Download - Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

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Page 1: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy

Mat Page

Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL

6. Dark matter

Page 2: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

5. Dark Matter

• This lecture:• Dark Matter:

– where is it?– what could it be?– some experiments to find it.

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Page 3: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

Recap of galaxy rotation

• Orbital velocities rise OK but then don’t fall off.

• Something wrong– Either gravity not 1/r2 (!!)– or there is more mass than we can see.– This is “dark matter”

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Page 4: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

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Page 5: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

Where must the mass be?

• Recall M = r v2/G

• If M varies with radius, and v is constant

• Mass proportional to radius

• for a disc thickness h, density

• for a sphere, density

• Must extend out to visible edge of galaxy

= 3v2

4Gr2

= v2

Ghr

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Page 6: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

• Two classes of candidates:• MACHOs

– Massive Compact Halo Obects

• WIMPs– Weakly Interacting Massive Particles

What could dark matter be?Slide 6

Page 7: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

• Discrete objects that are very difficult to detect:– Brown dwarfs / large Jupiters– White dwarfs– Small black holes.

What could MACHOs be?Slide 7

Page 8: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

• New particles we haven’t yet seen: – Neutrinos– Lightest Supersymmetric particles

(neutralinos)– Axions (Big bang remnants).

What could WIMPs be?Slide 8

Page 9: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

Detecting MACHOs

• Machos are small and dense.

• But they have mass, so cause curvature in spacetime.

• Will focus light from a background star as they pass in front - star will change brightness.

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Page 10: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

MACHO events

• MACHO project looked for these events.• 1m telescope in Australia looked at LMC every

night possible for several years.• Saw some!

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Page 11: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

..but not many

• Not many low-mass (planet size) MACHOs.

• Some 0.5 Mo events (black holes, white dwarfs?)

• MACHOs could account for UP TO 40% of dark matter.

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Page 12: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

Detecting WIMPs

• Several current + future experiments

• This is a NaIAD detector from UKDMC, Boulby Mine

• Look for recoil from “Heavy WIMP”

• None confirmed yet.

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How are they doing?

UKDM

Other planned experiments

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Page 14: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

But none found so far

• Big, risky science.• Would be as important for particle

physics as for cosmology.• Could net the Nobel prize if found.• But you have to detect one first.

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Page 15: Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 6. Dark matter.

Some key points about dark matter:

• 90% of the mass in the Universe• Most of the mass in the outer parts of galaxies.• Two possible candidates for dark matter:• WIMPs

– weakly interacting massive particles– searches underway, none found so far

• MACHOs– massive compact halo objects– can only make up to 40% of dark matter

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