Lightening up on dark matter

This image courtesy of Nasa shows the distribution of dark matter, galaxies, and hot gas in the core of the merging galaxy cluster. File photo: AFP

This image courtesy of Nasa shows the distribution of dark matter, galaxies, and hot gas in the core of the merging galaxy cluster. File photo: AFP

Published Apr 17, 2015

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London – Dark matter may not be so dark after all, after scientists witnessed the mysterious cosmic entity interacting with the universe around it in an entirely new way.

Despite accounting for an estimated 85 per cent of matter in the universe, dark matter has never been seen directly by any scientific instruments. Its existence has only been inferred by its gravitational effects.

But astronomers have now for the first time witnessed dark matter apparently “slowing down” after interacting with other dark matter – suggesting it is capable of engaging with a force other than gravity.

“We used to think that dark matter sits around, minding its own business. But if it slowed down during this collision, this could be the first dynamical evidence that dark matter notices the world around it,” said Richard Massey, of Durham University, who led the research. “Dark matter may not be completely 'dark' after all.”

Dark matter can only be detected indirectly by the way it bends the light of distant galaxies in a process known as gravitational lensing.

Exploiting this phenomenon, an international team of astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope took images of massive simultaneous collisions in deep space between four distant galaxies.

The researchers found that the dark matter associated with the colliding galaxies has become disconnected with this visible mass of colliding stars, suggesting that it has come under the influence of a force other than gravity, probably by interacting with itself. “The observations show that dark matter has ended up in a different place to the stars in the galaxy it was associated with,” Dr Massey said.

“It has become offset in some way, and that's pretty unusual.

“We've been trying to think of other things that would cause this offset and there's nothing else we can think of that would have this effect other than dark matter interacting with itself.

“This is the first step in figuring out what dark matter is. To see it behaving in this way is the first positive thing we've seen dark matter do,” he added.

An earlier study published last month examined the behaviour of dark matter during 72 “high speed” collisions of clusters containing thousands of galaxies. This suggested very little or no interaction between dark matter.

However, the latest study published today in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society examined the relatively slower speed collision of just four galaxies in a cluster known as Abell 3827, which took place over hundreds of millions of years.

The different nature of this collision means that even a very low level of interaction can eventually create a detectable lag between the galaxy's dark matter and its stars, which continued to collide, Dr Massey said. Professor Liliya Williams, of the University of Minnesota, a senior member of the team, said: “Our observation suggests that dark matter might be able to interact with more forces than just gravity. The parallel universe going on around us has just got more interesting. The dark sector could contain rich physics and potentially complex behaviour.”

Calculations suggest that the clump of dark matter associated with the cluster of four galaxies is offset in space by a distance of about 5,000 light years, equivalent to about 50,000 million million kilometres – a distance that would take Nasa Voyager spacecraft, the most distant man-made object, some 90 million years to travel.

 

The Independent

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