Discovery of Dark Matter
Hubble Space Telescope Image of the Center of the Coma Cluster (movie)![]() |
Fritz Zwicky![]() |
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Schematic of Foreground Galaxy Acting as Gravitational Lens on Background Quasar
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Cluster of Galaxies Acting as Gravitational Lens on Background Galaxies
To see a movie of a model of a cluster (yellow galaxies) moving in front of background galaxies (faint blue galaxies) and gravitationally lensing them, click here.
To check out a gravitational lensing demo, click here.
To read more about gravitational lensing, click here or here.
Spectra in Direction of Nearby and Distant Quasars Showing Lyman-alpha Forest
(absorption features are cold gas clouds of hydrogen in front of each quasar)
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High surface brightness galaxy (upper left) compared with three low surface brightness galaxies. Low surface brightness galaxies, which have low contrast compared with brightness of sky, are hard to find! |
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![]() Star Brightens and Fades Once (signature of microlensing!) |
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Light Curve of Star Brightness vs. Time for Microlensing Event (observed in both red and blue light ---> can rule out variable star) |
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With dark energy, dark matter helps determine fate of universe (movie)...
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![]() | Recent observations of distant supernova have suggested that the expansion of the universe is actually accelerating or speeding up, like the red curve, which implies the existence of a form of matter with a strong negative pressure, such as the cosmological constant. This strange form of matter is also sometimes referred to as the "dark energy". If dark energy in fact plays a significant role in the evolution of the universe, then in all likelihood the universe will continue to expand forever. |
Component | Mass Fraction (relative to critical density) | Comment |
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luminous matter | ~0.005 | light emitting baryons only |
all baryons | ~0.04-0.06 | from nucleosynthesis predictions and CMB measurements, factor of ~10x luminous baryons |
all light and dark matter | ~0.3 | from adding observed light from mass derived from bulk flows, factor of ~5x all baryons |
dark energy | ~0.7 | from supernovae and CMB measurements |