The Star Malaysia

Astronomer­s discover the impossible – a galaxy without dark matter

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Paris: Stupefied astronomer­s unveiled the first and only known galaxy without dark matter, the invisible and poorly-understood substance thought to make up a quarter of the Universe.

Wednesday’s discovery could revise or even upend theories of how galaxies are formed, they reported in the journal Nature.

“This is really bizarre,” said co-author Roberto Abraham, an astronomer at the University of Toronto.

“For a galaxy this size, it should have 30 times as much dark matter as regular matter,” he said.

“What we found is that there is no dark matter at all. That shouldn’t be possible,” he added.

Some 65 million light-years from Earth, NGC1052-DF2 – “DF2” for short – is about the same size as our Milky Way, but has 100 to 1,000 times fewer stars.

Dark matter’s existence is inferred from the motion of objects affected by its gravitatio­nal pull.

“It is convention­ally believed to be an integral part of all galaxies, the glue that holds them together and the underlying scaffoldin­g on which they are built,” said co-author Allison Merritt from the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, in Germany.

So-called ordinary matter – including stars, gases, dust, planets and everything on them – accounts for only 5% of all content in the Universe.

Dark matter and dark energy comprise the rest, and scientists have yet to directly observe either.

The discovery was made with a new kind of telescope developed by Abraham and lead author Pieter van Dokkum of Yale University.

Unlike mirror-based devices, the mobile Dragonfly Telescope Array is composed entirely of nano-coated lenses, 48 in all.

“Convention­al telescopes are good at finding small, faint objects.

“Ours is really good at finding large ones,” said Abraham.

Indeed, over the last few years Dokkum and Abraham have used it to uncover a whole new category of sparsely populated “ultra diffuse galaxies” – and sparked a cottage industry as astronomer­s struggle to explain their strange properties.

“Everything about them is a surprise, starting with the very fact they exist,” Abraham said.

Up to now, the analysis of galaxies has shown a fairly tight ratio of dark to ordinary matter.

But this new class “is breaking all the rules”, he said.

The first anomalies discovered were galaxies almost entirely composed of dark matter. That was odd enough.

But the real shocker was DF2, which has virtually none at all.

DF2 was first identified by Russian astronomer­s conducting a photograph­ic survey, but it’s uniqueness did not come to light until later.

A galaxy entirely bereft of dark matter raises vexing questions that, so far, have stumped astronomer­s.

“It challenges the standard ideas of how we think galaxies work,” said Dokkum.

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