On Thursday, Aug. 25,
scientists announced the
discovery of a galaxy with the same mass as the Milky Way but contains 99.99
percent dark matter, which is an elusive and undetected substance.
Known as Dragonfly 44, the newly identified
galaxy was first detected through the Dragonfly Telephoto Array in Toronto.
Afterward, scientists used the world's most powerful telescopes, the Gemini
North telescope at the Gemini Observatory and the Keck II telescope at the W.M.
Keck Observatory, to monitor it further.
Although the galaxy is not the first to be
identified with presence of dark matter, its discovery is special because it is
the only average-sized galaxy nearly dominated by dark matter.
Pieter van Dokkum, an astronomer from Yale
University, says soon after the galaxy's discovery, they realized there was
more to it than meets the eye.
Undetected
Dark Matter
Dragonfly 44 is located about 300 million
light-years away from our planet and is considered a dim galaxy with very few
stars. According to van Dokkum, the dim galaxy has so few stars that it would
be rapidly ripped apart unless it was being held together by something.
Scientists believe the galaxy is likely made
up of dark matter because the velocities of stars within it are much higher
than what they had expected, indicating that it has a mass greater than what
can be detected through telescopes.
Furthermore, although Dragonfly 44 has the
same mass as our own galaxy, it's actually the "Dark Twin" and is
different from our galaxy by a factor of 100.
How
The Discovery Changes Everything
The dim galaxy is such a novelty in the line
of research that astrophysicists currently study. According to van Dokkum, the
discovery of Dragonfly 44 challenges existing notions on the formation of
galaxies.
He says that prior to the research, they
thought the ratio of dark matter was something they already understood.
For instance, dark matter is thought to
outnumber regular matter - ordinary matter composed by atoms - by 5 to 1 in the
universe.
Additionally, scientists thought the formation
of stars was related to how much dark matter is present. However, Dragonfly 44
turns this last idea around.
Meanwhile, the race to detect other galaxies
similar to Dragonfly 44 is on. Because dark matter is believed to emit a faint
ultraviolet signal, experts hope a neighboring galaxy with dark matter can
provide the first evidence of the elusive substance's existence.
http://www.techtimes.com/articles/175333/20160828/dragonfly-44-galaxy-is-made-up-of-99-99-percent-dark-matter-how-this-discovery-changes-everything.htm?
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