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  • Cosmologists know that dark matter must exist.

  • If it didn't, the rate galaxies spin would tear them apart

  • so there must be something unaccounted for generating the gravity that's holding them together.

  • Something that doesn't interact with regular matter in any other way that we've detected yet.

  • What exactly that something is, is anyone's guessand there are a lot of candidates to choose from.

  • Now though, thanks to new observations using the Hubble Space Telescope,

  • scientists believe they have strong evidence for one of the most widely accepted

  • and coolest dark matter theories.

  • The specific form of dark matter that astronomers think they've detected is cold dark matter.

  • Cold refers to the slow speed the particles move,

  • with hypothetical warm and hot dark matter particles moving faster.

  • Any of these forms of dark matter could theoretically come together to form a scaffolding.

  • This scaffolding would have a gravitational pull strong enough to hold stars and galaxies embedded in it.

  • But only slow movingcolddark matter particles could congregate in smaller clumps,

  • ones with the mass of say, a commercial airliner.

  • These clumps would be too small to hold onto small galaxies,

  • meaning that detecting these smaller clumps is impossible using the traditional methods

  • of looking for embedded stars.

  • So, astronomers devised a new way of searching for them, one that relied on things lining up just right.

  • Astronomers used the Hubble Space Telescope to hunt for quasars,

  • the regions around active black holes where superheated matter emits tons of light.

  • But not just any quasar would do

  • Hubble had to find a quasar that was almost perfectly aligned behind an entire massive galaxy.

  • Of course, under normal circumstances here on Earth,

  • putting one enormous thing in front of a smaller thing is not conducive to seeing that smaller thing.

  • But in a cool twistpun intendedthe gravity from the galaxy bends the path of the quasar's light

  • in such a way that it's visible to Hubble.

  • In fact, the galaxy actually magnifies the quasar and copies its image four times.

  • This technique is known as gravitational lensing.

  • But the four copies of the quasar's image are not identical.

  • They get distorted by clumps of dark matter that warp the space the quasar's light travels through.

  • By comparing the warped images to how they should look if there were no dark matter,

  • astronomers can determine the mass of the dark matter clumps that otherwise would have been invisible.

  • But finding the right candidates to observe wasn't easy.

  • The researchers had to pore over ground-based surveys to find the gravitational lenses.

  • They found 8 from which to draw their data, with the quasars located about 10 billion light-years away,

  • aligned just right behind galaxies that are 2 billion light years from us.

  • After years of taking and analyzing images, these latest results are pretty tantalizing.

  • The researchers determined that the light from the quasars was distorted in ways

  • that suggest small clumps of dark matter are out there,

  • providing what they call the strongest evidence yet that dark matter is of the cold variety.

  • Not bad work for the Hubble Space Telescope, which is pushing 30 years of service.

  • Hubble took the images in the near-infrared range,

  • since quasars are best seen with infrared light.

  • When future infrared space telescopes like the James Webb

  • and Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope launch,

  • they'll be able to conduct follow up studies in greater detail.

  • We still don't know what exactly thiscolddark matter is,

  • but thanks to some clever work to bend light and space to our advantage,

  • we think we're getting closer.

  • Do you have a pet theory of what Dark Matter could be?

  • My personal favorite: WIMPS.

  • Just because of the acronym.

  • Let us know your thoughts down in the comments.

  • You know, I feel like we talk a lot about how great the James Webb Space Telescope is going to be,

  • but how close are we to actually launching this amazing thing?

  • Check out this video to find out.

  • Make sure to subscribe to Seeker and thanks for watching.

Cosmologists know that dark matter must exist.

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ハッブルが暗黒物質が「冷たい」という新たな証拠を発見 (Hubble Spotted New Evidence That Dark Matter Is "Cold")

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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