Astronomers map Dark Matter

Discussion in 'Astronomy, Exobiology, & Cosmology' started by thed, Apr 14, 2002.

  1. thed IT Gopher Registered Senior Member

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    Oops, wtong image.

    <img SRC="http://www.roe.ac.uk/~meg/darkmatter/imgs/Dark_Matter_Analysis.jpg" NOSAVE ALT="A901/902 Dark Matter Map" height=540 width=720>

    Royal Astronomical Society Press Notice

    Date: 3 April 2002
    EMBARGOED FOR 7 am BST, WEDNESDAY 10 APRIL 2002

    Ref. PN 02/17 (NAM 11)

    Issued by: RAS Press Officers

    Peter Bond (Except 8 - 12 April)
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    Fax: +44 (0)1483-274047
    Mobile phone: +44 (0)7711-213486
    E-mail: PeterRBond@cs.com

    AND

    Dr Jacqueline Mitton (Except 7 - 13 April)
    Tel: +44 (0)1223-564914
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    CONTACT DETAILS ARE LISTED AT THE END OF THIS RELEASE.

    ************************************************************

    MAPPING THE COSMIC WEB OF DARK MATTER

    What is Dark Matter and where is it found? These are two of the major
    mysteries in current studies of the Universe.

    Although the nature of this invisible material remains elusive,
    astronomers are beginning to produce detailed maps of the Cosmos,
    showing its location in relation to the ordinary matter that we can
    see in telescopes.

    One of the world leaders in this research is Dr. Andrew Taylor (Royal
    Observatory, Edinburgh), who will be presenting the most accurate
    image ever obtained of the Dark Matter in a galactic supercluster at
    the UK National Astronomy Meeting in Bristol on Wednesday 10 April
    2002.

    "Ultimately we hope that the detection of a Dark Matter particle in a
    laboratory will reveal its true nature and place in physics," said Dr.
    Taylor. "But at the moment our only guide to the properties of the
    Dark Matter is from Cosmology."

    The method used by Taylor, a PPARC Advanced Fellow, Dr. Meghan Gray,
    then a student at the Institute of Astronomy in Cambridge, and
    co-workers in Heidelberg and Imperial College London, is to take
    advantage of gravitational lensing, when light from a distant galaxy
    is bent by the gravitational field of matter in front of it. Such
    gravitational lenses provide a direct probe of where Dark Matter is
    in the Universe.

    Edinburgh has long been at the forefront of developing and applying
    methods of using gravitational lensing to image the two-dimensional
    distribution of Dark Matter and so study its properties.

    In a recent study, Taylor and his colleagues have made the most
    detailed analysis yet of the Dark Matter in the Abell 901/2
    supercluster, one of the largest structures in the Universe. The
    enormous structure, some 10 million light years across, contains a
    group of galaxy clusters known as Abell 901a, 901b and Abell 902.

    Their image of the Dark Matter, which covers an area of sky the size
    of the full Moon, was obtained by analysing the gravitationally
    lensed images of 50,000 galaxies. It shows that not only do the
    galaxies we see lie within larger Dark Matter clumps, but that these
    clumps are connected by "cosmic filaments" -- bridges of Dark Matter
    connecting the clusters.

    The existence of these filaments has long been a prediction of the
    theory of Dark Matter in the Universe, which indicated that the
    matter in the Universe is distributed in an intricate network of
    clumps and filaments -- the so-called Cosmic Web.

    More recently Taylor has developed a new method which will allow
    cosmologists for the first time to make fully three-dimensional
    images of the Dark Matter distribution in the Universe using
    gravitational lensing (Ref: Taylor, 2002, submitted to Phys Rev
    Lett, http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0111605).

    "Having 3-D images will allow cosmologists to put much better
    constraints on the nature of Dark Matter in the Universe," explained
    Taylor.

    NOTE FOR EDITORS:

    The existence of invisible Dark Matter has been determined from its
    gravitational pull on stars and galaxies. Calculations suggest that
    it fills the Universe, making up 80% of all of the matter in the
    Universe, and is five times more abundant than ordinary matter.
    When it clumps together it seeds the formation of galaxies. Its
    gravitational pull also holds together clusters of galaxies.

    Details of the supercluster research were published in the March 20th
    issue of the Astrophysical Journal. (Ref: Gray & Taylor et al, 2002,
    ApJ, 568, 141-162, http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0111288).

    The Royal Observatory, Edinburgh (ROE) comprises the UK Astronomy
    Technology Centre of the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research
    Council (PPARC), the Institute for Astronomy of the University of
    Edinburgh and the ROE Visitor Centre.

    CONTACT DETAILS:

    During the National Astronomy Meeting, Dr. Taylor can be contacted via
    the NAM press office (see above)

    Normal contact details:

    Dr. Andrew N. Taylor
    Institute for Astronomy
    University of Edinburgh
    Royal Observatory
    Blackford Hill
    Edinburgh
    EH9 3HJ
    Tel: +44 (0)131-668-8298
    Fax: +44 (0)131-668-8416
    E-mail: ant@roe.ac.uk

    AN IMAGE SHOWING THE DARK MATTER FILAMENTS IN SUPERCLUSTER ABELL 901/2 IS
    AVAILABLE ON THE WEB AT:
    http://www.roe.ac.uk/~meg/darkmatter/supercluster.html
     

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