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Dark matter mapped - First three-dimensional picture of elusive matter throws up mystery.
news@nature.com ^
 | 7 January 2007
 | Katharine Sanderson
Posted on 01/07/2007 6:55:02 PM PST by neverdem
 
  
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         |  Published online: 7 January 2007; | doi:10.1038/news070101-7
 Dark matter mappedFirst three-dimensional picture of elusive matter throws up mystery.Katharine Sanderson 
           Hot on the heels of evidence last year that dark matter really does exist (see 'Dark matter spied in galactic collision'), the same technique has been used to map this uncharacterized mass across half a million distant galaxies.
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               | Concentrations of dark matter (mapped in contours above) usually - but not always - match up with normal matter (coloured). |  |  
 The map shows that, as predicted, the mysterious dark matter that makes up a quarter of the Universe forms a filamentous 'skeleton' upon which visible matter congregates, eventually producing stars. This is the first time such a large-scale three-dimensional picture of dark matter has been produced, and it will allow cosmologists to probe deeper into the nature of this elusive matter.
 
 But the map, published in Nature1, also has a few puzzles within it. Some areas show clumps of dark matter that aren't accompanied by the bright features associated with conventional, visible material (made of baryonic matter), and vice versa.
 
 "On the large scale the general picture is as expected, but there are some small-scale discrepancies," says Richard Massey at the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, and one of the team members who pieced together the map from hundreds of slightly overlapping images from the Hubble Space Telescope's Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS).
 
 The existence of large clumps of isolated dark matter and visible matter flies in the face of everything we know, says cosmologist Carlos Frenk of the University of Durham, UK.
 
 The discrepancies could be a simple error resulting from the way the observations were made. But if they are real, says Massey, they will bring a huge shock. "Baryonic structures are expected to form only inside the dark-matter scaffold," he says. "There will need to be a lot of follow-up work before we really believe any individual discrepancies."
 
 A light pull
 
 Massey used a technique called gravitational lensing, whereby the pull from dark matter caught in between a star and the observing telescope alters the path of the light, and allows the presence of dark matter to be inferred.
 
 Eric Linder of the University of California, Berkeley, who was not involved with the work, agrees that the map backs up the favoured theory that dark matter forms a scaffold on which galaxies form.
 
 He suggests possibilities for the more unusual spots in the map: one is that galaxies made of dark matter (dark galaxies) exist, but he thinks this is unlikely. Another possibility is that the discrepancies are errors in the data — which seem almost inevitable given that mapping the dark matter required a very sensitive measurement of an incredibly small signal. "Right now the discrepancies are curiosities rather than items of concern," Linder says.
 
 Massey is also confident in the robustness of his map on the whole. "A couple of individual discrepancies in the map are not a huge surprise," he says. "The technique is intrinsically more noisy, and more prone to systematic errors, near the edges of the map." That is where most of the discrepancies are seen.
 
 Blown away
 
 There are plausible explanations for small areas of dark matter and visible matter existing in isolation.
 
 Dark matter, if the clump is small enough, could have any accumulating visible matter blown out of it by a high-energy phenomenon such as a quasar or a supernova, for example. The collision of two galaxies could also blow an amount of visible matter out as a faint satellite galaxy that has no associated dark matter, suggests Frenk.
 
 But these theories can't explain the large features visible on the COSMOS map, he adds.
 
 Like Massey and Linder, Frenk also suspects that the discrepancies are due to errors: "We know too much about the Universe," he says, to have completely missed this phenomenon up till now.
 
 Visit our newsblog to read and post comments about this story.
 
 
 
 
           
            | References 
               
                Massey R., et al. Nature, advance online publication, doi:10.1038/nature05497 (2007). |  |  
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         |  Story from news@nature.com:
 http://news.nature.com//news/2007/070101/070101-7.html
 |  |  |  | 
 
 
  
TOPICS: 
KEYWORDS: darkmatter
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1
posted on 
01/07/2007 6:55:05 PM PST
by 
neverdem
 
To: neverdem
    Dark matter mapped 
 
-- 
 
They MRI'd Pelosi's head?
 
2
posted on 
01/07/2007 6:56:11 PM PST
by 
NormsRevenge
(Semper Fi ......)
 
To: KevinDavis
3
posted on 
01/07/2007 6:56:11 PM PST
by 
neverdem
(May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
 
To: neverdem
    I thought that they were rethinking the whole dark matter thing.
 
4
posted on 
01/07/2007 7:01:16 PM PST
by 
Tanniker Smith
(I didn't know she was a liberal when I married her.)
 
To: Tanniker Smith
    I do not believe in dark matter.
 
5
posted on 
01/07/2007 7:05:08 PM PST
by 
true_blue_texican
(...against all enemies, foreign and domestic...)
 
