaws in our thinking," said the University of Arizona's Doug Clowe,
one of the study's key collaborators. "We believe these results prove that
dark matter exists."
The research is based on observations of a remarkable cosmic structure
called the bullet cluster. This structure is actually two clusters of
galaxies passing through one another. As the two clusters cross at a
speed of 10 million miles per hour, the luminous matter in each cluster
interacts with the luminous matter in the other cluster and slows down.
But the dark matter in each cluster does not interact at all, passing
right through without disruption. This difference in interaction causes
the dark matter to sail ahead of the luminous matter, separating each
cluster into two components: dark matter in the lead and luminous matter
lagging behind.
To detect this separation of dark and luminous matter, researchers
compared x-ray images of the luminous matter with measurements of the
cluster's total mass. To learn the total mass, they took measurements of
a phenomenon called gravitational lensing, which occurs when the cluster's
gravity distorts light from background galaxies. The greater the
distortion, the more massive the cluster.
By measuring these distortions with the Hubble Space Telescope, the
Magellan Telescopes and the Very Large Telescope, the team mapped out the
location of all the mass in the bullet cluster. They then compared these
measurements to x-ray images of the luminous matter taken with the Chandra
X-ray Observatory and discovered four separate clumps of matter: two large
clumps of dark matter speeding away from the collision, and two smaller
clumps of luminous matter trailing in their wake.
The spatial separation of the clumps proves that two types of matter
exist, while the extreme difference in their behavior shows the exotic
nature of dark matter.
These measurements are compelling," said KIPAC Director Roger Blandford.
"The direct demonstration that dark matter has the properties inferred on
the basis of indirect arguments shows that we are on the right track in
our quest to understand the structure of the universe."
This research will be published in forthcoming issues of the Astrophysical
Journal and the Astrophysical Journal Letters. In addition to Bradac of
the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (KIPAC), team
members include Douglas Clowe and Dennis Zaritsky of the University of
Arizona's Steward Observatory, Anthony Gonzalez of the University of
Florida, Maxim Markevitch, Scott Randall, Christine Jones and William
Forman of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Tim Schrabback
of the University of Bonn, and Phil Marshall of KIPAC. Support for this
work was provided by the National Science Foundation and NASA. This
project was also partially supported by the Department of Energy through
the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center.