Thursday, September 23, 2010

NO dark matter detected, yet

Without a wisp of exaggeration, the greatest myth in present physics might be about the so-called dark matter and dark energy. Physicists, fairly speaking, for the moment have not even the slightest definite clue about them. They were motivated for two observations: (1) the rotation velocity of a typical galaxy does not follow the pattern based on Newton's theory; (2) the universe is expanding faster and faster. Fact (1) leads to proposal of dark matter while (2) to that of dark energy. Interestingly, the dark energy term was first hypothesized by Einstein, who later on dismissed it for Hubble's discovery, to find a static and stable universe. This energy never dilute in the course of expansion. It permeates everywhere. People don't know where it comes from, although some suggested it might be vacuum energy (calculations rejected this idea). As regards the dark matter, it is usually hypothesized as some undetected particles other than baryons. They interact extremely weakly with visible matter. Some suggest these might be the so-called Weakly Interacting Massive Particles that are predicted by supersymmetric theory. Detectors have been mounted to settle this issue. A latest survey reports a failure [Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 131302 (2010) ].

Although the above dark matter idea is popular, it is quite dubious to some physicists, who don't like extra assumptions. In 2004, a German group did a study which reveals running gravitational constant that goes bigger at astronomical scales [Physical Review D 70: 124028 (2004)]. This study might null the necessity of dark matter.

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