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(Photo:
Space.com) |
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 9 (Xinhuanet)-- Based on images acquired by the Hubble space telescope and
computer simulations, a team of scientists mapped the location of invisible
"dark matter" in two very young galaxy clusters with unprecedented
detail.
The researchers at the Johns Hopkins University said
on Fridaythat their findings support the dark matter theory, which indicates the
galaxies we can see form at the densest regions in the webs of invisible dark matter, just like froth gathers on top of ocean waves.
The team has published their work in the Dec. 10 issue of the Astrophysical
Journal.
"Advances in computer technology now allow us to simulate the entire universe and
to follow the coalescence of matter into stars, galaxies, clusters of
galaxies and enormously long filaments of matter from the first hundred
thousand years to the present," said
Myungkook James Jee, co-author of the study.
"However, it is very challenging to verify the simulation results
observationally, because dark matter does not emit light."
Using the Hubble telescope, the team observed two
clusters, each containing more than 400 galaxies, in the southern sky. The
clusters were forming when the universe was about half its present age.
The researchers measured the subtle gravitational
"lensing"apparent in sharpened Hubble images to produce its detailed darkmatter
maps. The gravitational lensing means the small distortions of galaxies' shapes caused by gravity from unseen dark matter.
The result of the team's analysis is a series of vividly detailed,
computer-simulated images illustrating the dark matter's location.
According to the researchers, these images provide them with an
unprecedented opportunity to infer dark matter's properties.
"The images we took show clearly that the cluster galaxies arelocated at the
densest regions of the dark matter haloes, which are rendered in purple in
our images," Jee said.
The work supports the theory that dark matter, which constitutes 90 percent of matter
in the universe, and visible matter should coalesce at the same places because
gravity pulls them together, according to the researchers.
Concentrations of dark matter should attract visible matter, and as a result,
assist in the formation of luminous stars, galaxies and galaxy clusters,
they said.
The clumped structure of dark matter is also consistent withthe current
hypothesis that dark matter particles are "collision-less," which means they do
not collide and scatter like billiardballs but rather simply pass through each
other.
"Collision-less" particles do not bombard one another as two hydrogen atoms
do. If dark matter particles were collisional, amuch smoother distribution
should be yielded without any small-scale clumpy structures, they explained.
Dark matter presents a most challenging problem in cosmology. While its effects
can be undoubtedly felt, its exact characteristics remain elusive because
it is invisible.
Previous attempts to map dark matter in detail with ground-based telescopes were
handicapped by turbulence in the Earth's atmosphere, which blurred the
resulting images.
"Observing through the atmosphere is like trying to see the details of a
picture at the bottom of a swimming pool full of waves," said Holland Ford, a
professor at the Johns Hopkins Universityand principal investigator of the work.
The team was able to overcome the atmospheric obstacle with thehelp of space-based
Hubble telescope, whose sharpness and sensitivity of the images made
it ideal for this project. Enditem |