May 16, 2019 from Space Website
We can't see it. It might not be made of normal matter. Our telescopes haven't directly detected it.
But it sure seems like it's out there.
Ana Bonaca's evidence for the dark impactor, which she presented April 15 at the conference of the American Physical Society in Denver, is a series of holes in our galaxy's longest stellar stream, GD-1...
Stellar streams are lines of stars moving together across galaxies, often originating in smaller blobs of stars that collided with the galaxy in question.
The stars in GD-1,
remnants of a "globular cluster" that plunged into the Milky Way a
long time ago, are stretched out in a long line across our sky.
Astronomers would expect a single gap in the stream, at the point where the original globular cluster was before its stars drifted away in two directions.
But Bonaca showed that GD-1 has a second gap. And that gap has a ragged edge - a region Bonaca called GD-1's "spur" - as if something huge plunged through the stream not long ago, dragging stars in its wake with its enormous gravity.
GD-1, it seems, was hit
with that 'unseen bullet'...
shows the most detailed map yet
of
GD-1, revealing the apparent second gap and spur. New Astrophysical Probes of Dark Matter,
Ana
Bonaca/GAIA)
It's not impossible that there's a second supermassive black hole in our galaxy, Bonaca said.
But we'd expect to see
some sign of it, like flares or radiation from its accretion disk.
And most large galaxies seem to have just a single supermassive
black hole at their center.
GD-1 appears to actually look like. Bottom: This image shows what
computer models predict GD-1 should look like. New Astrophysical Probes of Dark Matter,
Ana
Bonaca/GAIA)
That doesn't mean the object is definitely, 100%, absolutely made of dark matter, Bonaca said.
But that seems unlikely, in part due to the sheer scale of the object.
what GD-1 appears to actually look like. Bottom: This image shows what computer models predict GD-1 would look like after
an
interaction with a large, heavy object. New Astrophysical Probes of Dark Matter, Ana Bonaca/GAIA)
(It may have been moving very fast, but not quite as heavy as expected - a true dark bullet - Bonaca said. Or it could have been moving more slowly but been very massive - a sort of dark hammer.)
Without an answer to that
question, it's impossible to be certain where the thing would have
ended up. Still, the possibility of having found a real dark matter
object is tantalizing.
Our universe seems to act like the luminous matter, the stuff we can see is just a small fraction of what's out there. Galaxies bind together as if there's something heavy inside them, clustered in their centers and creating enormous gravity.
So most physicists reason
that there's something else out there, something invisible. There
are lots of different opinions as to what it's made of, but none of
the efforts to directly detect dark matter on Earth have yet worked.
Some alternative
theories, including theories that suggest dark matter doesn't exist
at all, wouldn't include any clumps - and would have the effects of
dark matter distributed smoothly across galaxies.
That helped distinguish between stars that were really moving with GD-1, and those that just sat next to it in Earth's sky.
That effort produced the
most precise image ever of GD-1, which revealed the second gap, the
spur, and a previously unseen region of the stellar stream.
The goal, she said, is to
eventually map clumps of dark matter all across the Milky Way.
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