Expert Voices

National Geographic: First Glimpse of the Hidden Cosmos

National Geographic, Timothy Ferris, dark matter, dark energy
A view from Chile of Cosmic Expansion. The Dark Energy Survey will map an eighth of the sky at high resolution. One galaxy it has already imaged is NGC 1365, the Great Barred Spiral galaxy. It lies in the Fornax cluster, 56 million light-years away. (Image credit: Dark Energy Survey)

These images appeared in the January 2015 issue of National Geographic magazine. Ferris contributed these responses to Space.com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

In conjunction with the release of National Geographic's January 2015 issue of its magazine, Timothy Ferris discusses the hunt for dark matter and dark energy in this Q+A tied to his feature "A First Glimpse of the Hidden Cosmos"from that issue.

Space.com: Why do dark matter and dark energy so easily capture the imagination?

Ferris: The human mind is attracted to seemingly significant questions that might plausibly be answered in the near future — within, say, a decade or a generation from now. Dark matter and dark energy certainly seem significant: Scientists estimate that they amount to 95 percent of all the matter and energy in the observable universe. And they might be solvable within a reasonable amount of time. So they're more intriguing than relatively intractable mysteries like, "What is time?," or "What existed prior to the big bang?"

Death of an Early Star. One of the first stars in the universe explodes, bursting through its halo of invisible dark matter and seeding space with carbon, oxygen, and other elements. This computer simulation shows that stars might never have formed, and certainly not so soon — 100 million years after the big bang — without the gravitational force generated by abundant dark matter. Its nature is uncertain. (Image credit: Tom Abel and Ralf Kaehler, Stanford Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology)

Space.com: For something so elusive, we seem to know quite a bit about the influence of dark matter and dark energy. What are the biggest gaps in knowledge?

Ferris: Little is known about dark matter and dark energy except for their influence on the stuff that we can perceive.

Dark matter interacts gravitationally with observable matter. Astronomers studying the dynamics of galaxies and clusters of galaxies find that they contain much stronger gravitational fields than could have been generated by the glowing stars and nebulae that are seen there. They call this unknown substance matter because it generates gravitational force, and dark since it emits no light. Other than gravitationally, dark matter interacts little if at all with the visible elements of the universe. Scientists imagine that dark matter will turn out to be one or more of the exotic, but as yet unconfirmed, materials envisioned by supersymmetry and other advanced physics theories. But one can imagine a great deal. It remains for experiments to see whether such hypotheses apply in the real world.

Dark energy is even more mysterious. The term refers to whatever it is that is causing the cosmic expansion rate to accelerate. So you could say that dark matter is nothing but a gap in human knowledge — a name tag pasted on a gap. If dark energy is a property of space itself, a quantum theory of the vacuum may be required before researchers can make sense of it. Such an account is often called a quantum theory of gravity, since Einstein's general relativity depicts gravitation as due to curvatures in space.

Detecting the (almost) undetectable in a Stanford University clean room, research assistant John Mark Kreikebaum inspects silicon disks that might one day register the subtle energy signal of dark matter particles — which are believed to be ubiquitous but have yet to be observed. To shield the disks from the noise of cosmic rays, they'll be placed deep in a mine. "When you make a very sensitive detector, it tends to see quite a bit," explained Stanford's Matt Cherry. (Image credit: Photograph by Robert Clark/National Geographic; © National Geographic)

Space.com: What research into these phenomena seem to be the most promising?

Ferris: About a dozen dark-matter detectors are currently operating at various locations around the world. Either they will detect dark matter or they won't. In either case they will add to the sum of human knowledge. As Thomas Edison used to say, there's great value in learning what doesn't work.

Current research into dark energy consists mainly of observations aimed at refining measurements of how rapidly the universe is expanding and for how long the expansion rate has been accelerating. If you haven't yet identified the beast in the woods at least you can measure its footprints.

First to capture dark matter on Earth? DEAP-3600, maybe the most sensitive dark matter detector yet, was installed last year more than a mile underground in a nickel mine in Ontario. Its spherical array of light sensors points inward, toward a core full of liquid argon. The hope is that dark matter particles striking argon atoms will trigger tiny flashes of light. (Image credit: Photograph by Robert Clark/National Geographic; © National Geographic)

Space.com: Dark matter and dark energy have had a profound impact on the evolution of our universe, something well illustrated in your article's "timeline" — can you explain the deep history of that influence?

Ferris: Dark matter did the lion's share of work in assembling galaxies and creating the large-scale cosmic structures observed today. Were it not for dark matter, the universe would look quite different today. It might not even be inhabitable.

Dark energy appears to be a property of space, and may have been responsible for the rapid initial expansion of space without which our universe wouldn't be here at all. Its current acceleration certainly influences the future of the cosmos, although the nature of that influence cannot accurately be predicted until scientists understand what dark energy is and how it behaves. If dark energy is the same field or set of fields that got the universe expanding in the first place, you could say that our universe owes its existence to dark energy.

The observable universe consists almost entirely of space. Even stars, planets and human beings are mostly space: Take away the space inside each atom and molecule and each of us could fit ourselves into a pocket pillbox. So if dark energy is indeed a property of space, understanding it would be important in the sense that one cannot understand rain, snow and steam without knowing what water is.

Cover of the January 2015 cover of National Geographic magazine. (Image credit: © National Geographic)

Space.com: What is the future for the search for the universe's most mysterious, and yet influential, components?

Ferris: A candidate dark-matter particle may be found in the near future. A few experimenters think they've already seen evidence of it. But there may be more than one variety of dark matter. We'll see.

Coming to grips with dark energy looks like both a longer haul and a bigger potential payoff. Several major avenues in theoretical physics, from the familiar "standard model" to exotica like string theory, strongly suggest that there is a great deal more to the universe than meets the eye. The path to glimpsing just how strange and extensive nature really is may lie through investigations of dark energy.

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