PDA

View Full Version : Hubble Telescope Finds Ring of Dark Matter


edit
15-05-2007, 09:04 PM
Hubble Telescope Finds Ring of Dark Matter

US astronomers on Tuesday presented the most solid proof yet of the existence of dark matter, a mysterious substance believed to make up more than a quarter of the universe.


http://www.physorg.com/newman/gfx/news/2-astronomersf.jpg

Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have discovered a ghostly ring of dark matter that formed long ago during a titanic collision between two massive galaxy clusters. The ring's discovery is among the strongest evidence yet that dark matter exists. Astronomers have long suspected the existence of the invisible substance as the source of additional gravity that holds together galaxy clusters. Such clusters would fly apart if they relied only on the gravity from their visible stars. Although astronomers don't know what dark matter is made of, they hypothesize that it is a type of elementary particle that pervades the universe. Credit: NASA

Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have discovered a ghostly ring of dark matter that formed long ago during a titanic collision between two galaxy clusters. Dark matter makes up most of the universe's material. Ordinary matter, which makes up stars and planets, comprises only a small percent of the universe's matter. The ring's discovery is among the strongest evidence yet that dark matter exists.

Astronomers have long suspected the existence of the invisible substance and theorized that it is the source of additional gravity that holds galaxy clusters together. Such clusters would fly apart if they relied only on the gravity from their visible stars. Although astronomers do not know what composes dark matter, they hypothesize that it is a type of elementary particle that pervades the universe.

"This is the first time we have detected dark matter as having a unique structure that is different from both the gas and the galaxies in the cluster," said astronomer M. James Jee of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. Jee is a member of the team that spotted the dark matter ring.

The ring, which measures 2.6 million light-years across, was found in the cluster CL0024+17, located 5 billion light-years from Earth. The team unexpectedly found the ring while it was mapping the distribution of dark matter within the cluster. Although astronomers cannot see dark matter, they can infer its existence in galaxy clusters by observing how its gravity bends the light of more distant background galaxies. During the team's analysis, they noticed a ripple in the mysterious substance, somewhat like the ripples created in a pond from a stone plopping into the water.

Jee said, "Although the invisible matter has been found before in other galaxy clusters, it has never been detected to be so largely separated from the hot gas and the galaxies that make up galaxy clusters. By seeing a dark matter structure that is not traced by galaxies and hot gas, we can study how it behaves differently from normal matter."

Jee explained, "I was annoyed when I saw the ring because I thought it was an artifact, which would have implied a flaw in our data reduction. I couldn't believe my result. But the more I tried to remove the ring, the more it showed up. It took more than a year to convince myself that the ring was real. I have looked at a number of clusters, and I haven't seen anything like this."

Curious about why the ring was in the cluster and how it had formed, Jee found previous research that suggested the cluster had collided with another cluster 1 to 2 billion years ago. The research, published in 2002 by Oliver Czoske of the Argelander-Institute for Astronomy at the University of Bonn, was based on spectroscopic observations of the cluster's three-dimensional structure. The study revealed two distinct groupings of galaxies clusters, indicating a collision between two clusters.

Astronomers have a head-on view of the collision because it occurred along Earth's line of sight. From this perspective, the dark-matter structure looks like a ring.

The team created simulations showing what happens when galaxy clusters collide. As the two clusters smash together, the dark matter, as calculated in the simulations, falls to the center of the combined cluster and sloshes back out. As the dark matter moves outward, it begins to slow down under the pull of gravity and pile up, like cars bunched up on a freeway.


"By studying this collision, we are seeing how dark matter responds to gravity," said team member Holland Ford, also of Johns Hopkins University. "Nature is doing an experiment for us that we can't do in a lab, and it agrees with our theoretical models."

Tracing dark matter is not an easy task because it does not shine or reflect light. Astronomers can detect its influence only by how its gravity affects light. To find dark matter, astronomers study how faint light from more distant galaxies is distorted and smeared into arcs and streaks by the gravity of the dark matter in a foreground galaxy cluster. This powerful phenomenon is called gravitational lensing. By mapping the distorted light, astronomers can deduce the cluster's mass and trace how dark matter is distributed in the cluster.

