Astronomy Report
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to AstronomyReport.com RSS Feed Subscribe
New Articles
Cassini detects arcs of material at Saturn moons 9/7/2008

A fine-tooth comb to measure the accelerating universe 9/7/2008

Analysis Begins on Phoenix Lander's Deepest Soil Sample 9/6/2008

Rosetta Steins fly-by confirmed 9/6/2008

XMM-Newton's massive discovery 9/5/2008

Theory of the sun's role in formation of the solar system questioned 9/5/2008

Closest Look Ever at the Edge of a Black Hole 9/4/2008

The Thousand-Ruby Galaxy 9/4/2008

Cosmic connections: Scientist locates the origin of cosmic dust 9/3/2008

Integral locates origin of high-energy emission from Crab Nebula 9/2/2008

Antarctic research helps shed light on climate change on Mars 9/1/2008

Cluster watches Earth's leaky atmosphere 8/31/2008

GLAST Observatory renamed for Fermi, reveals entire gamma-ray sky 8/30/2008

Scientists discover minimum mass for galaxies 8/29/2008

A Clash of Clusters Provides Another Clue to Dark Matter 8/28/2008

Dwarf galaxies need dark matter too, astronomers say (10/25/2007)

Tags:
stars, galaxies, dark matter

Stars in dwarf spheroidal galaxies behave in a way that suggests the galaxies are utterly dominated by dark matter, University of Michigan astronomers have found.

Astronomy professor Mario Mateo and post-doctoral researcher Matthew Walker measured the velocity of 6,804 stars in seven dwarf satellite galaxies of the Milky Way: Carina, Draco, Fornax, Leo I, Leo II, Sculptor and Sextans. They found that, contrary to what Newton's law of gravity predicts, stars in these galaxies do not move slower the farther they are from their galaxy's core.

"These galaxies show a problem right from the center," Mateo said. "The velocity doesn't get smaller. It just stays the same, which is eerie."

Astronomers already know stars in spiral galaxies behave in a similar way. This research dramatically increases the available information about smaller galaxies, making it possible to confirm that the distribution of light and stars in them is not the same as the distribution of mass.

"We have more than doubled the amount of data having to do with these galaxies, and that allows us to study them in an unprecedented manner. Our research shows that dwarf galaxies are utterly dominated by dark matter, so long as Newtonian gravity adequately describes these systems," Walker said. Walker received his doctorate from U-M earlier this year and currently has a post-doctoral position at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom.

Dark matter is a substance astronomers have not directly observed, but they deduce it exists because they detect its gravitational effects on visible matter. Based on these measurements, the prevailing theory in astronomy and cosmology is that the visible parts of the universe make up only a fraction of its total matter and energy.

The planet Neptune was once "dark matter," Mateo said. Before the term was even coined, astronomers predicted its existence based on an anomaly in the orbit of Neptune's neighbor Uranus. They knew just where to look for Neptune.

For the past quarter century, astronomers have been looking for the Neptune of the universe, so to speak. Dark matter could take the form of dwarf stars and planets, elementary particles including neutrinos, or hypothetical and as-yet undetected particles that don't interact with visible light or other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum.

Dark matter is believed to hold galaxies together. The gravitational force of the visible matter is not considered strong enough to prevent stars from escaping. Other theories exist to explain these discrepancies, though. For example, Modified Newtonian Dynamics, Mateo said, proposes that gravitational forces become stronger when accelerations are very weak. While their results align with current dark matter models, Mateo and Walker say they also bolster this less-popular explanation.

"These dwarf galaxies are not much to look at," Mateo continued, "but they may really alter our fundamental views on the nature of dark matter and, perhaps, even gravity."

Walker will present a paper on these findings on Oct. 30 at the Magellan Science Meeting in Cambridge, Mass. The paper he will present is Velocity Dispersion Profiles of Seven Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies. It was published in the Sept. 20 edition of Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of Michigan

Homeowner Loan - New York Hotel - Mortgage - Debt Help

Post Comments:

Search
  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.