Dark matter is an undetected form of matter that accounts for approximately 25% of the mass-energy content of the universe. Its existence and properties are inferred through its gravitational effects on visible matter such as the orbital speeds of stars in galaxies and the movement of galaxies in galaxy clusters. These observations indicate much more mass is present than accounted for by visible matter alone. The nature and composition of dark matter remains unknown but the leading hypothesis is that it consists of weakly interacting massive particles.
Dark matter is an undetected form of matter that accounts for approximately 25% of the mass-energy content of the universe. Its existence and properties are inferred through its gravitational effects on visible matter such as the orbital speeds of stars in galaxies and the movement of galaxies in galaxy clusters. These observations indicate much more mass is present than accounted for by visible matter alone. The nature and composition of dark matter remains unknown but the leading hypothesis is that it consists of weakly interacting massive particles.
Dark matter is an undetected form of matter that accounts for approximately 25% of the mass-energy content of the universe. Its existence and properties are inferred through its gravitational effects on visible matter such as the orbital speeds of stars in galaxies and the movement of galaxies in galaxy clusters. These observations indicate much more mass is present than accounted for by visible matter alone. The nature and composition of dark matter remains unknown but the leading hypothesis is that it consists of weakly interacting massive particles.
Dark matter is an undetected form of matter that accounts for approximately 25% of the mass-energy content of the universe. Its existence and properties are inferred through its gravitational effects on visible matter such as the orbital speeds of stars in galaxies and the movement of galaxies in galaxy clusters. These observations indicate much more mass is present than accounted for by visible matter alone. The nature and composition of dark matter remains unknown but the leading hypothesis is that it consists of weakly interacting massive particles.
Some say in ice. From what Ive tasted of desire I hold with those who favor fire. But if it had to perish twice, I think I know enough of hate To say that for destruction ice Is also great And would suffice. -- Robert Frost Dark Matter An undetected form of mass that emits little or no light but whose existence we infer from its gravitational influence. Evidence for its existence dates from the 1930s and is very solid. Dark Energy An unknown form of energy that seems to be the source of a repulsive force causing the expansion of the universe to accelerate. Evidence for its existence was found only ~10 years ago, and it is much less well-understood. Although these have similar sounding names, they refer to two very different things, which have been identified by very different means. Unseen (Dark) Influences in the Cosmos Normal Matter: ~ 4.4% Normal matter inside stars: ~ 0.6% Normal matter outside stars: ~ 3.8% Dark Matter: ~ 25% We have some good candidates for this. Dark Energy ~ 71% This is a big mystery. Contents of Universe (by Mass) Evidence for Dark Matter What is the observational evidence for dark matter? Does dark matter really exist? What might dark matter be made of? Observational Evidence for Dark Matter Any non-luminous component of the Universe can only be detected indirectly, by its gravtitational influence on the luminous (light-emitting) components. Many lines of evidence Orbits of stars in galaxies. Motions of galaxies in galaxy clusters. Hot gas in galaxy clusters. Gravitational lensing. We can measure an objects mass from the orbital period & avg distance of bodies in orbit around it. Ex: Find mass of J upiter based on its moons orbits. This comes from Newtons form of Keplers Third Law, which can be rewritten as: So by measuring the orbital velocity & separation, we can determine the total mass enclosed by the orbit. Measuring masses using gravity v = orbital velocity r = average orbital separation M enc = mass enclosed by orbit G = gravitational constant M enc = v r 2 G How do we measure the mass of the Galaxy? Measuring the Suns orbital motion (radius and velocity) gives us the mass inside Suns orbit: ~1.0 x 10 11 M sun . Note that we cannot measure the mass outside of the Suns orbit in this fashion. Determining the masses of galaxies For spiral galaxies, we use the 21-cm emission line of hydrogen gas clouds to trace orbital motions. (We also can & do use stellar motions, but gas clouds can be found out to larger distances.) We use a galaxys rotation curve to determine the total amount of mass as a function of separation from the center. Measuring masses of spiral galaxies Use the 21-cm emission line of hydrogen gas clouds to trace orbital motions. (Can also use stellar motions, but gas clouds are found to larger distances.) Measure the galaxys rotation curve