New research offers a novel insight into the nature
of dark matter and dark energy and what the future of our Universe might be.
Researchers in Portsmouth
and Rome have
found hints that dark matter, the cosmic scaffolding on which our Universe is
built, is being slowly erased, swallowed up by dark energy.
The findings appear in the journal Physical Review
Letters, published by the American
Physical Society. In the journal cosmologists at the Universities of Portsmouth
and Rome , argue
that the latest astronomical data favours a dark energy that grows as it
interacts with dark matter, and this appears to be slowing the growth of structure
in the cosmos.
Professor David Wands, Director of Portsmouth ’s
Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, is one of the
research team.
He said: “This study is about the fundamental
properties of space-time. On a cosmic scale, this is about our Universe and its
fate.
“If the dark energy is growing and dark matter is
evaporating we will end up with a big, empty, boring Universe with almost
nothing in it.
“Dark matter provides a framework for structures to
grow in the Universe. The galaxies we see are built on that scaffolding and
what we are seeing here, in these findings, suggests that dark matter is
evaporating, slowing that growth of structure.”
Cosmology underwent a paradigm shift in 1998 when
researchers announced that the rate at which the Universe was expanding was
accelerating. The idea of a constant dark energy throughout space-time (the
“cosmological constant”) became the standard model of cosmology, but now the Portsmouth and Rome
researchers believe they have found a better description, including energy
transfer between dark energy and dark matter.
Research students Valentina Salvatelli and Najla
Said from the University of Rome worked in Portsmouth
with Dr Marco Bruni and Professor Wands, and with Professor Alessandro
Melchiorri in Rome .
They examined data from a number of astronomical surveys, including the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey, and used the growth of structure revealed by these surveys
to test different models of dark energy.
Professor Wands said: “Valentina and Najla spent
several months here over the summer looking at the consequences of the latest
observations. Much more data is available now than was available in 1998 and it
appears that the standard model is no longer sufficient to describe all of the
data. We think we’ve found a better model of dark energy.
“Since the late 1990s astronomers have been
convinced that something is causing the expansion of our Universe to
accelerate. The simplest explanation was that empty space – the vacuum – had an
energy density that was a cosmological constant. However there is growing
evidence that this simple model cannot explain the full range of astronomical
data researchers now have access to; in particular the growth of cosmic
structure, galaxies and clusters of galaxies, seems to be slower than
expected.”
Professor Dragan Huterer,of the University of Michigan ,
has read the research and said scientists need to take notice of the findings.
He said: “The paper does look very interesting. Any
time there is a new development in the dark energy sector we need to take
notice since so little is understood about it. I would not say, however, that I
am surprised at the results, that they come out different than in the simplest
model with no interactions. We’ve known for some months now that there is some
problem in all data fitting perfectly to the standard simplest model.”
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