Illustration of how light oscillates into an axion-like particle and back again by magnetic fields in intergalactic space.
Credit: Aurore Simonnet/Sonoma State University/NASA/NOAA/GSFC/Suomi NPP/VIIRS/Norman Kuring
Astronomers are highly aware that the vast majority of matter in our universe is invisible, or “dark.” So what the heck is it? Well, now we have a good idea as to what it probably isn’t.
After analyzing a large number of observations recorded by NASA’s Fermi space telescope, researchers have found a type of hypothetical dark matter particles, known as axion-like particles, either aren’t a major player in the dark matter game, or simply don’t exist.
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Axion-like particles are thought to be created by certain quantum interactions, but they have a strange quality that could be measured if they pass through strong magnetic fields. Although these particles are thought to be extremely light — “weighing in” at less than a billionth of the mass of an electron — the universe could be flooded with them, creating a huge gravitational bulk that could explain where most of the mass of the universe is hidden.
But axion-like particles, or “ALPs,” may give themselves away in a very subtle way. Under certain conditions, otherwise “invisible” ALPs may transform into photons, the particles responsible for the transmission of light. So we may not be able to directly see these dark matter particles (as dark matter does not interact via the electromagnetic force), but we can certainly see photons (which are the exchange particles of the electromagnetic force).
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To test this idea, physicists have analyzed gamma-ray emissions from a very bright galaxy called NGC 1275 in the Perseus galaxy cluster, some 240 million light-years away. Between us and that galaxy, there are some powerful magnetic environments any photon, or indeed dark matter particle, would need to travel through. So if a certain type of ALP does exist, their fluctuation from dark matter particle to gamma-ray photon — and vice versa — should be detected. However, no such oscillation has, so far, been found in 6-years-worth of gamma-ray observations by Fermi.
“The ALPs we have been able to exclude could explain a certain amount of dark matter,” said Manuel Meyer, post doctorate researcher at the Department of Physics, Stockholm University. “What is particularly interesting is that with our analysis we are reaching a sensitivity that we thought could only be obtained with dedicated future experiments on Earth.”
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The researchers hope to gather more data from Fermi, but it looks like either these types of ALPs don’t act in the way we expect or they don’t exist, likely canceling them out of the search for dark matter.
Source: Stockholm University
Originally published on Discovery News .
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