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  • [ intro ]

  • Generally speaking,

  • astronomers tend to study the biggest stuff in the universe,

  • while particle physicists study the smallest.

  • But over the last few years,

  • astronomers have done more and more research

  • on a certain prediction made by string theory

  • -- one of the most popular unproved ideas in all of physics.

  • And let's just say their results haven't been very encouraging.

  • The hope was that this might change

  • after a new study from NASA's Chandra X-Ray Observatory,

  • which tried to find evidence for string theory using galaxy collisions.

  • But so far, things aren't looking promising.

  • This new study was published last month in

  • The Astrophysical Journal, and it has three key pieces.

  • There's the string theory.

  • There's the astronomy.

  • And there's the family of hypothesized particles

  • that ties them all together:

  • a group called axion-like particles.

  • But first, the string theory.

  • String theory is one of the major candidates

  • for what's called a “Theory of Everything”:

  • a single framework that could predict the results of any experiment we could ever do.

  • Our best theories currently split the universe

  • into the big stuff that's governed by gravity,

  • and small stuff that's modeled by quantum mechanics.

  • Both models are great in their own domains,

  • but try to make them overlap,

  • and funky things can happen.

  • For instance,

  • if you try to study gravity on the tiniest scales,

  • any little bit of gravity should make more gravity around it.

  • So gravity should make more gravity, should make more gravity --

  • until you end up with an infinitely dense point where math doesn't work.

  • But in string theory, that can't happen.

  • String theory supposes that all particles

  • are actually made of tiny, vibrating strings.

  • And to make a simplification,

  • since those strings have a sort of length,

  • their interactions can never create a single, infinitely dense point.

  • And that stops the chaos.

  • Different theorists find different ways to go from this stringy foundation

  • to a universe like ours,

  • so there are multiple versions of string theory out there.

  • But many of them require certain kinds of new, unobserved particles to work.

  • Including some small, super-light ones.

  • They're known as axion-like particles, or ALPs.

  • If they exist,

  • ALPs would be so light that they'd hardly ever bump into any other kind of matter,

  • which would explain why we've never seen one in an experiment.

  • But a lot of researchers still think they're out there,

  • because ALPs seem like the perfect missing pieces

  • to many puzzling aspects of the universe.

  • They're good candidates for dark matter,

  • they could be why the universe has more matter than antimatter,

  • and they might even explain why time only ticks in one direction!

  • But we still haven't seen them.

  • The good news is, human-run experiments aren't the only places to look.

  • According to string theory,

  • ALPs should occasionally turn into photons,

  • or particles of light, as they travel through a magnetic field, and vice versa.

  • And for astronomers,

  • that's pretty convenient,

  • because space is full of light and magnetic fields.

  • So, if you looked at light after it went through one of these fields,

  • you could look for distortions created by ALP interference.

  • And if you saw that --

  • well, you'd provide the evidence physicists have been looking for.

  • Recently, this is exactly what a team of astronomers and cosmologists tried to do

  • using the Chandra X-Ray Observatory.

  • They weren't the first to look for ALPs this way,

  • but their observations let them look more closely than anyone had before.

  • They used Chandra to look at light from a galaxy called NGC 1275.

  • It's about 230 million light-years away,

  • and it's a galaxy that eats other galaxies.

  • Collisions like that release tons of X-rays,

  • and we can use models to predict what those rays should look like

  • in an ALP-free universe as they escape the galaxies' magnetic fields.

  • In their study, the team compared what they saw from NGC 1275 with a range of ALP models

  • --

  • because, remember, there's no one model.

  • Some say ALPs should interact with light a lot; others say it should be pretty rare.

  • And in the end

  • well,

  • The light from the galaxy looked exactly like we'd expect.

  • The team saw no evidence of ALPs in their data.

  • This doesn't mean they aren't out there,

  • but the fact that even a super-sensitive telescope like Chandra couldn't find them

  • does effectively eliminate a big range of possible models.

  • Maybe an even more advanced telescope could change things in the future.

  • But again, this Chandra study isn't the only one of its kind.

  • Over the last couple decades,

  • astronomical teams around the world have looked for evidence of ALPs in their data,

  • and none have found anything.

  • There are still models out there that fit everyone's observations,

  • but the field is thinning out fast --

  • making some scientists increasingly skeptical about ALPs

  • and some of the string theories that predict them.

  • So axion-like particles might still exist.

  • But if they do, they probably look pretty different from what we first expected.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space News!

  • If you're interested in astronomy and want to learn more about the field as a whole,

  • you might enjoy a series from one of our sister channels, Crash Course.

  • Their Crash Course Astronomy series covers everything from stars to eclipses to big questions

  • about things like dark energy.

  • It's hosted by the amazing Phil Plait and is just a great time.

  • You can check it out after this!

  • [ outro ]

[ intro ]

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