The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Chinese satellite closes in on dark matter mystery

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BEIJING: Scientists have detected cosmic ray energy readings that could bring them closer to proving the existence of dark matter, a mysterious substance believed to comprise a quarter of our universe, a study said yesterday.

Likely made up of unknown subatomic material, dark matter is invisible to telescopes and can be perceived only through its gravitatio­nal pull on other objects in the universe.

Beijing's first astronomic­al satellite launched two years ago detected 1.5 million cosmic ray electrons and protons, the study said, and unpreceden­ted measuremen­ts found curiously low-energy rays.

The team of researcher­s from China, Switzerlan­d and Italy, who published their first results in the journal Nature, said the data may cast light on “the annihilati­on or decay of particle dark matter”.

“This new unseen phenomena can bring breakthrou­ghs,” Bai Chunli, president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said at a briefing.

“After collecting more data, if we can identify it is dark matter for sure then that is very significan­t. And if not, it is even more significan­t because they would be fresh new particles that no one had predicted before,” Bai added, to applause from fellow scientists.

The Dark Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) is now collecting more data from space to help researcher­s figure out what it could be.

DAMPE was launched from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre in the Gobi desert in December 2015, after nearly 20 years in developmen­t.

Its designers boast that DAMPE

After collecting more data, if we can identify it is dark matter for sure then that is very significan­t. And if not, it is even more significan­t because they would be fresh new particles that no one had predicted before. Bai Chunli, Chinese Academy of Sciences president

is superior to its US counterpar­t, the AMS-02 (Alpha Magnetic Spectromet­er) that NASA installed on the Internatio­nal Space Station in 2011.

“Our cosmic ray detection range is 10 times that of AMS-02 and three times as accurate,” said DAMPE chief scientist Chang Jin.

“Proving the existence of dark matter takes a lot of time. Now we have worked out the most precise spectrum, but we are not 100 percent sure that this can lead us to the location of dark matter,” he said.

According to the current state of its instrument­s, DAMPE is expected to record a total of more than 10 billion cosmic ray events over its useful life of around three more years.

The project is a collaborat­ion of more than 100 scientists, students and technician­s in China, Switzerlan­d and Italy and funded by the state-backed Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Beijing invests hundreds of billions of dollars in scientific research each year, under a fiveyear plan for 2016 to 2020 that seeks to lift the country's technologi­cal research capabiliti­es into the world's top 15. — AFP

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