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Astronomy 305/Frontiers in Astronomy

Astronomy 305/Frontiers in Astronomy. Class web site: http://glast.sonoma.edu/~lynnc/courses/a305 Office: Darwin 329A and NASA EPO (707) 664-2655 Best way to reach me: lynnc@charmian.sonoma.edu. Group 14. Great job, Group 14!. What is the Universe made of?. Regular matter

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Astronomy 305/Frontiers in Astronomy

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  1. Astronomy 305/Frontiers in Astronomy Class web site: http://glast.sonoma.edu/~lynnc/courses/a305 Office: Darwin 329A and NASA EPO (707) 664-2655 Best way to reach me: lynnc@charmian.sonoma.edu Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  2. Group 14 Great job, Group 14! Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  3. Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  4. What is the Universe made of? • Regular matter • Heavy elements 0.03% • Stars 0.5% • Free Hydrogen and Helium 4% (Lecture 11) • Neutrinos 0.3% (Lecture 10) • Dark Energy 60% (Lecture 13) • Dark Matter 30% (this lecture) You can't see it but you can feel it! Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  5. Kepler’s Third Law movie • P2 is proportional to a3 Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  6. Dark Matter Evidence • In 1930, Fritz Zwicky discovered that the galaxies in the Coma cluster were moving too fast to remain bound in the cluster according to the Virial Theorem KPNO image of the Coma cluster of galaxies - almost every object in this picture is a galaxy! Coma is 300 million light years away. Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  7. Virial Theorem • Stable galaxies should obey this law: 2K = -U • where K=½mv2 is the Kinetic Energy • U = -aGMm/r is the Potential Energy (a is usually 0.5 - 2, and depends on the mass distribution) • Putting these together, we have M=v2r/aG. • Measure M, r and v2 from observations of the galaxies; then use M and r to calculate vvirial • Compare vmeasured to vvirial • vmeasured > vvirial which implies M was too small Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  8. NGC 3198 Dark Matter Evidence • Measure the velocity of stars and gas clouds from their Doppler shifts at various distances • Velocity curve flattens out! • Halo seems to cut off after r= 50 kpc • Galaxy Rotation Curves v2=GM/r where M is mass within a radius r Since v flattens out, M must increase with increasing r! Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  9. Dark Matter Evidence • Cluster Mass Java simulation • Rotation Curve Java simulation Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  10. Dark Matter Evidence • Measure the mass of light emitting matter in galaxies in the cluster (stars) • Measure mass of hot gas - it is 3-5 times greater than the mass in stars • Calculate the mass the cluster needs to hold in the hot gas - it is 5 - 10 times more than the mass of the gas plus the mass of the stars! • Hot gas in Galaxy Clusters Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  11. Dark Matter Halo • The rotating disks of the spiral galaxies that we see are not stable • Dark matter halos provide enough gravitational force to hold the galaxies together • The halos also maintain the rapid velocities of the outermost stars in the galaxies Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  12. Types of Dark Matter • Baryonic - ordinary matter: MACHOs, white, red or brown dwarfs, planets, black holes, neutron stars, gas, and dust • Non-baryonic - neutrinos, WIMPs or other Supersymmetric particles and axions • Cold(CDM) - a form of non-baryonic dark matter with typical mass around 1 GeV/c2 (e.g., WIMPs) • Hot (HDM) - a form of non-baryonic dark matter with individual particle masses not more than 10-100 eV/c2 (e.g., neutrinos) Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  13. Hydrogen = 1p + 1e Deuterium = 1p + 1e + 1n Helium = 2p + 2e + 2n Primordial Matter • Normal matter is 3/4 Hydrogen (and about 1/4 Helium) because as the Universe cooled from the Big Bang, there were 7 times as many protons as neutrons • Almost all of the Deuterium made Helium Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  14. Primordial Matter • The relative amounts of H, D and He depend on h = (protons + neutrons) / photons • h is very small - We measure about 1 or 2 atoms per 10 cubic meters of space vs. 411 photons in each cubic centimeter • The measured value for h is the same or a little bit smaller than that derived from comparing relative amounts of H, D and He • Conclusion:we may be missing some of baryonic matter, but not enough to account for the observed effects from dark matter! Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  15. Baryonic Dark Matter • Baryons are ordinary matter particles • Protons, neutrons and electrons and atoms that we cannot detect through visible radiation • Primordial Helium (and Hydrogen) – recently measured – increased total baryonic content significantly • Brown dwarfs, red dwarfs, planets • Possible primordial black holes? • Baryonic content limited by primordial Deuterium abundance measurements Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  16. Baryonic - Brown Dwarfs • Mass around 0.08 Mo • Do not undergo nuclear burning in cores • First brown dwarf star Gliese 229B Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  17. Expected 38 red dwarfs: Seen 0! Baryonic - Red Dwarf Stars • HST searched for red dwarf stars in the halo of the Galaxy • Surprisingly few red dwarf stars were found, < 6% of mass of galaxy halo Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  18. Ghost Galaxies • Also known as low surface brightness galaxies • Studies have shown that fainter, elliptical galaxies have a larger percentage of dark matter (up to 99%) • This leads to the surprising conclusion that there may be many more ghostly galaxies than those we can see! • Each ghost galaxy has a mass around 10 million Mo Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  19. Baryonic –MACHOs • Massive Compact Halo Objects • Many have been discovered through gravitational micro-lensing • Not enough to account for Dark Matter • And few in the halo! Mt. Stromlo Observatory in Australia (in better days) Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  20. Baryonic – MACHOs • 4 events towards the LMC • 45 events towards the Galactic Bulge • 8 million stars observed in LMC • 10 million stars observed in Galactic Bulge • 27,000 images since 6/92 Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  21. Gravitational Microlensing • Scale not large enough to form two separate images movie Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  22. Baryonic – black holes • Primordial black holes would form at 10-5 s after the Big Bang from regions of high energy density • Sizes and numbers of primordial black holes are unknown • If too large, you would be able to see their effects on stars circulating in the outer Galaxy • Black holes also exist at the centers of most galaxies – but are accounted for by the luminosity of the galaxy’s central region Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  23. So, it must be a black hole! Black Hole MACHO • Isolated black hole seen in Galactic Bulge • Distorts gravitational lensing light curve • Mass of distorting object can be measured • No star is seen that is bright enough….. Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  24. Strong Gravitational Lensing Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  25. Strong Gravitational Lensing • HST image of background blue galaxies lensed by orange galaxies in a cluster • “Einstein’s rings” can be formed for the correct alignment Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  26. Large Survey Synoptic Telescope • At least 8 meter telescope • About 3 degree field of view with high angular resolution • Resolve all background galaxies and find redshifts • Goal is 3D maps of universe back to half its current age Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  27. Gravitational Lens Movie #1 • Movie shows evolution of distortion as cluster moves past background during 500 million years • Dark matter is clumped around orange cluster galaxies • Background galaxies are white and blue Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  28. Gravitational Lens Movie #2 • Movie shows evolution of distortion as cluster moves past background during 500 million years • Dark matter is distributed more smoothly around the cluster galaxies • Background galaxies are white and blue Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  29. movie Strong Gravitational Lensing • Spherical lens • Perfect alignment • Note formation of Einstein’s rings Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  30. movie Strong Gravitational Lensing • Elliptical lens • Einstein’s rings break up into arcs if you can only see the brightest parts Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  31. Gas clouds in Lagoon nebula Baryonic – cold gas • We can see almost all the cold gas due to absorption of light from background objects • Gas clouds range in size from 100 pc (Giant Molecular Clouds) to Bok globules (0.1 pc) • Mass of gas is about the same as mass of stars, and is part of total baryon inventory Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  32. Dust clouds of the dark Pipe nebula Baryonic –dust • Dust is made of elements heavier than Helium, which were previously produced by stars (<2% of total) • Dust absorbs and reradiates background light Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  33. Non-baryonic: Neutrinos • There are about 100 million neutrinos per m3 • More (or less) types of neutrinos would lead to more (or less) primordial Helium than we see • Neutrinos with mass affect the formation of structure in the Universe • Much less small scale structure would be present • Observed structure sets limits on how much mass neutrinos may have, and on their contribution to dark matter. • The sum of all the mn~ 5 h502 eV (due to models of Hot and Cold DM) Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  34. Non-baryonic - axions • Extremely light particles, with typical mass of 10-6 eV/c2 • Interactions are 1012 weaker than ordinary weak interaction • Density would be 108 per cubic centimeter • Velocities are low • Axions may be detected when they convert to low energy photons after passing through a strong magnetic field Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  35. Searching for axions • Superconducting magnet to convert axions into microwave photons • Cryogenically cooled microwave resonance chamber • Cavity can be tuned to different frequencies • Microwave signal amplified if seen Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  