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Space Science

Dark, Miniature Galaxies 12

chill writes "CNN is reporting that "Scientists have discovered evidence that hordes of dark, miniature galaxies surround ordinary galaxies, lending credence to the theory that the universe is comprised mostly of cold, dark matter." The study was partly funded by NASA and the U.S. DOE."
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Dark, Miniature Galaxies

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  • More and more... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Chasing Amy ( 450778 ) <asdfijoaisdf@askdfjpasodf.com> on Wednesday May 22, 2002 @06:11PM (#3568674) Homepage
    It's looking more and more like the perennial complaints by cosmologists and other physicists and astronomers that there's too much mass in the universe for it all to be accounted by visible galaxies, is holding true.

    Yes, the mass of certain neutrinos and other "nearly-massless" particles does figure in, just like we've been theorizing and hearing for a long time. However, we are continually finding more and more of this evidence that there are other sources of mass in dark matter.

    It'll be interesting to see the theories on what these "dark matter galaxies" are. Is it some form of dark baryonic matter? Or something else? Quite exotic, either way...
    • by Anonymous Coward
      These satellite galaxies can only help explain the orbital behavior of galactic clusters. To explain the rotation *within* a galaxy, you need more mass *inside* the galaxy.

      So it's just not a matter of finding more mass, the mass needs to be located where it is missing.
  • Dark Matter Overview (Score:4, Informative)

    by rlotun ( 513569 ) <<rlotun> <at> <cs.ubc.ca>> on Wednesday May 22, 2002 @06:27PM (#3568764) Homepage
    For those of you, like me, who have only a cursory knowledge of Dark Matter check this overview of Dark Matter [ucla.edu]

    • Does anyone know why we haven't been able to detect these directly? Why are they dark, are they enshrouded in dust? This story fits with other info I've read recently such as some gamma ray bursts being detected close by and clouds of hydrogen 'raining down' onto the galactic center from outside the plane of the galaxy. But what do they think is the reason for their invisibility? If it is due to dust then wouldn't our view of most of the sky be diminished?
  • Okay, maybe not quite that miniature. :)
  • by Muad'Dave ( 255648 ) on Thursday May 23, 2002 @08:12AM (#3571457) Homepage

    So that's what my wife is made of! I have to keep the furnace on 'broil' in the winter, and I've seen her step into the shade of a palm tree in the Caribbean and start shivering. Who should I send a skin sample to?

  • The CNN is shy on details, so anyone who is more well-versed in dark matter is welcome to correct my terrible errors that I'm sure to make. I won't note the parts I may be wrong in, though, since I could be wrong in nearly all of them.

    Now, gravitation (esp. gravitational lensing) is the only way to detect dark matter. The article shows that the gravitational lens is a "bright" galaxy. So how did they determine that these dark midget galaxies exist? They don't radiate light to be bent by the lens, and unless I'm terribly mistaken, the little circles around the larger one in the image [cnn.net] are in fact the same object, but distorted by the gravitational field of the central galaxy.

    As for the second reason dark matter is supposed to exist (that the universe just isn't heavy enough): can't the stars/galaxies/clusters simply be more dense with ordinary matter than we thought? (This would require that the matter be colder than we thought in space, so that the total radiation corresponds with the experimental values).

    In conclusion, for those who know about dark matter: why does it have to exist?

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