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Friday, October 17, 2014

Study claims Milky Way dark matter half what scientists thought

Astronomers made the measurement by studying the speed of stars throughout the galaxy, including the edges, which had never been studied to this detail before


Artist’s impression of the expected dark matter distribution around the Milky Way
Artist’s impression of the Milky Way and its dark matter halo (shown in blue, but in reality invisible).
ESO/L. Calçada
A new measurement of dark matter in the Milky Way has revealed there is half as much of the mysterious substance as previously thought.

Australian astronomers used a method developed almost 100 years ago to discover that the weight of dark matter in our own galaxy is 800,000,000,000 (or 8 x 1011) times the mass of the Sun.

They probed the edge of the Milky Way, looking closely for the first time at the fringes of the galaxy about 3 million trillion miles (5 million trillion kilometers) from Earth.

Astrophysicist Prajwal Kafle from the University of Western Australia node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, said we have known for a while that most of the universe is hidden.

"Stars, dust, you and me, all the things that we see, only make up about 4 percent of the entire universe," he said. "About 25 percent is dark matter, and the rest is dark energy."

Kafle was able to measure the mass of the dark matter in the Milky Way by studying the speed of stars throughout the galaxy, including the edges, which had never been studied to this detail before.

He used a robust technique developed by British astronomer James Jeans in 1915 — decades before the discovery of dark matter.

Kafle's measurement helps solve a mystery that has been haunting theorists for almost two decades.

"The current idea of galaxy formation and evolution, called the lambda cold dark matter theory, predicts that there should be a handful of big satellite galaxies around the Milky Way that are visible with the naked eye, but we don't see that," Kafle said. "When you use our measurement of the mass of the dark matter, the theory predicts that there should only be three satellite galaxies out there, which is exactly what we see: the Large Magellanic Cloud, the Small Magellanic Cloud, and the Sagittarius Dwarf Galaxy."

University of Sydney astrophysicist Professor Geraint Lewis, who was also involved in the research, said the missing satellite problem had been "a thorn in the cosmological side for almost 15 years."

"Dr. Kafle's work has shown that it might not be as bad as everyone thought, although there are still problems to overcome," he said.

The study also presented a holistic model of the Milky Way, which allowed the scientists to measure several interesting things such as the speed required to leave the galaxy.

"Be prepared to hit 550 kilometers per second [340 miles per second] if you want to escape the gravitational clutches of our galaxy," Kafle said. "A rocket launched from Earth needs just 11 kilometers per second [7 miles per second] to leave its surface, which is already about 300 times faster than the maximum Australian speed limit in a car!"
 

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