Using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to look at the distribution of
dark matter around galaxies, astronomers at the University of
Pennsylvania shed new light on one of the most mysterious substances in
the universe.
In the 1970s, researchers noticed something strange about the motion
of galaxies. All the matter at the edge of spiral galaxies was rotating
just as fast as material in the inner part of the galaxy. But according
to the laws of gravity, objects on the outskirts should be moving
slower.
The explanation: A form of matter called dark matter that does not
directly interact with light. Many researchers now believe that more
than 80 percent of the matter of the universe is locked away in
mysterious, as yet undetected, particles of dark matter, which affect
everything from how objects move within a galaxy to how galaxies and
galaxy clusters clump together in the first place. This dark matter
extends far beyond the reach of the furthest stars in the galaxy,
forming what researchers call a dark matter halo. While stars within the
galaxy all rotate in a neat, organized disk, these dark matter
particles are like a swarm of bees, moving chaotically in random
directions, which keeps them puffed up to balance the inward pull of
gravity.
Bhuvnesh Jain, a physics professor in Penn’s School of Arts &
Sciences, and postdoc Eric Baxter are conducting research that could
give new insights into the structure of these halos. They investigated
whether these dark matter halos have an edge or boundary.
“People have generally imagined a pretty smooth transition from the
matter bound to the galaxy to the matter between galaxies, which is also
gravitationally attracted to the galaxies and clusters,” Jain said.
“But theoretically, using computer simulations a few years ago,
researchers at the University of Chicago showed that for galaxy clusters
a sharp boundary is expected, providing a distinct transition that we
should be able to see through a careful analysis of the data.”
Scientists believe that this region, or “edge” is due
to the “splashback effect.” “You have this big dark matter halo sitting
there,” Baxter said, “and it’s been accreting matter gravitationally
over its entire history. As that matter gets pulled in, it gets faster
and faster. When it finally falls into the halo, it turns around and
starts to orbit. That turnaround is what people have started calling
splashback, because stuff is splashing back in some sense.”
As the matter “splashes back,” it slows down. Because this effect is
happening in many different directions, it leads to a buildup of matter
right at the edge of the halo and a steep fall-off in the amount of
matter right outside of that position. This is what the Penn researchers
explored in the data.
Using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, or SDSS, Baxter and Jain looked
at the distribution of galaxies around clusters. They formed teams of
experts at institutions around the world to examine thousands of galaxy
clusters. Using statistical tools to do a joint analysis of several
million galaxies around them, they found a drop at the edge of the
cluster. Baxter and collaborator Chihway Chang at the University of
Chicago led a paper reporting the findings, accepted for publication in
the Astrophysical Journal.
In addition to seeing this edge when they looked at galaxy
distribution, the team also saw evidence of it in the form of galaxy
colors. When a galaxy is full of gas and forming many big, hot stars,
the heat causes it to appear blue when scientists takes images of it.
“But those big stars live very short lives,” Baxter said. “They blow up.
What you’re left with are these smaller, older stars that live for long
periods of time, and those are red.”
When scientists look at galaxies within clusters, they appear red
because they aren’t forming stars. “Previous studies have shown that
there are interactions inside of the cluster that can cause galaxies to
stop forming stars,” Baxter said. “You could imagine for instance that a
galaxy falls into a cluster, and the gas from the galaxy gets stripped
off by gas within the cluster. After losing its gas, the galaxy will be
unable to form many stars.” Because of this, researchers expect that
galaxies that have spent more time orbiting through a cluster will
appear red, while galaxies that are just starting to fall in will appear
blue.
The researchers noticed a sudden shift in the colors of galaxies
right at the boundary, providing them with more evidence that dark
matter halos have an edge. “It was really interesting and surprising to
see this sharp change in colors,” Jain said, “because the change of
galaxy colors is a very slow and complex process.”
The researchers are working on another paper using a deeper survey of
over a hundred million galaxies called the Dark Energy Survey, or DES.
Both the SDSS and the DES make massive maps of the sky using a huge
camera that Jain said isn’t very fundamentally different from the
cameras in smartphones but bigger and more precise and costing millions
of dollars to build.
In the DES, when the camera opens, it takes an exposure of a couple
minutes, and then moves to a different part of the sky. This process is
repeated during the course of several years using different filters to
allow scientists to get a survey in multiple colors. The DES allows the
researchers to do expanded measurements, pushing to higher distances.
Instead of measuring the distribution of galaxies, the researchers
are using an astrophysical phenomenon called gravitational lensing to
probe the dark matter halos. In gravitational lensing, light coming to
an observer bends as matter exerts gravitational force on it. The
researchers can analyze images of the sky to see how clusters stretch
images of the galaxies behind them. “Light is going to bend if there’s
mass,” Baxter said. “By measuring these deflections we can measure the
mass directly which is cool because most of the mass is dark matter
which we can’t see so it’s a unique way to probe the dark matter.”
In terms of fundamental understanding of the universe, Baxter said,
dark matter is one of the biggest mysteries there is right now. “You
look in the sky, even with the biggest optical telescopes, and you see
nothing beyond the light of the galaxies,” Jain said. “There’s just this
dark matter.”
The researchers hope that their research will contribute to a better
understanding of the mysterious substance that makes up about 80 percent
of matter in the universe. If they can mark the edge of a dark matter
halo, it would allow them to test things like Einstein’s theory of
gravity and the nature of dark matter.
“It’s just a new way of looking at clusters,” Jain said. “Once you
find the boundary you can study both the standard physics of how
galaxies interact with the cluster and the possible unknown physics of
what the nature of dark matter and gravity is.”
Wednesday, May 3, 2017
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