Researchers
studying 50 galaxy clusters found that the density of dark matter
increases from the edges to the center of the cluster and that the
concentration parameter of galaxy clusters in the near universe aligns
with cold dark matter theory
By
Subaru Telescope Facility, Hilo, Hawaii —
Published:
June 13, 2013

An
outline of how the dark matter distribution (right) was reconstructed
from optical images (left) taken by the Subaru Telescope. A precise
measurement of the shapes of background galaxies in observed images
enabled the team to investigate the distortion pattern (center) and then
reconstruct the distribution of dark matter in the galaxy clusters. // NAOJ/ASIAA/School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Birmingham/Kavli IPMU/Astronomical Institute, Tohoku University
| | An
international team of astronomers from Taiwan, England, and Japan has
used the Subaru Telescope to measure the distribution of dark matter in
50 galaxy clusters and found that its density gradually decreases from
the center of these cosmic giants to their diffuse outskirts. This new
evidence about the mysterious dark matter that pervades our universe
conforms to the predictions of cold dark matter theory, known as CDM.
Few scientists seriously doubt the existence of dark matter, which
researchers discovered almost 80 years ago. Nevertheless, astronomers
cannot directly see dark matter in the night sky, and particle
physicists have not yet identified a dark matter particle in their
experiments. “What is dark matter?” is a big unanswered question facing
astronomers and particle physicists, especially because invisible dark
matter probably makes up 85 percent of the mass of the universe.
The team, led by Nobuhiro Okabe of Academia Sinica, Taiwan, and Graham
Smith of the University of Birmingham, England, used the Subaru Prime
Focus Camera (Suprime-Cam) to investigate the nature of dark matter by
measuring its density in 50 galaxy clusters, the most massive objects in
the universe. “A galaxy cluster is like a huge city viewed from above
during the night,” said Smith. “Each bright city light is a galaxy, and
the dark areas between the lights that appear to be empty during the
night are actually full of dark matter. You can think of the dark matter
in a galaxy cluster as being the infrastructure within which the
galaxies live.” The team wanted to use a large sample of galaxy clusters
to find out how the density of dark matter changes from the center of a
typical galaxy cluster to its outskirts. |

Dark
matter maps for a sample of 50 individual galaxy clusters (left), an
average galaxy cluster (center), and those based on dark matter theory
(right). The density of dark matter increases in the order of blue,
green, yellow, and red colors. The white horizontal line represents a
scale of 1 million light-years. The map based on predictions from CDM
theory (right, middle) is a close match to the average galaxy cluster
observed with the Subaru Telescope. // NAOJ/ASIAA/School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Birmingham/Kavli IPMU/Astronomical Institute, Tohoku University
The
density of dark matter depends on the properties of the individual dark
matter particles, just like the density of everyday materials depends
on their components. CDM, the leading theory about dark matter to date,
asserts that dark matter particles only interact with each other and
with other matter via the force of gravity; they do not emit or absorb
electromagnetic radiation and are difficult if not impossible to see.
Therefore, the team chose to observe dark matter by using gravitational
lensing, which detects its presence through its gravitational
interactions with ordinary matter and radiation. According to Einstein’s
general theory of relativity, light from a distant bright source bends
around a massive object, such as a cluster of galaxies, between the
source object and the observer. It follows from this principle that the
dark matter in cosmic giants like galaxy clusters alters the apparent
shape and position of distant galaxies. Lead author Okabe enthused, “The
Subaru Telescope is a fantastic instrument for gravitational lensing
measurements. It allows us to measure very precisely how the dark matter
in galaxy clusters distorts light from distant galaxies and gauge tiny
changes in the appearance of a huge number of faint galaxies.”
CDM theory describes how dark matter in galaxy clusters changes from its
dense center to its lower-density edges in two ways. One is a simple
measure of the galaxy cluster’s mass, the amount of matter that it
contains. The other is a concentration parameter, which is a single
measurement of the cluster’s average density, how compact it is. CDM
theory predicts that central regions of galaxy clusters have a low
concentration parameter while individual galaxies have a high
concentration parameter.
The team combined measurements from observations of 50 of the most
massive known galaxy clusters to calculate their concentration
parameter. The average mass map is remarkably symmetrical with a
pronounced mass peak. The mass density distribution for individual
clusters shows a wide range of densities. The researchers found that the
density of dark matter increases from the edges to the center of the
cluster, and that the concentration parameter of galaxy clusters in the
near universe aligns with CDM theory. Past research based on a small
number of clusters found that they had large concentration parameters
and did not conform to CDM theory. In contrast, measurement of the
average concentration parameter from a large number of clusters yielded a
different result, which supports CDM theory. Okabe commented on the
team’s findings, based on a larger sample of galaxy clusters: “This is a
very satisfying result, which is based on a very careful analysis of
the best available data.”
What does the future hold for the team’s continued research on dark
matter? Smith noted, “We don’t stop here. For example, we can improve
our work by measuring dark matter density on even smaller scales, right
in the center of these galaxy clusters. Additional measurements on
smaller scales will help us to learn more about dark matter in the
future.”
Team member Masahiro Takada of the Kavli Institute for the Physics and
Mathematics of the Universe at the University of Tokyo is also excited
about the future: “Combining lensing observations of many galaxy
clusters into a single measurement like this is a very powerful
technique. Japanese astronomers are preparing to use Subaru Telescope’s
new Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) to conduct one of the biggest surveys of
galaxies in human history. Our new results are a beautiful confirmation
of our plan to use HSC for gravitational lensing studies.”
Source
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.