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<text id=93TT2358>
<title>
Jan. 18, 1993: The Dark Side Of The Cosmos
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SCIENCE, Page 48
The Dark Side of the Cosmos
</hdr>
<body>
<p>As astronomers struggle to illuminate the nature of dark matter,
a new report hints that as much as 97% of the universe could
be made of the mystery stuff
</p>
<p>By J. MADELEINE NASH/PHOENIX--With reporting by Michael D.
Lemonick/New York
</p>
<p> When Charles Alcock peers up at the nighttime sky, he
wonders not at the luminous stars but at the blackness that
enfolds them. The Milky Way, Alcock knows, is like a sprinkling
of bright sequins on an invisible cloak spread across the
vastness of space. This cloak is woven out of mysterious stuff
called dark matter because it emits no discernible light. A sort
of shadow with substance, dark matter dominates the universe,
accounting for more than 90% of its total mass. Yet scientists,
struggling to interpret just a few sparse clues, know virtually
nothing about it. The dark matter could be made up of giant
planets, failed stars, black holes, clouds of unknown particles,
or even, so far as the laws of physics are concerned, bowling
balls. "After all this time and all this effort," sighs Alcock,
head of astrophysics at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,
"we still don't know what most of the universe is made of."
</p>
<p> Over the coming decade, Alcock and others believe, this
collective ignorance may at last be dispelled. Small bands of
determined researchers are embarking on elaborate hunts for the
hidden side of the cosmos. Some, using telescopes, are taking
aim at the dark halo that rings our galaxy, searching for large,
dim objects like burned-out stars. Others are positioning
electronic detectors in underground tunnels, hoping to entrap
phantom particles that may be so prevalent that they drench the
universe like invisible drops of rain. "Someday soon," predicts
University of Chicago astrophysicist David Schramm, "one of
these groups is going to strike gold--Swedish gold," the kind
that bears the likeness of Alfred Bernhard Nobel.
</p>
<p> A new finding announced last week can only encourage such
searches, for it supports the growing conviction that dark
matter exists in astonishing abundance. At a meeting of the
American Astronomical Society held in Phoenix, Arizona, a team
of scientists reported that the dark equivalent of 20 trillion
suns lies hidden in a small group of galaxies located millions
of light-years from earth. They based their calculation on the
recent detection by the Rosat X-ray satellite of a cloud of hot
gas that suffuses a seemingly empty region between two of the
galaxies. The gas molecules are moving at such high velocities,
explains Richard Mushotzky of NASA'S Goddard Space Flight
Center, that a "cloud like this would have dissipated into space
long ago, leaving nothing for us to detect, unless it was held
together by the gravity of an immense mass." The unseen mass
needed to perform this function may outweigh the amount of
visible material by an astounding 30 to 1.
</p>
<p> If such a ratio prevails throughout the universe, the
implications are vast. First, it would mean that there might be
so much matter in the universe that the outward expansion
ignited by the Big Bang would eventually be counteracted by the
force of gravity. The universe would ultimately cease its
expansion and begin to collapse under its own weight, imploding
in a catastrophic finale that theorists have dubbed the Big
Crunch. But the presence of so much dark matter also has
implications for the question Alcock ponders: What is all this
stuff made of? The more dark matter there is, the less likely
it is to resemble ordinary matter.
</p>
<p> Dark matter was first postulated in the 1930s by the
astrophysicist Fritz Zwicky, who observed that galaxies in the
far-off Coma cluster were whirling around one another faster
than the laws of physics would allow. They should by rights have
been flung out into deep space, unless, as Zwicky contended, the
gravity from some massive, invisible substance was holding them
in. For decades the idea was rejected as too bizarre. "It
smacked of angels dancing on the head of a pin," recalls
theoretical physcist Joel Primack of the University of
California at Santa Cruz.
</p>
<p> That view has gradually changed over the past 20 years as
astronomers became convinced that dark matter not only exists
but exists in great quantity. Much of the evidence comes from
the kinds of motions Zwicky noted and also from the mysteriously
rapid rotation rates of individual star systems, particularly
those known as spiral galaxies. Another clue, uncovered largely
by AT&T Bell Laboratories astrophysicist J. Anthony Tyson, is
the bending of light from distant galaxies. The light is
presumably distorted by the gravitational pull of invisible
matter.
