The Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA)
has captured an image with subtle distortions. That, in and of itself, is not
too terribly interesting; however, these distortions hint at a hidden galaxy—a
dark, dwarf galaxy made up mostly of dark matter.
The image captured by ALMA showed
faint red arcs surrounding a galaxy (shown in blue light below) nearly 4
billion light-years away. The distortions of light are believed to have been
caused by the gravitational force from the dwarf dark galaxy behind it
As NASA says, “we are much more certain what dark matter is not
than we are what it is.” We know that dark matter does not emit or absorb light
making it invisible to us as of now. And while we have no known methods of
seeing dark matter, all matter has gravitational force, which has an effect on
surrounding matter (including light).
As predicted by Einstein’s theory of
general relativity, the gravitational forces of objects alter light and cause a
lensing effect, called gravitational lensing. This gives clues about
surrounding galaxies, even when they are far away or, in this case, invisible.
“We can find these invisible objects
in the same way that you can see rain droplets on a window. You know they are
there because they distort the image of the background objects,” Stanford
University astronomer Yashar Hezaveh explained.The research implies that we may have not been seeing majority of dwarf galaxies because they are made up mostly of dark matter.
For nearly two decades, researchers have been seeing similar distortions but brushed them off as “discrepancies.” This discovery could explain those discrepancies and open up possibilities for ALMA to find similar objects for comparison as well as help astronomers find out more about dark matter.
Source:
ALMA
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