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Friday, January 10, 2020

Dark Matter Can Form Tiny, Cold 'Clumps.' Scientists Have Found the Smallest Ones Yet. - Space.com

It turns out that dark matter forms smaller "clumps" than scientists thought, confirming a fundamental prediction about the mysterious substance.

Dark matter is the invisible stuff that is said to make up about 27% of all of the mass in the universe. Though researchers cannot directly observe dark matter because it doesn't emit light or energy, scientists think it dominates all of outer space — and even Earth. 

It may sound weird, but dark matter gets "clumpy." 

According to the widely accepted "cold dark matter" theory, all galaxies form within clouds of dark matter, which is made up of slow-moving, or "cold," particles. These "cold" dark matter particles form structures, or "clumps," that can be as "small" as an airplane or as massive as hundreds of thousands of Milky Way galaxies, according to a NASA statement

Related: Vera Rubin: The Astronomer Who Brought Dark Matter to Light

Now, a recent study, which used a new observation technique with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, provides incredible evidence for the "cold dark matter" theory and shows how the mysterious stuff forms smaller clumps than scientists previously thought. 

"We made a very compelling observational test for the cold dark matter model, and it passes with flying colors," Tommaso Treu, a professor in the Division of Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of California, Los Angeles and a member of the team that made the Hubble observations, said in the NASA statement. 

To indirectly observe and study dark matter, researchers use the effects of gravity in nearby stars and galaxies to detect dark matter and glean information about it. Previously, researchers have found evidence of clumps of dark matter near large and medium-size galaxies, but the clumps found in these new observations are the smallest ever detected. 

Because scientists hadn't seen such small clumps of dark matter until now, some researchers had suggested that there might be "warm" dark matter particles that move around too quickly to form large structures, and thus form only smaller clumps. But with these observations, it's clear that "cold" dark matter particles can also form small clumps. 

As scientists continue to (indirectly) observe and study dark matter, the mysterious material becomes less … well … mysterious. This work both reveals new information about dark matter and works to confirm presumptions made about the material that makes up such an enormous percentage of our universe. 

"Dark matter is colder than we knew at smaller scales," Anna Nierenberg, a researcher at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory who led the Hubble survey, said in the statement. "Astronomers have carried out other observational tests of dark matter theories before, but ours provides the strongest evidence yet for the presence of small clumps of cold dark matter. By combining the latest theoretical predictions, statistical tools and new Hubble observations, we now have a much more robust result than was previously possible."

The researchers behind these observations will present their results at the 235th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Follow Chelsea Gohd on Twitter @chelsea_gohd. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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Dark Matter Can Form Tiny, Cold 'Clumps.' Scientists Have Found the Smallest Ones Yet. - Space.com
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