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Welcome to my dark matters !


If you want to know what kind of person I am, just go to http://reasonable.posterous.com,
and I will tell you about my private life, different hobbies and some eccentric experiments.
Meanwhile, I want to tell you what I recently learned by studying up to date articles in the
magazines Scientific American and Sky & Telescope, searching for the last news about
mysterious dark matter, dark energy and vacuum energy.
And what a surprice ! The empty spaces between billions of galaxies in the universe is not an
empty vacuum, full of nothing. It’s full of matter and energy, constituting about 95 % of all
mass and energy. But it’s invisible, why is it so ? You will perhaps find the answer if you read
my little abstract, so do it now !

Dark matter, how did it start ?

In 1687 Isaac Newton ‘s law of universal gravitation , the first modern scientific description
of gravity, involves “action” at a distance “. Newton was sure there must be an acount of
gravity without this nonlocality, and even tries an unsuccessful theori in which tiny, invisable,
jiggling particles fill all of seemingly empty space. ( pict. 1)

Who predicted the existence of dark matter ?

The swiss Fritz Zwicky (1898-1974, (pict.2) measured in 1933 the mass of the Coma cluster
of galaxies, a near galaxie cluster outside our own . He found this to be 400 times the mass of
all visible stars from galaxies in this cluster. His conclution was that it had to be an invisibel
mass in the univers, “gluing together” the galaxis.
What kind of particles could this bee, and not beeing obserevable? Such particles could not
be any of those created in particle accelerators, such as quarks, leptons and bosons .

The first evidence .

In the MaxPlanck institute for astronomy in Heidelberg three-dimentional pictures from


galaxies was scrutinized, and especially pictures from the Hubble space telescope revealed a
peculiar phenonmena, called “gravitation lenses”. (pict.3)
Such distortion of a picture from a star cluster could only get its explanation from an
enormous gravitation influence. The stars in this the cluster could only contribute with a few
percent of this, the rest had to come from the dark matter. In fact, his proves the existence of
dark matter.

What is the universe made of ?

Just take a look at pic. 4. (Mc-Donald Observatory) Normal matter amounts to only 5 %,
that’s all ! Dark matter amounts to 21 % , but is a completely overshaddoved by dark energy,
another mysterious content in the universe.
So we still don’t know for sure what dark matter is ! In the standard model for particle
physics we find no neutral, heavy particles beeing stable for the lifetime of the universe.
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Therefore, scientists has given such mystical particles the name “Weakly Interactive Massive
Particle”or WIMP. In the nearby months, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Cern could
possibly give scientists important information about the true nature of WIMP’s.

Is dark matter homogenous distributed in universe ?

Simon White, direktor by Mac Planck Institute for astrophysics in Germany, has during 17
years studied computer-simulation of dark matter contribution in the universe. He revealed
that dark matter was irregulary distributed, and clogging . He was able to visualize the
clogging in pictures, giving an impression of their extension in space. In pict.5 the scale given
is 500 Mpe/h (megaparcel) corresponding to 2 billion lightyears. White says that dark matter
must be an up to now unknown type of an elementary particle. We believe it’s kind of
supersymmetric particles, Wimps.

A new approach to the understanding ?

Results from two guite different groups, the one using a satellite and the other a ballon, was
published at the end of 2008. The satellite group used the European PAMELA -satellite, the
ballon group used a ballon-borne instrument known as ATIC.

In Sky & Telescope Magazine for april 2009 the author Govert Schilling published an article
with the title “ Shedding New Light on Dark Matter”, where he discusses the observarions
and possible explanations. An extract from this article is presentet here:

From PAMELA (pict.6) was reported an excess of high-energy positrons up to about 100
billion eV

From ATIC ( pic7) was registered 210 high-speed electrons, coming from deep space, beeing
50 % more than the expected 140. These electrons had energies roughly between 300 and 700
billion eV (electron volts) . This should mean that each single electron had as much kinetic
energy as a flying mosquito. In defiance of variances measured, the datasets appear to match
pretty well in general. Shilling writes : “Something appearantly in our cosmic
neighboborhood spews out large numbers of energetic electrons and positrons. Could it bee a
nearby cloud of annihaliationed dark matter? It’s fairly likely that the PAMELA group has
observed dark matter”. (pic.8)

A theory (Wulf) based on observations from ATIC is that due to the drop-off above 800 billion
eV Wulf suggest they come from annihilating Kaluza-Klein particles. Such particles should
exist in tiny, rolled up fifth dimensions, from where they could make there presence in our
four-dimentional space-time .

