Dark Matter - astronomy.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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observed, and the measured frequency of such events has placed limits on how much dark matter can take the form of MACHOs.
From the observations that have beenmade by astronomers, it is now known that MACHOs cannot be the dominant constituent of dark matter.
There are simply not enough such gravitational lenses.
Physicists suspect that a more exotic form of cold dark matter must exist.
This form is not baryonic.
Like neutrinos, this form barely interacts with ordinary matter, butis some type of massive particle.
Such candidates are often called WIMPs (for “weakly interacting massive particles”).
Various theories of the fundamental elementary particles and their interactions in nature predict the existence of new particles that have not yet been discovered.
Thesehypothetical particles are excellent candidates for WIMPs.
For example, supersymmetric theories propose that a new fundamental symmetry of nature was presentwhen the universe was very young and energetic.
If this symmetry existed in the past, it requires the hypothetical particles to exist.
The symmetry would havedisappeared as a result of natural dynamical effects as the universe aged and became less energetic.
See also Theory of Everything; Unified Field Theory.
As a result we do not observe this symmetry today.
The loss of symmetry over time is very similar to what happens as water freezes and turns to ice as it is cooled.Water is more symmetrical than ice since its molecules point in all directions in space, whereas ice forms a crystal lattice with the molecules pointing in the preferreddirections of the lattice.
As the universe expands, it also cools, and this can give rise to the disappearance of important symmetries in later epochs.
IV FUTURE EXPERIMENTS
The supersymmetric theories predict that relics of the earlier, more symmetric phase of the universe exist and that they exist in the form of a very specific family ofmassive particles.
New experiments, such as those planned for the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), a particle accelerator at the European Organization for NuclearResearch (CERN) in Switzerland, are expected to be able to test some of these theories.
The experiments will try to create the predicted particles directly, using theenergetic collisions produced in the LHC.
If the particles are discovered, the LHC and other proposed experiments will systematically study their properties to determineif they are indeed the sought-after principal components of dark matter.
This type of dark matter would be the key agent of structure formation that gave rise to thegalaxies and clusters of galaxies that constitute our home in the universe.
In 2006 astronomers announced what may be the first direct evidence for dark matter in the cosmos, based on observations from the Chandra X-Ray Observatorytelescope, the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and advanced telescopes on Earth.
A collision between two clusters of galaxies over 4 billion light-years away apparentlycaused visible matter and dark matter to separate on a gigantic scale.
Huge gas clouds between and around the galaxies in each group smashed together as the twoclusters raced past each other, heating the gas to a plasma state and dragging it away from the dark matter halos thought to surround the galaxies.
The massivepresence of dark matter was detected by gravitational lensing that bent the light from more-distant background galaxies in the telescopes’ line of sight.
The findingsappear to support theories that dark matter exists and that gravity behaves the same in giant clusters of galaxies as it does on Earth.
In early 2007 an international team of astronomers published the results of the first search for dark matter in a wide region of the sky using high-resolution imagesfrom the HST.
Findings from the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) conducted with the HST were used to create a three-dimensional map that shows the distributionof dark matter through periods of time as far back as 6.5 billion years ago, almost halfway to the big bang.
The scientists studied the shapes of half a million galaxies tofind distortions in their apparent shapes caused by gravitational lensing around large concentrations of mass lying between very distant galaxies and Earth.
Suchconcentrations of mass indicate the presence of dark matter.
The new map reveals how areas of dark matter provided the scaffolding for clusters of galaxies made ofvisible matter.
The galaxies accumulated in the densest regions of dark matter as gravity gradually drew the dark matter into more compact filaments that form amassive networklike structure.
Contributed By:Clifford V.
JohnsonMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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