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University of British Columbia: Bringing Dark Matter to Light Print E-mail
Written by CBC News   
Saturday, 12 January 2008
New Map Lets Scientists 'See' Dark Matter: Researchers use Hubble Space Telescope to predict where dark matter is
by CBC News
A study headed by a University of British Columbia researcher is giving scientists a peek at dark matter's effects on distant galaxies.

Catherine Heymans, a post-doctoral fellow in the university's department of astronomy and physics, has generated the highest resolution map of dark matter ever captured.

Supercluster Abell 901/902 is seen in this photo compiled by astronomers. The magenta-tinted clumps represent a map of the dark matter in the cluster. (C. Heymans/M. Gray/M. Barden/C. Wolf/K. Meisenheimer/NASA)
 
  • "For the first time we are clearly detecting irregular clumps of dark matter in a supercluster," she said in a news release. "Previous studies were only able to detect fuzzy, circular clumps, but we’re able to resolve detailed shapes that match the distribution of galaxies."


 
Dark matter is matter that doesn't absorb or emit light. Though it can't be seen, scientists can often observe its effects on visible matter. They believe it surrounds the universe's galaxies and influences their rotational and orbital speeds.

It is also believed to pull distant galaxies into superclusters, which are large groupings of small galaxy groups and clusters.

Heymans and a team of researchers used the Hubble Space Telescope to monitor the supercluster Abell 901/902 and more than 60,000 galaxies located behind it.


Abell 901/902 is 2.6 billion light-years from Earth.

In order to be seen on Earth, the galaxies' light must pass through the dark matter that surrounds the supercluster.

And dark matter, the researchers found, left more than a mark on the galaxies' appearance. Circular galaxies more closely resemble the shape of a banana after passing near dark matter, the study said.

Heymans and her co-researchers will publish their results in an upcoming issue of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
 
 
Comments (1)Add Comment
Terminology
written by Steve, January 12, 2008
Just a personal thing, but while I accept the effects shown to be taking place, the 'matter' of dark matter is a term that puts a strain on the acceptance. 'Force','energy'... 'gravity', strike me as easier to digest.
While matter possesses the characteristic called 'gravity', no particle has been discovered to be the source of that characteristic. (The gravitron is a hypothetical particle.) Giving 'matter' a broader definition by incorporating the characteristics of 'dark matter' in order to explain the impact is of what is being observed strikes me as the same thing as calling a lizard a mammal because it has four legs.

Thanks for the article. Not enough science in the world of reporting.
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