Kaluza-Klein theory is a model that seeks to unify the two fundamental forces of gravitation
and electromagnetism. In 1921 Kaluza extended general relativity to a five-dimentional
spacetime. The resulting equations can be separated out into further sets of equations, one of
which is equivalent to Einsteins field eqations, another set equivalent to Maxwell’s equations
for the electromagnetic field and the final part an extra field now termed the “ radion”. In
1926 , Oscar Klein proposed that the fourth spatial dimension is curled up in a circle of very
small radius, so that a particle moving a short distance along the axis would return to where it
began. The distance a particle can travel before reaching its initial position is said to be the
size of the dimention.
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Exsistance of higher dimensioned particles is a prediction in the String Theory, not yet
confirmed by observations. String Theory presuppose eleven dimentions (seven in addition to
our daily four x –y -z and time) and it’s extreemly complicated to combine all forces in
coincident mathematic equations.

Other physicists express scepticism , not sure that the measurements from ATIC are due to
dark matter. There are other objects that could accelerate positrons and electrons to such high
energies, such as pulsars and suopernovas, and concludes. Well known pulsares could give
such signals, they say.

New hopes for a solution are attached to the Fermi accelerator in USA and the Large Hadron
Accelerator (LHC) i Cern , Switzerland.(pict.9)

Scientists hope for seeing “telltale glow of decaying particles produced by dark matter
annihilation, a faint glow that is predicted to be most conspicious in the large centered on the
core of our Milky Way Galaxy.”

Dark energy, does it really exist ?

What is dark energy ?

No one knows the answer today. A full clarification will probably disclose å new kind of
physics, shaking our modern comprehension of particles behaviour in their fundaments.
But something seems clarified about dark energy :

• It shows a repulsiv force, and is responsoble for the expansion of the universe.
• Dark energy is probably relayed to what we call vacuum energy
• Dark energy is uniformly distributed in the , it doesn’t clog like dark matter.

Whatever the location, be it in your kitchen or in intergalactic space, vacuum energy has the
same density, about 10 -26 kilograms per m3, equivalent to a handfulog hydrogen atoms. All
dark energy in our own solar system amounts to the mass of a small asteroide. So it’s effect
stands out only when viewed over vast distances and spans of time.

Newertheless, some kind of energy, previously unknown to science, opposes and overwhelms
galaxies mutual attraction, pushing them apart ever faster, and adds up to the most powerful
force in the cosmos. Simultation have shown that matter on cosmic scales is distributed in a
cobweblike pattern, a filigree of filaments, several tens of millions of lightyears long,
interspersed with voids of similar size. Therefore, both dark energy and dark matter are
needed to be explained. Common matter, so called baryons (protons and neutrons) , makes up
to 4 % of all “elements” in the universe. Dark matter makes about 70%, and dark energy
about 26%.
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What is vacuum energy ?

The quantum theory

In 1917 Albert Einstein introduced dark energy with a constant he kalled Λ. He needed this in
his equation for the general theory of relative gravitation, making it asserting for a static
universe. Shortly after this Hubble detected the expanssion of the universe, and Λ was
redundant. Later on the Quantum Theori showed up, and scientists believed that the empty
room virtually was full of particles, continiously forming and vanishing. The physicians now
suspicted that vacuum necessarily had a dark form of energy, and Λ was again introduced.

Status for vacuum theory.

Today, physicists explain the cosmological constant Λ as the vacuum energy of space. In
essence, this say that pairs of of particles are constantly popping into existence throughout the
universe. This “virtual pairs” of one particle with a negative charge and one with a positive
charge. They only exist for a tiny fraction of a second . See pic.10, showing four stages :

1. Empty space
2. Two particles suddenly appear
3. Particles ram together and annihilate each other
4. They leave ripples of energy through space

This energy may be pushing outwards on space itself, causing the universe to accelerate
faster. In addition, one suspect that vacuum energy came from space itself, when the Big Bang
started.

Today, 13.7 billion years after the Big Bang, the universe has grown much larger, and the
galaxies are not packed so close together. Their gravitatonal pull on each other is weakened ,
allowing the vacuum energy to play a more dominant role.

Skien, 10.april 2009

Kjell W. Tveten

References :

Scientific American, may 2004 “The time before time”


Scientific American, febr. 2007 “ The cosmic grip of dark energy”
Scientific American, mars 2009 “ Was Einstein wrong ?”
Scientific American , april 2009 “ Dark energy, does it really exist?”
Sky& Telescope, febr. 2009 “ Going over the dark side”
Sky&Telescope, april 2009 ” Dark matter, seen at last ?”

The Standard Model, a quantum felt theory (QFT) from Wikipedia, 18 p..
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