"The collision between the two galaxy clusters created a ripple of dark matter that left distinct footprints in the shapes of the background galaxies," Jee explained. "It's like looking at the pebbles on the bottom of a pond with ripples on the surface. The pebbles' shapes appear to change as the ripples pass over them. So, too, the background galaxies behind the ring show coherent changes in their shapes due to the presence of the dense ring."

Jee and his colleagues used Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys to look behind the cluster to detect the faint, distorted, faraway galaxies that cannot be resolved with ground-based telescopes. "Hubble's exquisite images and unparalleled sensitivity to faint galaxies make it the only tool for this measurement," said team member Richard White of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore.

Previously, observations of the Bullet Cluster with Hubble and the Chandra X-ray Observatory presented a sideways view of a similar encounter between two galaxy clusters. In that collision, the dark matter was pulled apart from the hot cluster gas, but the dark matter still followed the distribution of cluster galaxies. CL0024+17 is the first cluster to show a dark matter distribution that differs from the distribution of both the galaxies and the hot gas.

The team's paper has been accepted for publication in the June 1 issue of Astrophysical Journal.



Source: NASA
» Next Article in Physics - Physics: Mysteries and Surprises in Quantum Physics (http://www.physorg.com/news98378951.html)
May 15, 2007 http://www.physorg.com/news98450367.html

chicken_little
15-05-2007, 09:12 PM
It looks to me like that less luminescent ring is not from dark matter but from a circle of less light reflecting/producing entities in the area. Wouldn't dark matter make the things behind it appear less bright?

edit
16-05-2007, 10:05 AM
Astronomy Picture of the Day (http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html)
Dark Matter Ring Modeled around Galaxy Cluster CL0024+17
2007 May 16
Explanation: How do we know that dark matter isn't just normal matter exhibiting strange gravity? A new observation of gravitationally magnified faint galaxies far in the distance behind a massive cluster of galaxies is shedding new dark on the subject. The above detailed image from ...

« Space carnival at Fraser’s!
Skepticality interview » (http://www.badastronomy.com/bablog/2007/05/15/skepticality-interview-2/)

www.badastronomy.com (http://www.badastronomy.com/bablog/2007/05/15/hubble-finds-dark-matter-smoke-ring/)


Hubble finds dark matter smoke ring


I won’t waste your time by first writing a lot of words. Let’s get right to the way cool picture:


http://www.badastronomy.com/pix/bablog/2007/hst_darkmatter_ring.jpg

That image is of the galaxy cluster CL0024+1652 (go look at the higher resolution version — it’s very pretty!), (http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/screen/heic0709a.jpg) a galactic city located a whopping 5 billion light years away! That means the light we see from this cluster left it five billion years ago, so we’re seeing this structure as it was when the Universe was just 2/3 its present age. Almost every small object in that image is a galaxy, and all of them are held sway by the cluster’s gravity, orbiting the center like bees flying around a beehive.

It has long been thought that every large object in the Universe is surrounded by a halo of dark matter — unseen, mysterious, yet profoundly influential in the life of normal matter. Dark matter (or just DM for short) gives off no light, and does not interact with normal matter directly– a cloud of it could pass right through you and you’d never know. But, like regular old matter, it has gravity, and that can betray its presence.

I’ve gone over this before — Einstein postulated that gravity from matter bends space, like a bowling ball on a bed bends the mattress. Light will follow that bend in space the same way a marble rolled across the bed will curve from the bowling ball’s dip. If there is some massive object out there in space, and some galaxy beyond it, the light from the more distant galaxy will bend as it passes by the intervening material. We see that as a distortion in the shape of the galaxy. This is called gravitational lensing, and can be used to map out the location of dark matter. So even though we cannot see DM directly, we can see its effects.

