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Space Science Technology

Physicists Build Donut-Shaped Magnet To Find 'Ghost-Like' Dark Matter Particle (cnet.com) 154

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNET: One of the central puzzles in particle physics is discovering what particle (or particles!) makes up dark matter — the form of matter that is responsible for 85 percent of the mass in the known universe. Some physicists believe searching for a hypothetical particle known as an "axion" could lead to a better understanding of dark matter and to hunt for it, a team of U.S. physicists have recently designed and tested a basketball-sized, donut-shaped apparatus that can seek it out.

It has been believed that axions may be detectable by looking at an unusual type of neutron star known as a "magnetar". These small, erupting stars create some of the most powerful magnetic fields in the universe. Because of their giant magnetic power, axions would be converted to radio waves in the presence of the magnetar -- and thus, detectable by telescopes on Earth. That strange cosmic phenomenon inspired theoretical physicists to create the impressively-named ABRACADABRA experiment (the full name is "A Broadband/Resonant Approach to Cosmic Axion Detection with an Amplifying B-field Ring Apparatus" so the theorists deserve a round of applause for that backcronym). The experiment consists of a donut (or "toroid") shaped device, dangled in a freezer just above absolute zero and fine-tuned to create its own magnetic field. If axions exist, the magnetic field in the middle of the donut could reveal them.
The study has been published in the journal Physical Review Letters.
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Physicists Build Donut-Shaped Magnet To Find 'Ghost-Like' Dark Matter Particle

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  • The FARGate? Completely legally different than StarGate?

  • "Dark" "Matter" (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    It's responsible for 85% of the mass of the known Universe, but we can't seem to find any. Yes, you in the back? No, there's no way we're mistaken, next question?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      A Nobel Prize is up for grabs to anyone who can come up with a testable idea that does a quantitatively better job of reconciling theory and measurement. That's why some of the smartest people in the world are working on it. Why don't you step in and best them all?

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        I don't need to know the answer to recognize hand waving and wishful thinking when I see it. I can produce an incorrect proof that P = NP, does that mean you can't criticize it if you don't have a valid proof to the contrary?

        • If your proof that P = NP is incorrect but not yet independently identified, or had found a fault. But your proof is more of a Postulate or a Theorem.

          One can still criticize a proof even if they cannot produce a counter proof. Because your proof isn't the final outcome but the steps to get to that point.
          I don't have you discredit your Poof of P = NP by proving that P != NP but by going threw the steps in your poof, finding the error in your logic, often making an assumption or muddying the proof with oth

          • by Anonymous Coward

            Can the claim that 85% of the universe is made of stuff we haven't yet isolated not be a valid criticism of the logic behind the dark matter hypothesis? Certainly if I claimed there were unicorns in my sock drawer turning them inside out, you would criticize the mental leap required to create the unicorns even if I could point to some socks that were inside out? "But the unicorn theory neatly explains the socks being turned inside out. Until you have a better theory you cannot criticize this." Sure.

            • by Anonymous Coward

              Yes, but, if there were also unicorn poop in the drawer I might have to take your theory seriously.

              • by Anonymous Coward

                In the absence of unicorn poop, we can safely assume that unicorns don't poop. See what I did there?

            • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @09:58AM (#58353376)

              Dark Matter hasn't been proven yet. However its hypothesized nature does fit into the mathematical models of the trended data of the observed universe.
              Right now with our understanding of gravity and the universe expansion it would seem that we need more mass then what is observable. Could it be something different, yes. But the point of this article, is try to find ways to detect this "Dark Matter" where we then can either show that it does exist and now it is observable (no longer being dark matter) we can study it further and see if its properties does indeed help fill out all the number to match our models.

              If we see that n^2 = 9 n will be equal to 3 or -3, both fit the model. However chances are it will be 3 not -3 as positive values are more common then negative ones.
              This isn't good enough to pass a math test, however if we are going to make a model of the universe, we should pick the more common and simplest answer then trying to explain the more complex model.

