Shedding light on the dark side of the Universe
Collisions between massive galaxy clusters are helping European scientists to explain two of the greatest mysteries in our Universe, dark matter and dark energy.
Dark matter is an invisible substance thought to make up 27 % of all
matter in our Universe. The strength of its gravitational pull keeps
galaxies from separating at the speed at which they whirl. Dark energy,
on the other hand, is pushing the Universe apart, increasing the rate
with which the cosmos expands. Scientists believe that dark energy could
make up about 70 % of the Universe while known particles make up just 5
%.
What dark matter and dark energy actually has remained a mystery
until today, despite many potential explanations suggested for both.
Scientists working on the EU-funded 'Understanding the dark universe
with 3D weak gravitational lensing' (DARKMATTERDARKENERGY) project have
used the most successful technique yet developed to investigate this
dark sector: gravitational lensing.
Dark matter does not interact with electromagnetic force operating
between charged particles and therefore, does not emit or reflect light.
However, it seems to play the most important role in shaping the
Universe on large scales, interacting with the force of gravity. The
curvature of time-space near gravitating mass, including dark matter,
deflects passing rays of light, thereby distorting the images of
background galaxies.
Measurements of the distribution of dark matter seen by
gravitational lensing in 65 galaxy clusters were compared with the
distribution of gas determined from X-ray emission and scattering of
photons from the cosmic microwave background. This comparison led to
unexpected findings, such as the luminosity-temperature relationship
remaining constant for the past 5 million years in the clusters of
varying mass.
Even more puzzling were the findings from the analysis of collision
between galaxy clusters. In observations from the Hubble Space
Telescope, the Chadra X-ray Observatory in space and the ESO Very Large
Observatory on the ground, the DARKMATTERDARKENERGY team found four
collisions. Together with the 'Bullet cluster' discovered in 2006, these
collisions between galaxy clusters have provided some evidence that
dark matter interacts with ordinary matter.
If these results are correct and dark matter interactions are more
common than expected, that would confirm the existence of dark matter
and dark energy. More importantly, they would provide a more accurate
estimate of how much of this mysterious substance exists. For this
purpose, scientists extended the work of the DARKMATTERDARKENERGY after
its completion with new experiments such as ESA's Euclid telescope.
published: 2015-02-19