Dark matter is composed of
particles that do not absorb, reflect, or emit light, so they cannot be
detected by observing electromagnetic radiation. Dark matter is material that
cannot be seen directly. We know that dark matter exists because of the effect
it has on objects that we can observe directly.
Dark matter may account for the
unexplained motions of stars within galaxies.
Computers play an important role in the search for dark matter data. They allow
scientists to create models which predict galaxy behavior. Satellites
are also being used to gather dark matter data. In 1997, a Hubble Space Telescope image
revealed light from a distant galaxy cluster being bent by another cluster in
the foreground of the image. Based on the way the light was bent, scientists
estimated the mass of
the foreground cluster to be 250 times greater than the visible matter in the
cluster. Scientists believe that dark matter in the cluster accounts for the
unexplained mass.
Scientists have produced many
theories about what exactly dark matter may be normal objects such as cold
gasses, dark galaxies, or massive compact halo objects (called MACHOs, they
would include black holes and brown dwarfs). Other
scientists believe that dark matter may be composed of strange particles which
were created in the very early universe. Such particles may include axions,
weakly interacting massive particles (called WIMPs), or neutrinos.
Understanding dark matter is
important to understanding the size, shape and future of the universe. The
amount of dark matter in the universe will determine if the universe is open
(continues to expand), closed (expands to a point and then collapses) or flat
(expands and then stops when it reaches equilibrium). Understanding dark matter
will also aid in definitively explaining the formation and evolution of
galaxies and clusters. As a galaxy spins it should be torn apart. This does not
happen, so something is holding the galaxy together. The something is gravity;
the amount of gravity required to do this, however, is enormous and could not
be generated by the visible matter in the galaxy.
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