Thursday, January 12, 2012

Vast Web of Dark Matter Mapped

In a sense, yes. Dark matter was just one hypothesis among many for galaxy rotation speeds before the CMBR studies.

But the CMBR studies were really the "discovery" of dark matter. At the point where the universe took a snapshot of itself, the distribution of matter was still fairly uniform: alternating areas of slightly-denser and slightly-less-dense matter as sound waves rolled through the universe. By measuring the size and magnitude of these compression waves, one thing that we know - by direct observation - is that only 20% or so of matter was interacting with photons, directly or indirectly.

The universe at that time was dominted by 2 forces, gravity and light pressure. Gravity would compress slightly denser patches until light pressure would cause them to "bounce". We know the force of gravity and light pressure quite precisely, and the mechanics of compression waves, and so we can measure the ratio of mass that interacts with each force. And there's abot 5 times as much mass that reacts to gravity as mass that reacts to light pressure.

So, yeah, direct measurement of dark matter, and the exact measurement (which was 2 or 3 significant digits) was just what the dark matter hypothesis had predicted based on completely unrelated measurements of galaxy rotation speeds. Of course, that gives few clues about the nature of dark matter, but we know most matter in the universe is dark.

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/CrSS3uqEYDk/vast-web-of-dark-matter-mapped

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