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Newly found dwarf galaxies could help reveal the nature of dark matter

Astronomers set out looking for dwarf galaxies around Andromeda to help them understand how matter relates to dark matter.
By University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Published: November 7, 2011
andromeda-dwarf
The circled cluster of stars is the dwarf galaxy Andromeda 29, which University of Michigan astronomers have discovered. The bright star within the circle is a foreground star within our own Milky Way galaxy. This image was obtained with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph at the Gemini North Telescope in Hawaii. Credit: Gemini Observstory/AURA/Eric Bell
In work that could help advance astronomers' understanding of dark matter, University of Michigan researchers have discovered two additional dwarf galaxies that appear to be satellites of Andromeda, the closest spiral galaxy to Earth.

Eric Bell and Colin Slater found Andromeda XXVIII and XXIX. They did it by using a tested star-counting technique on the newest data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, which has mapped more than a third of the night sky. They also used follow-up data from the Gemini North Telescope in Hawaii.

At 1.7 million light-years from Andromeda, these are two of the furthest satellite galaxies ever detected. Invisible to the naked eye, the galaxies are 100,000 times fainter than Andromeda and are barely visible even through large telescopes.

These astronomers set out looking for dwarf galaxies around Andromeda to help them understand how matter relates to dark matter, an invisible substance that doesn't emit or reflect light, but is believed to make up most of the universe's mass. Astronomers believe it exists because they can detect its gravitational effects on visible matter. With its gravity, dark matter is believed to be responsible for organizing visible matter into galaxies.

"These faint, dwarf, relatively nearby galaxies are a real battleground in trying to understand how dark matter acts at small scales," Bell said. "The stakes are high."

The prevailing hypothesis is that visible galaxies are all nestled in beds of dark matter, and each bed of dark matter has a galaxy in it.
For a given volume of universe, the predictions match observations of large galaxies.

"But it seems to break down when we get to smaller galaxies," Slater said. "The models predict far more dark matter halos than we observe galaxies. We don't know if it's because we're not seeing all of the galaxies or because our predictions are wrong."

"The exciting answer," Bell said, "would be that there just aren't that many dark matter halos. This is part of the grand effort to test that paradigm."

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5 stars
RAYMOND LUSSIER from CALIFORNIA said:
Perhaps we are speck of dust on someones black curtains in an other reality.
5 stars
ANTHONY AYIOMAMITIS from PENNSYLVANIA said:
Awesome article and great imaging opportunities!

Thanks for the heads-up.
4 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
Assuming each bed of dark matter has a galaxy in it might be a stretch, since there is so much of it, and normal matter is so relatively rare.
The big news here seems to me to be that there must be a lot more galaxies out there, like quadrillions more. Andromeda is not far away, as galaxies go, so just discovering these two little fellows shows how many are probably around all those other galaxies out there. It reminds me of why Beavis or Butt Head said they hated math - too many numbers. The next generation of giant telescopes on Hawaii and in Chile will need them. (Don't worry. Governments can print money. It works, so long as they don't get carried away.)
Look at all the galaxies in the background. Quite a few of those little dots in the image appear to be galaxies.
And Andromeda is heading toward your computer faster than the fastest rocket ever launched. Only if you go to a dark site and look at it with your eye, then realize how far away it is, can you begin to grasp the enormous size of that sucker. That faint glow is a long, long way away.
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