BBC Science The Theory of (nearly) Everything 2019

(Martin Jones) #1

THE NEXT BIG STEPS FOR SCIENCE


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Vera Rubin studied a large number of galaxies and
found that the ef fects of dark matter are widespread

SEARCHING FOR


DARK MATTER


For decades, top astronomers have been on an enormous treasure hunt


for the Universe’s most mysterious substance. But if we can’t see it,


how on Earth do we know it even exists? Colin Stuart explains


Q


Why do scientists think that dark
matter exists?

A


The first clues that everything
in the Universe was not as it
seemed came in the 1930s. Swiss-
American astronomer Fritz Zwicky
was looking at a group of galaxies and
working out how fast the individual
galaxies were moving. To his surprise,
he found them careering around at
speeds far greater than he expected. In
fact, t hey were moving so fast t hat t hey
should have quickly dispersed,
breaking away from the gravity of
ever y t hing else in t he cluster. Except
they weren’t. Zwicky was forced to
surmise that there must be more stuff
in the cluster that was boosting its
overall gravitational pull and keeping
the galaxies tied together. The
discrepancy wasn’t small either. He
estimated there was 400 times more
matter present t ha n he could see. At a
loss to explain what t his mysterious
material was, he called it ‘dunk le
materie’ – German for dark matter.
At the same time, Dutch astronomer
Jan Oort was forced to invoke
something similar. He was looking at
the stars orbiting near the edge of the
Milky Way. He expected to f ind t hat
the further he looked from the galactic
centre, the slower the stars would be
rotating a round it. This idea isn’t
dissimilar to our Solar System: the


further a planet is from the Sun, the
longer it takes to orbit it. But that’s not
what Oort found. The outer stars were
zipping about faster than they should
be. In order to explain why they stayed
bound to the Milky Way despite their
lofty speeds, he supposed there was
some invisible material with
gravitational power spread throughout
the Galaxy. By 1980, American
astronomer Vera Rubin had spotted
t he sa me effect in a round 100 ot her
galaxies. Whatever this invisible stuff
was, it was widespread.
Today, a n effect k now n as
gravitational lensing provides even
more evidence to suggest there is

something strange going on. If we see
a large amount of mass, say a cluster
of galaxies, move in front of a distant
light source, then the foreground
object is able to bend t he light f rom
the background object around it. This
light creates a series of arcs that can
join toget her to for m what’s k now n as
an ‘Einstein ring’. The more mass there
is, the greater the amount of bending.
Yet there is often not enough visible
mass in the cluster to account for the
a mount of bending we obser ve. Again,
there must be extra mass that’s hidden
from view.

Q


What do scientists think dark
matter is?

A


Physicists have a cookbook for
the Universe known as the
Standard Model of particle physics. By
using its recipes, they can account for
the behaviour of forces and the way
particles interact with one another.
This model has been validated many
times over, including by experiments
at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider. The
book’s final missing page was the
recently discovered Higgs boson.
And yet there is nothing within those
recipes t hat allows physicists to cook
up anything with the observed
behaviour of dark matter. It has to be
able to interact wit h nor mal matter via
gravity – and yet in order to remain 5
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