Clusters are a rich hunting ground for DM: it’s thought that DM helped normal matter form into large structures when the Universe was young. So clusters should still have lots of DM around them. It was also thought that in general, the DM halo around clusters would be roughly spherical, or maybe slightly elongated like a football. More exotic shapes weren’t really expected.

Until now, that is. CL0024_1652 is surrounded by a ring of dark matter, as shown in that Hubble image! (http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/html/heic0709.html) (Update: this is also available at Hubblesite.org (http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2007/17/) ). Astronomers looked at the cluster, and very carefully mapped the distortions of background galaxies by the gravity of the cluster. What they found, after applying some fiendish math and physics to the observations, was that ghost ring of dark matter. Mind you, the image is not directly of the DM itself, but is a map of its location using those gravitational distortions. Here’s what the cluster looks like in just visible light:


http://www.badastronomy.com/pix/bablog/2007/hst_darkmatter_visible.jpg (http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/html/heic0709b.html)


If you look carefully at it (or grab a higher-res version) (http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/html/heic0709.html)you can see blue arcs of light all around it. Those are images of more distant galaxies distorted by the cluster’s gravity. It’s distortions similar (but weaker) than those that astronomers use to map to the DM.

This ring of dark matter is totally cool. When I first heard about it a few days ago, my first thought was, "Hmm, must have been some sort of collision between clusters to do that." Since DM doesn’t interact with normal matter except through gravity, I knew that there is no way for matter to sculpt the DM through the usual methods (pressure, winds, things like that which give gas clouds such gorgeous shapes). But sometimes, when a small galaxy collides with a big one, the gravitational interaction can totally whip the big galaxy into a frenzy, leaving it with a ring shape. My favorite example of this is Hoag’s object:

http://www.badastronomy.com/pix/bablog/2007/hoags_object.jpg (http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/screen/heic0709b.jpg)


That’s a single galaxy, though (if it were at the cluster distance, it would be just one of the dots in the cluster image). The DM ring around the cluster is far, far larger– it’s something like 2.6 million light years across! For comparison, our own Milky Way Galaxy is about 100,000 light years across. The nearest big spiral galaxy to us is over 2 million light years away, so that ring is BIG. Sometime in the past, maybe one or two billion years ago, the cluster suffered a mighty collision with another cluster, and their mutual gravitational dance puffed out the DM halo into that ring shape (you can see a diagram of this on the European Hubble website).

Interestingly, the astronomers who discovered the ring did some research and discovered a paper (http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2002A%26A...386...31C)claiming that the cluster did in fact have a collision with another cluster: it appears that there are two separate groupings of galaxies in the cluster, which implies a collision. Evidently, we are seeing this event along our line of sight; it’s as if the colliding cluster was aimed right at us (or, I suppose, directly away from us). From the side, the ring would look more rectangular, probably, like a barrel or a life preserver seen from the side. It just so happens that our location gives this event its dramatic appearance.

This ring will prove important to astronomers for many reasons. For one, it gives us insight on how dark matter can be shaped by normal matter. We don’t understand the nature of DM very well at all, so anything like this can only be helpful in honing the theories. For another, this is a bright, dense, well-observed cluster, so we can learn quite a bit about it. The more we understand the cluster, the less we have to guess about its DM halo. For a third, this is the first time a halo of DM has been seen to be so differently shaped from the gas and other mass in the cluster. It can be studied separately from the normal matter, making that task in some ways easier.

And the best thing about it? It’s unexpected! Surprise! It’s always nice in science when things go your way, and predictions pan out. But it’s even better when you process the data, and a big fat bogie like this is sitting in the middle of it. That means there’s more to learn, more to know, more to understand. And that’s the very essence of science!

____________________________________

This entry was posted on Tuesday, May 15th, 2007 at 9:01 amand is filed under Cool stuff, Science, Astronomy, NASA, Pretty pictures. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
____________________________________


http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/medium/heic0709c.jpg

http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/html/heic0709c.html
http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/html/heic0709.html