36. Non-baryonic - WIMPs • Weakly Interacting Massive Particles • Predicted by Supersymmetry (SUSY) theories of particle physics • Supersymmetry tries to unify the four forces of physics by adding extra dimensions • WIMPs would have been easily detected in acclerators if M < 15 GeV/c2 • The lightest WIMPs would be stable, and could still exist in the Universe, contributing most if not all of the Dark Matter Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  37. CDMS Lab 35 feet under Stanford Cryostat holds T= 0.01 K CDMS for WIMPs • Cryogenic Dark Matter Search • 6.4 million events studied - 13 possible candidates for WIMPs • All are consistent with expected neutronflux Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  38. Detecting WIMPs? • Laboratory experiments - DAMA experiment 1400 m underground at Gran Sasso Laboratory in Italy announced the discovery of seasonal modulation evidence for 52 GeV WIMPs • 100 kg of Sodium Iodide, operated for 4 years • CDMS has 0.5 kg of Germanium, operated for 1 year, but claims better background rejection techniques • http://www.lngs.infn.it/ Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  39. HDM CDM HDM vs. CDM models • Supercomputer models of the evolution of the Universe show distinct differences • Rapid motion of HDM particles washes out small scale structure – the Universe would form from the “top down” • CDM particles don’t move very fast and clump to form small structures first – “bottom up” Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  40. Largest structures are now just forming Z=1.0 Z=0.5 Now Critical density Low density CDM models vs. density • CDM models as a function of z (look-back time) Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  41. Dark Matter Activity • You will search a paper plate “galaxy” for some hidden mass by observing its effect on how the “galaxy” “rotates” In order to balance, the torques on both sides must be equal: T1 = F1X1 = F2X2 =T2 where F1 = m1g and F2 = m2g Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  42. Superstrings • Strings are little closed loops that are 1020 times smaller than a proton • Strings vibrate at different frequencies • Each resonant vibration frequency creates a different particle • Matter is composed of harmonies from vibrating strings – the Universe is a string symphony “String theory is twenty-first century physics that fell accidentally into the twentieth century” - Edward Witten Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  43. Superstrings • Strings can execute many different motions through spacetime • But, there are only certain sets of motions that are self-consistent • Gravity is a natural consequence of a self-consistent string theory – it is not something that is added on later Self-consistent string theories only exist in 10 or 26 dimensions – enough mathematical space to create all the particles and interactions that we have observed Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  44. Superstring Dimensions • Since we can observe only 3 spatial and 1 time dimensions, the extra 6 dimensions (in a 10D string theory) are curled up to a very small size • The shape of the curled up dimensions is known mathematically as a Calabi-Yau space Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  45. Superstring Universe • At each point in 3D space, the extra dimensions exist in unobservably small Calabi-Yau shapes Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  46. Superstring Theories • There are at least five different versions of string theory, which seem to have different properties • As physicists began to understand the mathematics, the different versions of the theories began to resemble each other (“duality”) • In 1995, Edward Witten showed how all five versions were really different mathematical representations of the same underlying theory • This new theory is known as M-theory (for Mother or Membrane) Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  47. M-Theory • Unification of five different types of superstring theory into one theory called M-theory • M-theory has 11 dimensions Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  48. Some questions • Can we find the underlying physical principles which have led to us to string theory? • Does the correct string (or membrane) theory have 10 or 11 dimensions? • Will we ever be able to find evidence for the curled up dimensions? • Is string theory really the long-sought “Theory of Everything”? • Will any non-physicists ever be able to understand string theory? • Hear and see Brian Greene in NOVA’s “Elegant Universe” Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  49. Web Resources • VROOM visualization of 4 dimensions http://www.evl.uic.edu/EVL/VROOM/HTML/PROJECTS/02Sandin.html • Ned Wright’s Cosmology Tutorial http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/cosmolog.htm • Fourth dimension web site • http://www.math.union.edu/~dpvc/math/4D/welcome.html Prof. Lynn Cominsky

  50. Web Resources • Michio Kaku’s web site http://www.mkaku.org • E. Lowry’s EM Field in Spacetime http://www.ultranet.com/~eslowry/elmag • Visualizing tensor fieldshttp://www.nas.nasa.gov/Pubs/TechReports/RelatedPapers/StanfordTensorFieldVis/CGA93/abstract.html • Exploring the Shape of Space http://www.geometrygames.org/ESoS/index.html Prof. Lynn Cominsky

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