to determine the total mass as a function of separation from the center. Rotation curve = a plot of velocity versus orbital radius. Ex: Merry go-round. Who has the largest orbital velocity? A, B, or C? Rotation curve of merry-go-round rises with radius. Rotation curve = a plot of velocity versus orbital radius. Solar systems rotation curve declines because the Sun has almost all the mass. Rotation curves measure the mass distribution The stars in the Milky Way go out to a radius of ~50,000 light-yrs. If the stars represented all the mass in the galaxy, then the rotation curve would decline at large separations. But it doesnt ! Most of the Milky Ways mass seems to be some kind of unidentified, invisible (dark) matter!! Spiral galaxies all tend to have flat rotation curves indicating large amounts of dark matter. The visible portion of a galaxy lies deep in the heart of a large halo of dark matter. The total mass in dark matter is about 10x more than in visible material (e.g. stars!!) The true mass distribution of galaxies Elliptical galaxies have very little gas, so cant use 21-cm H line. Use broadening of stellar spectral lines in elliptical galaxies tells us how fast the stars are orbiting These galaxies also have dark matter Measuring mass in elliptical galaxies We can measure the velocities of galaxies in a cluster from their Doppler shifts. The mass we find from galaxy motions in a cluster is about 50 times larger than the mass in stars! Measuring mass in galaxy clusters: Method 1 98% of the mass is not visible in this image! Clusters contain large amounts of very hot Xray emitting gas. Temperature of this hot gas measures the clusters mass, because the gas has to be held in the cluster by gravity (hydrostatic equilibrium). We find: 85% dark matter 13% hot gas 2% stars Measuring mass in galaxy clusters: Method 2 Chandra X-ray image of a cluster of galaxies showing optical galaxies and x-ray gas components. Gravitational lensing, the bending of light rays by gravity, can also tell us a clusters mass. Measuring mass in galaxy clusters: Method 3 General Relativity (GR) is our best theory of gravity. GR treats mass as a curvature of spacetime. Light (photons) travel along null geodesics in this curved spacetime(much like airlines take the shortest routes along great circles along the curved surface of our spherical globe). Therefore mass concentrations can bend light and focus it much like an optical lens. This is a confirmed prediction of GR. Gravitational lenses (and dark matter) are ubiquitous Gravitational LensingArcs in massive clusters of galaxies All three methods of measuring cluster mass indicate similar amounts of dark matter So what is this stuff? Does dark matter really exist? 1. Dark matter really exists, and we are observing the effects of its gravitational attraction. OR 2. Something is wrong with our understanding of gravity, causing us to mistakenly infer the existence of dark matter. Because gravity is so well tested, most astronomers prefer option #1. What is dark matter? MACHOS or WIMPS Massive Compact Halo ObjectS Dead or failed stars in the halos of galaxies (brown dwarfs, white dwarfs, small black holes) Weakly Interacting Massive ParticleS Mysterious neutrino-like particles. 1. Ordinary Matter (MACHOs) Massive Compact Halo Objects: dead or failed stars in halos of galaxies 2. Extraordinary Matter (WIMPs) Weakly Interacting Massive Particles: mysterious neutrino-like particles What might dark matter be made of? MACHOs occasionally make other stars appear brighter through gravitational lensing. Observational Searches for MACHOS MACHOs occasionally make other stars appear brighter through gravitational lensing. but not enough lensing events seen to explain dark matter 1. Ordinary Dark Matter (MACHOs) Massive Compact Halo Objects: dead or failed stars in halos of galaxies 2. Extraordinary Dark Matter (WIMPs) Weakly Interacting Massive Particles: mysterious neutrino-like particles What might dark matter be made of? This is our best bet for the nature of dark matter. Theres not enough ordinary matter (protons, neutrons, electrons) to account for the measured amount of dark matter. WIMPs could be left over from Big Bang. Galaxy formation models involving WIMPs match observations of large-scale structure (whereas models involving other kinds of dark matter dont). Why Believe in WIMPs? Maps of galaxy positions show extremely large-scale structures: superclusters and voids (>1 billion light years across) Largest scales: distribution of galaxies seems almost uniform (consistent with the cosmological principle). Models show that gravity of dark matter pulls mass into denser regions Universe grows lumpier with time. Time in billions of years 0.5 2.2 5.9 8.6 13.7 Size of expanding box in millions of lt-yrs 13 35 70 93 140 Structures in galaxy maps look very similar to the ones found in models in which dark matter is WIMPs. Why worry about dark matter? (theres very little in the Solar System, its all on large scales) Because the fate of the Universe depends on it!