City
Epaper

Scientists attempt to measure temperature of dark matter

By ANI | Published: January 16, 2020 1:14 PM

We know that it exists and makes up about a quarter of our universe, but we have yet to see a particle of the elusive dark matter.

Open in App

We know that it exists and makes up about a quarter of our universe, but we are yet to see a particle of the elusive dark matter.

Although our current knowledge of this mysterious substance is highly limited, it can be said with a certain degree of surety that the gravity of clumps of dark matter can distort light from distant objects.

Chris Fassnacht, a physics professor at the University of California, Davis and his colleagues are using this distortion, called gravitational lensing, to measure the temperature of dark matter.

The standard model for dark matter is that it is 'cold,' meng that the particles move slowly compared to the speed of light, Fassnacht said.

This is also tied to the mass of dark matter particles. The lower the mass of the particle, the 'warmer' it is and the faster it will move.

The model of cold (more massive) dark matter holds at very large scales, Fassnacht said, but doesn't work so well on the scale of individual galaxies.

That's led to other models including 'warm' dark matter with lighter, faster-moving particles. 'Hot' dark matter with particles moving close to the speed of light has been ruled out by observations.

Former UC Davis graduate student Jen-Wei Hsueh, Fassnacht, and colleagues used gravitational lensing to put a limit on the warmth and therefore the mass of dark matter.

They measured the brightness of seven distant gravitationally lensed quasars to look for changes caused by additional intervening blobs of dark matter and used these results to measure the size of these dark matter lenses.

If dark matter particles are lighter, warmer and more rapidly-moving, then they will not form structures below a certain size, Fassnacht said.

"Below a certain size, they would just get smeared out," he said.

The results put a lower limit on the mass of a potential dark matter particle while not ruling out cold dark matter, he said.

The team's results represent a major improvement over a previous analysis, from 2002, and are comparable to recent results from a team at UCLA.

Fassnacht hopes to continue adding lensed objects to the survey to improve the statistical accuracy.

"We need to look at about 50 objects to get a good constraint on how warm dark matter can be," he said.

( With inputs from ANI )

Tags: DavisUniversity Of CaliforniaUc Davis Graduate
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS Campus Protest: Many Injured as Violent Clashes Erupt at UCLA Between Pro-Palestinian and Pro-Israel Activists, Visuals Emerge

InternationalMarco Troper: 19-Year-Old Son of Former YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki Found Dead at US University

BusinessHyderabad teen brings pride to the city, making waves in medical sciences

TechnologyClimate change likely led to violence in early Andean populations: Research

EntertainmentAl Pacino, girlfriend Noor Alfallah welcome baby boy, reveal the name of child

टेकमेनिया Realted Stories

TechnologySouth Korea welcomes US move to extend tax credits for EVs containing Chinese graphite

TechnologyIIT Delhi, ITU to host UN-based robotics championship in India in October

Technology'Two-thirds of Indian companies striving for better execution of SDG goals'

TechnologyOla Krutrim opens AI Cloud infrastructure for developers, launches mobile app

TechnologyKarma has a way of biting back: Zerodha CEO Nithin Kamath