To: neverdem
6
posted on 
01/07/2007 7:10:08 PM PST
by 
frankenMonkey
(Are there any men left in Washington, or are they all cowards?)
 
To: true_blue_texican
    Re: "I do not believe in dark matter."
 Always fear the dark side... oh wait, you said "dark matter" ;-)

 
7
posted on 
01/07/2007 7:11:19 PM PST
by 
Trajan88
(www.bullittclub.com)
 
To: neverdem
    
Looks like a close up of Stephen Hawking's boxers, to me....
 
8
posted on 
01/07/2007 7:12:27 PM PST
by 
RightResponse
(It depends on what the defamation of Islam is .....)
 
To: true_blue_texican
    http://www.continuitystudios.net/clip00.html 
 Neal Adams holds that the expanding earth is covered by water due to the interraction of "dark matter" with light and that this eventtually leads to the elements that compose water. 
 If you seeded a small planet with "dark matter" and that caused it to grow, develop large bodies of water you would have to be God.....
9
posted on 
01/07/2007 7:13:11 PM PST
by 
x_plus_one
(Allah has no son.)
 
To: NormsRevenge
    Looks like a map of Washington DC.
 
10
posted on 
01/07/2007 7:24:40 PM PST
by 
Mad_Tom_Rackham
(Well, it's 2007. Time to get ready for 2008.)
 
To: neverdem; PatrickHenry; Old_Professor; RadioAstronomer
    "The existence of large clumps of isolated dark matter and visible matter flies in the face of everything we know, says cosmologist Carlos Frenk of the University of Durham, UK." Well, for starters...dark matter doesn't exist. For a followup, the paths of galaxies as we all hurtle ever outward from the original "point of origin" would have to be non-linear if such a grouping of so-called "dark matter" really did exist.
 Galaxies would hit bumps in the clumps of dark matter. It's just silly. This is the sort of ridiculous pseudoscience that one gets when trying to rectify ToR with QM.
 
11
posted on 
01/07/2007 7:34:38 PM PST
by 
Southack
(Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
 
To: Tanniker Smith
    Dark matter is always under reconsideration, but so is the other kinds ~ here's a thought for you ~ what we are seeing here are actually OTHER UNIVERSES. 
They are adjacent to our own. However, some of them broadcast in frequencies, and according to natural laws, so similar to those that prevail in our own universe, that we can see them. Others are different enough that we simply cannot detect their local equivalent of "dark matter" or "ordinary matter".
12
posted on 
01/07/2007 7:40:19 PM PST
by 
muawiyah
 
To: true_blue_texican
    No doubt a belief shared by dark matter of you.
 
13
posted on 
01/07/2007 7:41:07 PM PST
by 
muawiyah
 
To: neverdem
14
posted on 
01/07/2007 8:27:24 PM PST
by 
ZULU
(Non nobis, non nobis Domine, sed nomini tuo da gloriam.  God, guts and guns made America great.)
 
To: true_blue_texican
    "I do not believe in dark matter." - Then you don't believe in hillary either. Lucky you.
 
15
posted on 
01/07/2007 8:30:47 PM PST
by 
GSlob
 
To: true_blue_texican
    It takes Gray Matter to believe in Dark Matter.
16
posted on 
01/07/2007 8:48:36 PM PST
by 
fish hawk
(. B O stinks.  That would be body odor and Barak Obama)
 
To: true_blue_texican
    "I do not believe in dark matter." ~~~~~ 
 Unless you are a cosmologist working with valid data, your "belief" has no bearing on this discussion. 
 And, by the same token, "beliefs" such as the' YEC' misinterpretation of Scripture are embarassingly irrelevant to the study or discussion of cosmology.
 
17
posted on 
01/07/2007 9:37:33 PM PST
by 
TXnMA
("Allah":  Satan's current alias...)
 
To: Trajan88
    He said, "dark matter" -- not "dark Master". '-}
18
posted on 
01/07/2007 9:41:18 PM PST
by 
TXnMA
("Allah":  Satan's current alias...)
 
To: neverdem; All
    If your "eyes" could only "see" gamma rays, and yet you somehow managed to reach a level of science that was at least where we are, you would be theorizing/calculating that some other form of energy (like we see in the different wavelenghts of "light") must exist, and you would probably refer to that missing energy/matter as "dark". 
 
I think calling an element of the universe we simply do not have the eyes or the technology to directly detect as "dark" gives a negative, pejorative and subjective value to something that might be real but lie just beyond our present level of ignorance. 
 
It is actually our level of understanding that is still "dark" and not some aspect of the universe we are not yet smart enough to "see".
 
19
posted on 
01/07/2007 9:43:24 PM PST
by 
Wuli
 
To: fish hawk
20
posted on 
01/07/2007 9:43:37 PM PST
by 
TXnMA
("Allah":  Satan's current alias...)
 
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