              • by Anonymous Coward

                Dark Matter hasn't been proven yet. However its hypothesized nature does fit into the mathematical models of the trended data of the observed universe.

                But this is no surprise because the nature of Dark Matter are made to fit into the mathematical models. Dark Matter is "invented" to fill the gaps.

                • The theories point to there being something missing out there, and some form of matter that we can't yet detect is one idea that people are trying to test. Other idea may be true instead. However just rejecting the whole concept and claiming that what we currently know is the entirety of what there is means we have to rewind many decades of physics.

                  • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
                    Theories pointing to something missing is much less interesting than observations objectively showing that something is missing, which is what the Dark Matter phenomena is.
            • But the idea that there is 85% of the universe that we can't detect comes from measurements that strongly hint that this may be true. We can't detect the unicorn but we can see the unicorn poop in your sock drawer. Alternate theories may be true if they can also explain the missing mass or the appearance of rainbow poop.

              • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
                It's not missing mass. We think it's missing matter because it's the only thing not moving at the speed of light that could explain the observed mass which has no corresponding matter.
        • Re: "Dark" "Matter" (Score:5, Informative)

          by ThePyro ( 645161 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @09:11AM (#58353134)
          Don't be so quick to dismiss dark matter! We have good reasons [wikipedia.org] to speculate about the existence of a particle which doesn't normally interact with electromagnetic fields. In the example above, huge clusters of galaxies collided with each other and the ordinary matter slowed down as a result of the collision, but gravitational lensing suggests that the center of mass (i.e. dark matter) got separated during the collision. It's not a slam dunk, but it's an interesting result that suggests there's more going on than just an incomplete model of gravity.
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          We've discovered a bunch of particles in the past 50 years, why is it wishful thinking to assume that there might be more?

    • Re:"Dark" "Matter" (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Sarten-X ( 1102295 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @09:36AM (#58353262) Homepage

      Since this is Slashdot, I'll throw in a car analogy, in the time-honored tradition.

      You can see my car, a good distance away on level ground. It seems to be moving away from you. With more observations, you can tell it's not just moving, but actually picking up speed.

      Since the ground certainly seems level, and you don't see anything else around, it's a safe assumption that my car does indeed have an engine, and someone's driving it away from you.

      Now, the problem is that engine doesn't actually create any power. It just transfers the energy from its fuel, so it's also a safe assumption that my car has a fuel tank (or batteries, if electric), and that's providing the energy for the acceleration.

      Now back to dark matter...

      Galaxies don't have engines or fuel tanks, but we've recently confirmed that they are actually accelerating... and far more than makes sense for the amount of mass and energy we've seen. To use another car analogy, it's like having a horse-drawn cart keeping up with a race car... It's enough to suggest something really fishy is going on.

      When something fishy happens in astrophysics, it means either our formulas or our models are wrong. Since our formulas seem to be correct everywhere else, we've started looking for this "dark matter" stuff, under the suspicion that it might hold the energy we're looking for... like finding rockets hidden under the bottom of the horse-drawn cart.

      It is still possible that our formulas are wrong... but to match other experiments' results, they'd have to be off by an extremely small amount in some cases, and extremely large amounts in other cases. That means not just a tweak to a scalar value somewhere, but restructuring equations entirely...and we'd still need some kind of reason for the discrepancy. Draft horses don't run at race car speeds, and if they did, they wouldn't look like draft horses.

      Looking for dark matter and the dark energy it caries is actually the simpler solution. The theory fits well with our existing observations, and doesn't require completely overhauling our understanding of how the universe works. If we keep running experiments like the one in TFA and finding nothing, we'll start the huge undertaking to figure out what else might be happening, but for now this is the sensible approach.

