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Scientists Peer Through Warped Space, Identify 12-Billion-Year-Old Dark Matter

These halos from the early universe could lead to a new era of cosmology.

Monisha Ravisetti Former Science Writer
Monisha Ravisetti was a science writer at CNET. She covered climate change, space rockets, mathematical puzzles, dinosaur bones, black holes, supernovas, and sometimes, the drama of philosophical thought experiments. Previously, she was a science reporter with a startup publication called The Academic Times, and before that, was an immunology researcher at Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York. She graduated from New York University in 2018 with a B.A. in philosophy, physics and chemistry. When she's not at her desk, she's trying (and failing) to raise her online chess rating. Her favorite movies are Dunkirk and Marcel the Shell with Shoes On.
Monisha Ravisetti
5 min read
A colorful square in the background depicts the Big Bang's radiation, galaxies and distorted radiation, seen in the foreground.

An artist's illustration of radiation residue from the Big Bang distorted by dark matter 12 billion years ago.

Reiko Matsushita

Twisted into our universe lies one of science's biggest unsolved mysteries. Where is all the dark matter? What is all the dark matter

I mean, we know it's there. 

Galaxies, including the Milky Way, are spinning so rapidly that our physics predicts everything inside should be flung outward like horses on an unhinged merry-go-round. But obviously, that's not happening. You, me, the sun and Earth are safely anchored. Therefore, scientists theorize that something -- probably shaped like a halo -- must surround galaxies to protect them from falling apart. 

Whatever comprises those boundaries is called dark matter. We can't see it, we can't feel it, and we don't even know if it's one thing. It's the epitome of elusive. We only know that dark matter exists. 

Despite our inability to view or touch the material itself, experts have interesting ways of identifying the effects it has on our universe. After all, we deduced dark matter's presence in the first place by noticing how it holds galaxies together. 

Scientists took advantage of that principle, announcing remarkable new findings about dark matter on Monday. With a toolkit composed of warped space, cosmic residue left over from the Big Bang and powerful astronomy instruments, they detected a deep space zone of previously unstudied dark matter halos -- each situated around an ancient galaxy, dutifully protecting it from living out a merry-go-round nightmare. 

These whirls, according to a study on the find published in Physical Review Letters, date back 12 billion years, just under two billion years post-Big Bang. That might very well make them the youngest dark matter rings ever studied by humanity, the authors suggest, and potentially the prelude to cosmology's next chapter.

"I was happy that we opened a new window into that era," Hironao Miyatake of Nagoya University and author of the study, said in a statement. "12 billion years ago, things were very different. You see more galaxies that are in the process of formation than at the present; the first galaxy clusters are starting to form as well." 

Wait, warped space? Cosmic residue?

Yes, you read that correctly. Let's explain.

More than a century ago, when Albert Einstein coined his famous theory of general relativity, one prediction he made was that super strong gravitational fields stemming from massive quantities of matter would literally warp the fabric of space and time, or spacetime. He turned out to be correct. Today, physicists tap into the concept by calling on a technique dubbed gravitational lensing to study very faraway galaxies and other phenomena in the universe. It works something like this. 

Imagine two galaxies. Galaxy A is in the background and B is in the foreground.

Basically, as light from galaxy A passes by galaxy B to get to your eyes, that luminescence gets distorted by B's matter, dark or not. This is good news for scientists, because such distortion often magnifies faraway galaxies, kind of like a lens. 

Further, there's a sort of reverse calculation you can do with this light warp to figure out how much dark matter surrounds galaxy B. If galaxy B held a lot of dark matter, you'd see a lot more distortion than expected from visible matter -- the stuff we can see -- within. But if it didn't have that much dark matter, the distortion would be much closer to your prediction. This system has worked pretty well, but it has a caveat. 

A depiction of a faraway bright spot, representing a quasar, emitting light that's getting distorted by a foreground galaxy before reaching the lens of the Hubble Space Telescope.

This sketch shows paths of light from a distant quasar, which is a really bright object in the center of a galaxy, being gravitationally lensed by a foreground galaxy on the way to the lens of the Hubble Space Telescope.

NASA, ESA and D. Player (STScI)

Standard gravitational lensing only allows researchers to identify dark matter around galaxies that sit something like 8 billion to 10 billion light-years away, at maximum. 

This is because as you look deeper and deeper into the universe, visible light becomes harder and harder to interpret, eventually even turning to infrared light that's totally invisible to human eyes. (That's why NASA's James Webb Space Telescope is such a big deal. It's our best shot at catching the faintest, most invisible light stemming from the distant cosmos.) But what this means is that visible light distortion signals for dark matter studies become far too faded beyond a certain point to help us analyze the hidden stuff. 

Miyatake came up with a workaround. 

Perhaps we can't notice standard light distortions to detect dark matter, but what if there's another type of distortion we can see? As it turns out, there is: microwave radiation released from the Big Bang. It's pretty much Big Bang heat remnants, formally known as cosmic microwave background, or CMB, radiation. 

"Look at dark matter around distant galaxies?" Masami Ouchi, a cosmologist at the University of Tokyo and co-author of the study, said in a statement. "It was a crazy idea. No one realized we could do this. But after I gave a talk about a large distant galaxy sample, Hironao came to me and said it may be possible to look at dark matter around these galaxies with the CMB."  

In essence, Miyatake wanted to observe how dark matter gravitationally lensed our universe's first light.

Picking up pieces of the Big Bang

"Most researchers use source galaxies to measure dark matter distribution from the present to 8 billion years ago," Yuichi Harikane, an assistant professor at the University of Tokyo and co-author of the study, said in a statement. "However, we could look further back into the past because we used the more distant CMB to measure dark matter. For the first time, we were measuring dark matter from almost the earliest moments of the universe."  

To arrive at their results, the new study team first collected data from observations taken by the Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam Survey. 

That led them to identify 1.5 million lensed galaxies – a bunch of hypothetical galaxy B's – which could be traced back to 12 billion years ago. They then called on information from the European Space Agency's Planck satellite on Big Bang microwave radiation. Put it all together, and the team could learn if and how those lensed galaxies distorted the microwaves.

A view of hundreds (perhaps thousands) of galaxies in deep space

The James Webb Space Telescope's First Deep Field was revealed on July 11. In it, you can see a ton of gravitational lensing as indicated by the stretched out-looking galaxies toward the center.

NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI

"This result gives a very consistent picture of galaxies and their evolution, as well as the dark matter in and around galaxies, and how this picture evolves with time," Neta Bahcall, a professor of astrophysical sciences at Princeton University and study co-author, said in a statement.

Notably, the researchers emphasized their study finding that dark matter from the early universe doesn't seem to be as clumpy as our present physics models suggest. Down the line, this bit could adjust what we currently believe about cosmology, mainly theorems rooted in what's called the Lambda-CDM model.

"Our finding is still uncertain," Miyatake said. "But if it is true, it would suggest that the entire model is flawed as you go further back in time. This is exciting because if the result holds after the uncertainties are reduced, it could suggest an improvement of the model that may provide insight into the nature of dark matter itself." 

And next up, the study team wants to explore even earlier regions of space by tapping into information held by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory's Legacy Survey of Space and Time.  

"LSST will allow us to observe half the sky," Harikane said. "I don't see any reason we couldn't see the dark matter distribution 13 billion years ago."