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Dark Matter in 3-D
Light travels at a finite speed, so looking out into the distance is equivalent to looking back through time. Combining a set of slices at fixed distances (top) gives a 3-D map (bottom) that is like a geological core sample of the universe. Evolving over time from right to left, the distribution of dark matter becomes increasingly clumpy.
An international team led by Caltech scientists has made
a three-dimensional map of dark matter that offers a first look at its
distribution. Dark matter, which makes up most of the universe’s
mass but neither emits nor reflects light, has so far eluded direct detection
or even a definitive explanation for its makeup. But a cosmic quirk called
“gravitational lensing,” first predicted by Einstein, allows
the invisible stuff to be traced out. The light rays from distant galaxies are deflected where
space is curved by the gravitational influence of dark matter, making
the shapes of background galaxies appear distorted. So postdoc Richard
Massey and JPL scientist Jason Rhodes carefully measured those shapes
to infer the distribution of foreground structures. Since gravitational
lensing is sensitive to all mass, it reveals the location of otherwise
invisible features— The 3-D map, which was unveiled at the January meeting
of the American Astronomical Society and also appeared in the January
18 issue of Nature, reveals a gelatinous network of cosmological filaments
that grew over time, intersecting to form massive structures containing
clusters of galaxies. According to lead author Massey and coauthor Richard
Ellis, the Steele Family Professor of Astronomy, this provides the best
evidence yet that normal matter coalesces to form galaxies only inside
the preexisting scaffolding of dark matter. The map was derived from the Hubble Space Telescope’s
widest survey of the universe, led by Nick Scoville, Caltech’s Moseley
Professor of Astronomy. The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) consists
of 575 slightly overlapping views of the universe requiring nearly 1,000
hours of observations—the largest project ever undertaken with the
Hubble. Scattered through the COSMOS images are some half-million distorted galaxies whose distances were measured to high accuracy—using color data from the Subaru telescope in Hawaii—as part of COSMOS’s research on large-scale structures.
Reprinted by permission from MacMillan Publishers Ltd: Massey, et al., Nature, vol. 445, pp. 286–290, January 18, 2007. In this rendering of the entire COSMOS field, the contours show the total mass of both visible and dark matter. Ordinary matter grows inside a dark matter scaffolding: the galaxy mass distribution is shown in blue and number density in yellow; the two combine to become green. Red shows X-ray emission from hot, dense gas in the centers of dense clusters of galaxies. This view covers nearly two square degrees of sky, or roughly nine times the area of the full moon.
The resulting map
stretches halfway back to the beginning of the universe, showing how dark
matter started out smooth and grew increasingly clumpy as it continued
to collapse. These observations will guide theorists grappling with how
large cosmic structures evolved under the relentless pull of gravity,
and may illuminate the role of “dark energy”—a sort
of negative gravitational force that is believed to influence how dark
matter clumps. According to Scoville,
stars in the galaxies in the densest cosmic structures of the early universe
are generally found to be older than those in galaxies in more rarified
environments, indicating that the galaxies in the denser regions formed
first and that the mass accumulated in a bottom-up fashion. By contrast,
those galaxies with ongoing star formation today dwell in less populated
cosmic filaments and voids. “Both the maturity of the stellar populations and the ‘downsizing’ of star formation in galaxies vary strongly with the epoch when the galaxies were born, as well as their dark-matter environment,” says Scoville. His team’s findings will appear in a future issue of The Astrophysical Journal. Other Caltech participants in this COSMOS research on large-scale structures include postdocs Peter Capak and Mara Salvato, Member of the Professional Staff Patrick Shopbell, and Kartik Sheth of the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center. —RT
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