Samuel Ting, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Nobel laureate particle physicist, said Wednesday that his $1.6 billion cosmic ray experiment on the International Space Station had found evidence of “new physical phenomena” that could represent dark matter, the mysterious stuff that serves as the gravitational foundation for galaxies and whose identification would rewrite some of the laws of physics.
The
results, he said, confirmed previous reports that local interstellar space is
crackling with an unexplained abundance of high energy particles, especially
positrons, the antimatter version of the familiar electrons that comprise
electricity and chemistry. They could be colliding particles of dark matter. Or
they could be could be coming from previously undiscovered pulsars or other
astronomical monsters, throwing off wild winds of radiation.
The
tantalizing news is that even with the new data, physicists cannot tell yet
which is the right answer, but they are encouraged that they soon might be able
to.
“I don’t
think it makes you believe it must be dark matter, nor do I think it makes you
believe it cannot be,” said Neal Weiner, a particle theorist at New York
University.
The good
news is that the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, as Dr. Ting’s instrument is
called, is only two years into what could be a 20-year voyage on the space
station, and is working brilliantly. “Over the coming months, A.M.S. will be
able to tell us conclusively whether these positrons are a signal for dark
matter, or whether they have some other origin,” Dr. Ting told an audience of
physicists at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research.
The report
will be published in Physical Review Letters on Friday.
Astronomers
and others from outside the collaboration responded enthusiastically.
“A.M.S. has
confirmed with exquisite precision and to high energy one of the most exciting
mysteries in astrophysics and particle physics,” said Justin Vandenbroucke of
the University of Wisconsin and Stanford’s SLAC laboratory.
Maria
Spiropulu, a Caltech particle physicist, said, “They have exquisitely small
errors and they stop the plot at the cliffhanger, so we will be asking for
more.”
Others,
like Gregory Tarle of the University of Michigan, cautioned that uncertainties
in the galactic background of radiation might make it impossible to ever get a
clean answer to the source of the positrons.
Dark matter
has teased and obsessed astronomers since the 1930s, when the Caltech
astronomer Fritz Zwicky deduced that some invisible “missing mass” was required
to supply the gravitational glue to hold clusters of galaxies together.
According
to recent measurements by the Planck spacecraft, about 27 percent of the
universe, by mass, is composed of some unknown form of matter unlike the atoms
that make up us and everything we can see. Astronomers cannot see it, but they
can detect its gravitational tug pulling the galaxies and stars around.
Figuring
out what this stuff is is important for more than cosmology. The most favored
candidates for its identity are as yet undiscovered particles known as WIMPs —
weakly interacting massive particles — left over from the Big Bang. Such
particles could drift through the Earth like wind through a screen door.
Impervious to almost everything except gravity, they would form a shadow
universe clumping together into invisible clouds that then attract ordinary
matter. Discovering one of them could give a lift to new theories of physics,
like supersymmetry, which predicts of a whole new spectrum of so-called
superpartners to the particles we already know about, not to mention
explicating the nature of more than a quarter of creation.
But until
now, the dark matter particles have mostly eluded direct detection in the
laboratory or creation at the Large Hadron Collider.
The sky
could be a different story. Such WIMPs floating in the halos around galaxies
would occasionally collide and annihilate one another in tiny fireballs of
radiation and lighter particles, the theorists Michael Turner of the University
of Chicago and Frank Wilczek of M.I.T. suggested in 1990.
The Alpha
Magnetic Spectrometer is one of the most expensive, complicated and
controversial experiments ever mounted in space. Built by an army of 600
scientists from 16 countries, including Italy, Germany, Russia, China and
Taiwan, it took 16 years from its approval in 1995 by NASA’s administrator at
the time, Dan Goldin, to get to space, on the next-to-last shuttle flight, in
May 2011.
By then
there were already intimations of dark matter in the heavens. Pamela, a
satellite built by Italian, German, Russian and Swedish scientists, registered
an excess of anti-electrons, or positrons, in space — perhaps, they said, from
collisions of dark matter particles. Using data from the Fermi satellite,
researchers at Stanford were also able to detect a similar excess.
Dr. Ting said his spectrometer had validated
those observations with more detail and much better statistics. Among other
things, as best the A.M.S. team can tell, the positrons are coming equally from
all directions — a result that would favor dark matter, which should be spread
evenly through the galaxy, rather than pulsars, which would be localized.
But none of
the experiments has yet observed what Dr. Turner called the smoking gun of dark
matter. If the signal is coming from colliding WIMPs, the theory says, the
ratio of positrons to electrons will rise as the energy of the positrons and
electrons rises, flattens and then drops sharply. The cutoff energy represents
the mass-energy of the putative dark matter particle.
In the case
of pulsars, the fraction of positrons would drop much more slowly and
gradually, physicists say.
The space
station spectrometer can record particles with energies as high as a trillion
electron volts, Dr. Ting said, and indeed in his talk he showed individual
events with positrons and electrons having energies of some 600 billion
electron volts. But the data presented Wednesday ranges in energy only from a
few million to 350 billion electron volts.
That data
is summarized in a plot that shows the ratio of positrons to electrons rising
rapidly and then ever more slowly as the energy increases. The plot runs out of
data, Dr. Turner noted, just where the telltale drop should start taking place.
At CERN, Dr. Ting declined to answer
questions or speculate about what happened in the empty spot at higher energies
on his graph, or even when he would know. “Slowly,” he answered when asked.
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