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View Full Version : The end to a mystery [of dark matter and dark energy]? (Forwarded)


Andrew Yee[_1_]
February 14th 08, 06:06 AM
Press Office
University of St Andrews

Contact:
Fiona Armstrong, Press Officer
01334 462530 / 462529

Ref: Dark Matter 310108

Thursday 31 January 2008

The end to a mystery?

Dr HongSheng Zhao, of the University's School of Physics and Astronomy, has
shown that the puzzling dark matter and its counterpart dark energy may be
more closely linked than was previously thought.

Only 4% of the universe is made of known material -- the other 96% is
traditionally labelled into two sectors, dark matter and dark energy.

A British astrophysicist and Advanced Fellow of the UK's Science and
Technology Facilities Council, Dr Zhao points out, "Both dark matter and
dark energy could be two faces of the same coin.

"As astronomers gain understanding of the subtle effects of dark energy in
galaxies in the future, we will solve the mystery of astronomical dark
matter at the same time."

Astronomers believe that both the universe and galaxies are held together by
the gravitational attraction of a huge amount of unseen material, first
noted by the Swiss astronomer Fritz Zwicky in 1933, and now commonly
referred to as dark matter.

Dr Zhao reports that, "Dark energy has already revealed its presence by
masking as dark matter 60 years ago if we accept that dark matter and dark
energy are linked phenomena that share a common origin."

In Dr Zhao's model, dark energy and dark matter are simply different
manifestations of the same thing, which he has considered as a 'dark fluid'.
On the scale of galaxies, this dark fluid behaves like matter and on the
scale of the Universe overall as dark energy, driving the expansion of the
Universe. Importantly, his model, unlike some similar work, is detailed
enough to produce the same 3:1 ratio of dark energy to dark matter as is
predicted by cosmologists.

Efforts are currently underway to hunt for very massive dark-matter
particles with a variety of experiments. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at
the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva is a
particle accelerator that amongst other objectives, could potentially detect
dark matter particles.

According to Dr Zhao, these efforts could turn out to be fruitless. He said,
"In this simpler picture of universe, the dark matter would be at a
surprisingly low energy scale, too low to be probed by upcoming Large Hadron
Collider.

"The search for dark-matter particles so far has concentrated on
highly-energetic particles. If dark matter however is a twin phenomenon of
dark energy, it will not show up at instruments like the LHC, but has been
seen over and over again in galaxies by astronomers."

However, the Universe might be absent of dark-matter particles at all. The
findings of Dr Zhao are also compatible with an interpretation of the dark
component as a modification of the law of gravity rather than particles or
energy.

Dr Zhao concluded: "No matter what dark matter and dark energy are, these
two phenomena are likely not independent of each other." Dr Zhao and his
collaborators' findings have recently been published by Astrophysical
Journal Letters in December 2007, and Physics Review D. 2007.

NOTE TO EDITORS:

Theories of the physics of gravity were first developed by Isaac Newton in
1687 and refined by Albert Einstein's theory of General Relativity in 1905
which stated that the speed of gravity is equal to the speed of light.

However, Einstein was never fully decided on whether his equation should add
an omnipresent constant source, now called dark energy in general.

Astronomers following Fred Zwicky have also speculated additional sources to
Einstein's equation in the form of non-light emitting material, called dark
matter in general.

Apart from very light neutrinos neither dark sources have been confirmed
experimentally.

Dr Zhao is available for interview on 01334 463135.