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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT0312>
<title>
Oct. 04, 1993: Twinkles In The Dark
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SPACE, Page 77
Twinkles In The Dark
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Astronomers may have finally detected the invisible matter that
will control the fate of the universe
</p>
<p>By MICHAEL D. LEMONICK
</p>
<p> The last thing physicist Kim Griest expected was to find what
he was looking for. Griest and colleagues at the University
of California, Berkeley had been scanning the skies for more
than a year in search of the mysterious and elusive material
called dark matter. The scientists couldn't see it and couldn't
say what it was, but they knew it was out there because of its
undeniable effect on stars and planets. What could the invisible
stuff be made of? The Berkeley group was checking out a theory
that dark matter takes the form of large planets or small, dim
stars--a plausible idea, but one that Griest suspected was
wrong. A little over two weeks ago, he was prepared to say confidently
that dark matter was almost certainly something else.
</p>
<p> It didn't work out that way. At a meeting in Italy last week,
Griest's boss, Bernard Sadoulet, announced that the team had
discovered what appeared to be a tiny star or a huge planet,
lurking out beyond the visible stars of the Milky Way. It may
be just one of trillions of similar objects, whose combined
mass far outweighs all the known stars. At the same time, a
French group doing its own search disclosed that it had found
two more of the dark bodies, making it unlikely that either
team had made a mistake. If the discoveries pan out, they may
solve a puzzle that has baffled scientists for nearly 60 years.
</p>
<p> The hunt for dark matter is not just an academic exercise. It
is a quest to know the fate of the universe. The unseen material
makes up at least 90% of the mass in the cosmos, generates most
of the gravity and thus controls the universe's evolution. If
there's enough dark matter producing a sufficient amount of
gravitational force, the universe will eventually stop expanding
and then collapse in an apocalyptic Big Crunch. If there's not,
the expansion will go on forever.
</p>
<p> How do scientists know dark matter exists? Most galaxies rotate
so quickly that they would disintegrate if they were not surrounded
by a massive halo of invisible matter. Similarly, pairs and
groups of galaxies revolve around one another faster than they
should, unless there is more mass, and thus more gravity, than
there appears to be.
</p>
<p> Over the years theorists have come up with many competing notions
about the identity of dark matter. The candidates have included
various kinds of subatomic particles, many of which aren't even
known to exist; black holes; and even long, thin strings of
pure energy left over from the Big Bang. Large planets or dim
stars--known as MACHOs (massive compact halo objects)--are
by far the most mundane of the solutions to the puzzle. They're
also the least popular: theorists think there should be just
enough dark matter to stop the universe's expansion without
reversing it, and MACHOs can't be numerous enough to do the
job.
</p>
<p> Still, they were worth looking for, if only to prove they weren't
there, and Princeton astronomer Bohdan Paczynski had proposed
an ingenious way to conduct the search. Albert Einstein showed
in his general theory of relativity that the gravity from a
star will bend rays of light that pass nearby. In principle,
he said, a star could act as a lens, focusing and brightening
the light of another star directly behind it. If a cloud of
small stars or big planets really is orbiting the Milky Way,
some of them should occasionally pass in front of stars in the
next galaxy over--the Large Magellanic Cloud. If you watched
this galaxy very carefully for a year or two, you might sometimes
see a star getting inexplicably brighter, then dimmer again.
If you saw nothing, then there were no MACHOs worth talking
about.
</p>
<p> That was the strategy used by the American and the French groups,
as well as by Paczynski and several Polish astronomers. Scanning
the stars was only the beginning; the astronomers then had to
put thousands of megabytes of data from their telescopes through
a computer. The computer's job was to identify the unusual flickers
of light caused by MACHOs amid the flashes from thousands of
naturally pulsating stars that regularly switch from dim to
bright and back again. After nearly 2 million individual observations
that yielded just one dubious MACHO, Griest's group was ready
to give up. Then, unexpectedly, the computer spit out what he
calls "a beautiful event." After Griest and his colleagues had
raised and ruled out phenomena that might be tricking them,
they were ready to unveil their MACHO.
</p>
<p> There is still a chance that what Griest found was some bizarre
kind of variable star, but the fact that the French saw the
same flicker in an entirely different type of star argues against
that possibility. The next step is to comb through another million
observations already stored in the computer. If nothing more
shows up, it means MACHOs alone can't account for all the dark
matter. Attention would then shift to the hunt for undiscovered
subatomic particles. But if several more MACHOs--Griest won't
say exactly how many--pop out of the computer, then they could
probably account for the entire dark-matter halo. And scientists
could be more confident that they have at last found the main
fabric of the universe.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>