A collaboration led by scientists at Nagoya University in Japan has
investigated the nature of dark matter surrounding galaxies seen as they
were 12 billion years ago, billions of years further back in time than ever
before. Their findings, published in Physical Review Letters, offer the
tantalizing possibility that the fundamental rules of cosmology may differ
when examining the early history of our universe.
Seeing something that happened such a long time ago is difficult. Because of
the finite speed of light, distant galaxies appear not as they are today,
but as they were billions of years ago. But even more challenging is
observing dark matter, which does not emit light.
Consider a distant source galaxy, even further away than the galaxy whose
dark matter one wants to investigate. The gravitational pull of the
foreground galaxy, including its dark matter, distorts the surrounding space
and time, as predicted by Einstein's theory of general relativity. As the
light from the source galaxy travels through this distortion, it bends,
changing the apparent shape of the galaxy. The greater the amount of dark
matter, the greater the distortion. Thus, scientists can measure the amount
of dark matter around the foreground galaxy (the "lens" galaxy) from the
distortion.
However, beyond a certain point scientists encounter a problem. The galaxies
in the deepest reaches of the universe are incredibly faint. As a result,
the further away from Earth we look, the less effective this technique
becomes. The lensing distortion is subtle and difficult to detect in most
cases, so many background galaxies are necessary to detect the signal.
Most previous studies have remained stuck at the same limits. Unable to
detect enough distant source galaxies to measure the distortion, they could
only analyze dark matter from no more than 8–10 billion years ago. These
limitations left open the question of the distribution of dark matter
between this time and 13.7 billion years ago, around the beginning of our
universe.
To overcome these challenges and observe dark matter from the furthest
reaches of the universe, a research team led by Hironao Miyatake from Nagoya
University, in collaboration with the University of Tokyo, the National
Astronomical Observatory of Japan, and Princeton University, used a
different source of background light, the microwaves released from the Big
Bang itself.
First, using data from the observations of the Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam
Survey (HSC), the team identified 1.5 million lens galaxies using visible
light, selected to be seen 12 billion years ago.
Next, to overcome the lack of galaxy light even further away, they employed
microwaves from the cosmic microwave background (CMB), the radiation residue
from the Big Bang. Using microwaves observed by the European Space Agency's
Planck satellite, the team measured how the dark matter around the lens
galaxies distorted the microwaves.
"Look at dark matter around distant galaxies?" asked Professor Masami Ouchi
of the University of Tokyo, who made many of the observations. "It was a
crazy idea. No one realized we could do this. But after I gave a talk about
a large distant galaxy sample, Hironao came to me and said it may be
possible to look at dark matter around these galaxies with the CMB."
"Most researchers use source galaxies to measure dark matter distribution
from the present to eight billion years ago," added Assistant Professor
Yuichi Harikane of the Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, University of
Tokyo. "However, we could look further back into the past because we used
the more distant CMB to measure dark matter. For the first time, we were
measuring dark matter from almost the earliest moments of the universe."
After a preliminary analysis, the researchers soon realized that they had a
large enough sample to detect the distribution of dark matter. Combining the
large distant galaxy sample and the lensing distortions in CMB, they
detected dark matter even further back in time, from 12 billion years ago.
This is only 1.7 billion years after the beginning of the universe, and thus
these galaxies are seen soon after they first formed.
"I was happy that we opened a new window into that era," Miyatake said. "12
billion years ago, things were very different. You see more galaxies that
are in the process of formation than at the present; the first galaxy
clusters are starting to form as well." Galaxy clusters comprise 100–1000
galaxies bound by gravity with large amounts of dark matter.
"This result gives a very consistent picture of galaxies and their
evolution, as well as the dark matter in and around galaxies, and how this
picture evolves with time," said Neta Bahcall, Eugene Higgins Professor of
Astronomy, professor of astrophysical sciences, and director of
undergraduate studies at Princeton University.
One of the most exciting findings of the researchers was related to the
clumpiness of dark matter. According to the standard theory of cosmology,
the Lambda-CDM model, subtle fluctuations in the CMB form pools of densely
packed matter by attracting surrounding matter through gravity. This creates
inhomogeneous clumps that form stars and galaxies in these dense regions.
The group's findings suggest that their clumpiness measurement was lower
than predicted by the Lambda-CDM model.
Miyatake is enthusiastic about the possibilities. "Our finding is still
uncertain," he said. "But if it is true, it would suggest that the entire
model is flawed as you go further back in time. This is exciting because if
the result holds after the uncertainties are reduced, it could suggest an
improvement of the model that may provide insight into the nature of dark
matter itself."
"At this point, we will try to get better data to see if the Lambda-CDM
model is actually able to explain the observations that we have in the
universe," said Andrés Plazas Malagón, associate research scholar at
Princeton University. "And the consequence may be that we need to revisit
the assumptions that went into this model."
"One of the strengths of looking at the universe using large-scale surveys,
such as the ones used in this research, is that you can study everything
that you see in the resulting images, from nearby asteroids in our solar
system to the most distant galaxies from the early universe. You can use the
same data to explore a lot of new questions," said Michael Strauss,
professor and chair of the Department of Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton
University.
This study used data available from existing telescopes, including Planck
and Subaru. The group has only reviewed a third of the Subaru Hyper
Suprime-Cam Survey data. The next step will be to analyze the entire data
set, which should allow for a more precise measurement of the dark matter
distribution. In the future, the team expects to use an advanced data set
like the Vera C. Rubin Observatory's Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST)
to explore more of the earliest parts of space. "LSST will allow us to
observe half the sky," Harikane said. "I don't see any reason we couldn't
see the dark matter distribution 13 billion years ago next."
Reference:
First Identification of a CMB Lensing Signal Produced by 1.5 Million
Galaxies at z∼4: Constraints on Matter Density Fluctuations at High
Redshift, arXiv:2103.15862 [astro-ph.CO]
arxiv.org/abs/2103.15862 ,
Accepted by PRL:
journals.aps.org/prl/accepted....
Tags:
Physics