      • It sounds like you are talking about dark energy rather than dark matter. Dark energy is whatever it is that is accelerating the expansion of the galaxies away from each other. Dark matter is whatever is keeping galaxies gravitationally bound into themselves given the rates that we observe them spinning (at which rates the mass accounted for by visible matter would not be enough to keep all the stars in them from flying apart into intergalactic space).

    • by Anonymous Coward

      How on Earth is this idiotic response marked Insightful????

    • There are billions of WHOLE PLANETS we can not directly "see" yet, and you have a problem with the idea that there might be some widely diffuse clouds of exotic matter that we can't identify? Wow, you have a lot of faith in telescopes without much in the people who made those telescopes.....

      • I don’t know the finer details of dark matter, but what I do know is that one of the very first questions posed about the existence of dark matter was whether it was just unaccounted ordinary matter. And further research said no it was not. And it wasn’t one team/person that verified this. Multiple teams in at least two ways have verified the numbers.

        Also using visible light isn’t the only technique cosmologists use. The EM spectrum consists of way more than human visible light.

    • Dark Matter is merely the name given to the observation. It's not a theory stating that the universe is full of black stuff that's hard to see. There are many competing ideas on what exactly dark matter is. The possibility that we just have got gravity wrong again is one of them. Once we can account for the observations then it will no longer be called dark matter. It will be called something more appropriate.

      This is something that layman reporting on physics often does a poor job of explaining. It's often

  • Donut shaped? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @08:25AM (#58352934) Journal
    We were freshman in IIT, having passed JEE, head high in the clouds, top 1000 All India Rank, all the orientation speakers calling us creme-de-la-creme of India. First Chemistry 101 class. Reading ahead for the class, our study group found there are some electron orbital stuff, n orbital, p orbital etc. One of them was described to be doughnut shaped. All of us were stumped. We did not know what a doughnut was or what it would look like.

    Then one from our study group found an American chemistry text book with pictures. It spelled doughnut as donut, but had a picture. We exclaimed, "It is a damned torus! Why wouldn't they call it a torus? Why use this weird thing donut/doughnut". In the class Prof PJ Narayanan said, "... it says doughnut in the text book. Doughnut is like a vada [wikipedia.org] but it is sweet not savoury, they make in the West..."

    If slashdot is going to call itself "news for the nerds" the least it can do is to call that shape by its proper name, a torus.

    • by Kokuyo ( 549451 )

      Is it really that important in which foreign language the thing is described? At least the English language isn't dead, no matter how much it gets tortured by each new generation ;).

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 29, 2019 @08:43AM (#58353024)

      Well this discussion just went pear shaped

    • by Anonymous Coward


      If slashdot is going to call itself "news for the nerds" the least it can do is to call that shape by its proper name, a torus.

      Most people know what a donut is, and don't know what a torus is. Super-nerds seem to often suffer from this disease where they think everyone else is a super-nerd. They can't imagine that not everyone knows what a torus is, or that even other nerds might not know what a torus is. Most people here are computer related, and the torus shape just doesn't come up that often.

      Language s

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      you torus a new one

    • If you say "torus", too many Americans will think you are hitting on the them or talking about an old Ford sedan (Taurus). Besides, I can't imagine that a torus tastes as good as a doughnut.

    • And Dark Matter is like a ghost.

      Every so often /. editors post shit to elicit outrage comments rather than topical one. Eyeballs are eyeballs; advertisers don't care.

      The readers fall for it hook, line, and sinker every time.

    • We were freshman in IIT, having passed JEE, head high in the clouds, top 1000 All India Rank, all the orientation speakers calling us creme-de-la-creme of India. First Chemistry 101 class. Reading ahead for the class, our study group found there are some electron orbital stuff, n orbital, p orbital etc. One of them was described to be doughnut shaped. All of us were stumped. We did not know what a doughnut was or what it would look like.