</p>
<p> Just what this mystery matter is made of has been the
subject of some truly wild speculation. "The list of
candidates," says Rocky Kolb, a theoretical astrophysicist at
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory near Chicago, "depends on
whether or not you believe in a WYSIWYG universe." WYSIWYG
stands for "what you see is what you get" (dark-matter
aficionados are inordinately fond of acronyms). WYSIWYG types
like to assume that dark matter is most likely made up of the
same basic building blocks as ordinary, visible matter: protons,
neutrons and electrons. One possibility is that dark matter is
nothing more exotic than planet-like objects that are bigger
than Jupiter but too small to shine like the sun. Such objects,
known as MACHOs (massive compact halo objects), may be orbiting
our own Milky Way like swarms of giant bees.
</p>
<p> Over the next four years, a 1.3-m telescope on Mount
Stromlo, in Australia, mounted with sophisticated digital
cameras, will methodically search for MACHOs by peering at stars
in the nearby dwarf galaxy known as the Large Magellanic Cloud.
If MACHOs exist, explains physicist Christopher Stubbs of the
University of California at Santa Barbara, who helped design the
experiment, they should occasionally pass between the earth and
these background stars. Because gravity bends light, the MACHOs
would act as lenses, causing the stars temporarily to brighten
enough for the cameras to detect.
</p>
<p> But even if MACHOs are found, they are unlikely to resolve
the dark-matter conundrum. Physicists have calculated that
there is an absolute limit to the amount of ordinary matter in
the universe. If dark matter adds up to more than that--as
last week's announcement and other new findings suggest it
might--then at least some of the dark matter must be made of
something different from the matter we know.
</p>
<p> The most obvious candidate is the neutrino, a fast-moving
brand of particle that whizzes through the cosmos in great
abundance. Though physicists initially flocked to this
explanation, there are two considerable drawbacks. First, no one
knows if neutrinos have any mass at all, although some recent
experiments have hinted that they might. Second, and more
important, computer models of a cosmos built largely of
neutrinos fail to match up with the universe as we know it. The
models imply, for example, that galaxies should have formed
relatively recently, while in fact they are very ancient.
</p>
<p> As a result, physicists have increasingly come to believe
that dark matter--or at least some of it--is made of
something no one has ever seen. Santa Cruz's Primack calls this
idea "the ultimate Copernican revolution." Says he: "Not only
will the earth no longer be the center of the universe, it won't
even be made of the same sort of stuff." The unknown ingredient
could be "weakly interacting massive particles," or WIMPs--sluggish but ubiquitous bits of matter predicted by theoretical
physicists. Says University of California, Berkeley,
astrophysicist Joseph Silk: "The only thing that's uncertain
about WIMPS is their existence. If they exist, then they are the
dark matter."
</p>
<p> This instant, in fact, quadzillions of WIMPs may be
streaking harmlessly through our bodies. Alternatively, the
mystery matter might be made of "axions," equally speculative
little items predicted by other theories and whimsically named
after a laundry detergent. Both are known in the trade as cold
dark matter (cold refers not just to their temperature but also
to the fact that they move slowly, unlike hot, zippy neutrinos).
</p>
<p> Physicists are in pursuit of each of these possibilities.
At the Center for Particle Astrophysics at Berkeley, director
Bernard Sadoulet and his colleagues are putting the final
touches on a contraption designed to catch a WIMP. It consists
of a solitary crystal of germanium immersed in a frigid bath of
liquid helium; the whole apparatus will eventually be placed
underground to screen out more conventional particles. Should
a wayward WIMP happen to jostle one of the atoms in the crystal,
the impact would create a telltale spike of heat, detectable by
delicate sensors. Meanwhile, at Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory, Karl van Bibber and his colleagues are hoping to
build an axion trap using a magnetic field 150,000 times as
strong as the earth's.
</p>
<p> The success of either group would be cause for
celebration, and yet such an achievement would probably solve
only a piece of the dark-matter puzzle. In the past five years,
astronomers peering deep into the cosmos have discovered huge
structures: superclusters of galaxies with names like the Great
Wall and the Great Attractor, and empty regions like the Great
Void in the constellation Bootes. Mathematical models indicate
that such superstructures would be unlikely to exist if all
dark matter were cold. The latest thinking: maybe dark matter
includes both cold particles like WIMPs or axions and hot stuff
like neutrinos; the former would have husbanded ordinary matter
into galaxies and clusters of galaxies, while the latter helped
create the giant structures.
</p>
<p> Such a hodgepodge is considered a cumbersome and ugly
solution by many theorists. Says Princeton University's Jeremiah
Ostriker: "It's like you're making soup, and you add a little
salt, and it doesn't taste right, so you add a little pepper."
Still, in the confounding world of astrophysics, the simplest
and most elegant theories often fail, and there is no reason to
assume that the recipe for the cosmos would be bland.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>