Subtitles section Play video
-
Of all the spectacles mankind has viewed through a telescope,
-
there are few lovelier than a spiral galaxy.
-
Majestic whirlpools of stars, they rotate in a stately and predictable dance.
-
The fact that we see many billions of them in our telescopes
-
tells us they are both common and stable.
-
It is perhaps surprising that it is relatively easy to understand the inner workings of these cosmic pinwheels.
-
By combining physical principles worked out by Sir Isaac Newton in the late 17th century,
-
with the observed amount of mass in a galaxy,
-
scientists can calculate the rates at which these galaxies rotate.
-
Using these techniques, astronomers predict how fast stars at different distances from the center of the galaxy should move.
-
Stars very close to the center move slowly.
-
That's because there is very little mass between them and the center of the galaxy to pull them along.
-
Stars a bit further away move faster,
-
because they are being pulled by all of the stars in between them and the center.
-
As we get really far away, the stars are predicted to move slowly again.
-
Their great distance reduces gravity to a gentle tug,
-
so they move leisurely in their orbits.
-
Knowing this, scientists looked at the galaxies and measured how fast stars were moving.
-
To their surprise, they found that while the stars closer to the center of the galaxy behaved as predicted,
-
those further away moved far too quickly.
-
This observation was devastating to the tradtional theories of gravity and motion.
-
If the stars were moving as fast as their measurement suggested,
-
galaxies should have torn themselves apart.
-
It was a crisis, and astronomers and physicists scrambled to find a mistake in their calculation.
-
Was Newton's theory of gravity wrong?
-
Was his theory of motion wrong?
-
Or was it possible that astronomers had incorrectly measured the galaxy's mass?
-
All options were investigated, and all were ruled out. Except one.
-
Today, scientists believe that the answer lies in a previously unknown kind of matter, called dark matter.
-
This dark matter can be envisioned as a cloud which surrounds most galaxies.
-
This matter is very unusual. It is affected by gravity,
-
but it is invisible to visible light and all other forms of electromagnetic radiation.
-
The name "dark matter" originates in this form of matter's inability to emit or absorb light.
-
Dark matter adds to the gravity of the galaxy
-
and explains the orbital speed of stars far from the galactic center.
-
Dark matter has not yet been directly observed,
-
but scientists believe that it is likely to be real,
-
mostly because the other options have been ruled out.
-
Using dozens of approaches, astronomers and physicists continue to search for direct evidence
-
that would prove that the dark matter hypothesis is true.
-
This question is one of the most important physics research questions of the 21st century.