      Then one from our study group found an American chemistry text book with pictures. It spelled doughnut as donut, but had a picture. We exclaimed, "It is a damned torus! Why wouldn't they call it a torus? Why use this weird thing donut/doughnut". In the class Prof PJ Narayanan said, "... it says doughnut in the text book. Doughnut is like a vada [wikipedia.org] but it is sweet not savoury, they make in the West..."

      If slashdot is going to call itself "news for the nerds" the least it can do is to call that shape by its proper name, a torus.

      It is the ghost-like that got me. What are the actual properties of a ghost? Sheet like with holes for eyes?

    • A torus?

      A torus is the folk who walk aroun an take photos of stuff an eat at yer local restraunt and thing... Usully show up on big ol bus and wear funny shorts an hats.

    • I think they use that term to make sure that everybody knows about donuts. It's a public service.

      You have learned something new, enjoy!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      If slashdot is going to call itself "news for the nerds" the least it can do is to call that shape by its proper name, a torus.

      Fuck you and your cultural sensitivity. It's a donut, it's always a donut, and anyone who doesn't like it can go to naraka.

    • The issue is that the term "torus" has only entered the mainstream public vernacular in fairly recent days. The branch of math that refers to them primarily is Topology. They are referenced, defined and used in general Geometry, but aren't particularly important shapes because there are few examples of Torii in the physical universe. Do(ugh)nuts, Tires,and other things like life preserver/rescue rings make up most of the examples of that shape in the real world. There just are't that many. So, unless yo

  • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @08:35AM (#58352990) Journal
    Theorists develop the underlying theory of physics by suggesting extensions to existing laws to solve problems or by calculating what existing laws predict for given situations. These physicists have built, and are running, an experiment. They are collecting and analysing the data to test a theoretical prediction of a new model of physics which makes them experimentalists, not theorists.
  • by As_I_Please ( 471684 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @09:10AM (#58353130)

    Here's the pre-print on arxiv: https://arxiv.org/abs/1901.106... [arxiv.org]

    The primary result in this paper is the validation of the experimental design using a scaled-down version. From the paper:

    ABRACADABRA-10 cm represents the first step in an experimental search program, which aims to ultimately be sensitive to ADM in the coupling range preferred by QCD axions. Future phases of ABRACADABRA will require larger magnets with higher fields, improved shielding, and strong mitigation of mechanical vibration. Augmenting the techniques described here with a resonant amplification readout and scan strategy will also greatly improve the sensitivity of a future full scale ABRACADABRA detector. We have already begun engineering studies towards designing and building such a detector and ABRACADABRA-10 cm creates a strong foundation for this ongoing work.

  • by DontBeAMoran ( 4843879 ) on Friday March 29, 2019 @09:22AM (#58353194)

    Is one of those physicists named Homer, by any chance?

  • How does having a frozen magnetic field here let you detect the conversion of a thing that may or may not exist into radio waves god only knows how many light years away?
    • The axion was a particle postulated to answer the question of why strong interactions, those between quarks, conserve charge-parity. If it exists it would have detectable properties. The range of its mass, and the fact it could be changed into a photon by a strong enough magnetic field.

      Even without considering it a candidate for dark matter, it would be a huge experimental breakthrough for QCD (quantum chromodynamics, our most useful model of quarks and their interactions) theory to find the particle or to

  • CLAPCLAPCLAPCLAP for the acronym - brilliant! But you won't find it because it isn't a particle - unless you have to, then you will, of course. It is a bit of denser space but not dense enough to be a particle. The only thing that came out of the beginning is space in different densities.
  • I didn't know magnets can detect math errors causes by not knowing how gravity and space really work? Need I remind everyone that no dark matter has ever ACTUALLY been detected in any way, shape, or form (pun intended)
  • even a dougnut shaped magent won't help with finding a black cat in a dark room - when it's not there. Researchers tend to forget that a dark matter is nothing more than a figment of someone's imagination.

  • Today it gets hard to distinguish fundamental physics and April fools' jokes.
  • How about a magnet shaped donut instead. That ought to have some uses. Before I eat it.

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