How dark matter was discovered, and what it might be
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Pretty Much all the stuff that we're made out of, me and you and cats are made out of quarks and electrones.
Well, cats are made out of something strange though, right, Yeah.
Some people suspect cats come from another dimension, little weird particles, and that would explain a lot. Yeah, But in so far, everything that we've ever interacted with, like all the history of science, everything we've been studying for hundreds of years, has only studied stuff that's made out of quarks and electrons. And so for a long time we thought, well, maybe everything's made out of quark and electrons. Right, We've never seen anything else. Hi, I'm Daniel and I'm Jorge, and this is Daniel and Jorge explain the universe.
Today we're going to talk about dark matter.
What is dark matter? Anyway, how dark is it? Does it really matter? I mean, who cares?
Right, Well, hopefully they care because they clicked on the podcast.
Well, dark matter certainly matters to us, and so today we'll be talking about all the interesting things about dark matter, all the mysteries and amazing facts that we know and don't know about dark matter. So what do you think dark matter is? We went out in the street and we asked people what they thought. Here's what they had to say.
I don't remember. It's like black holes, right and stuff like that.
Lava, I don't know.
I'm thinking it's like this dark mass that I have no idea what's in it, but it's just a dark mass. Cool. Wow. People have some pretty interesting ideas about what dark matter is and what dark matter isn't. So I think it's pretty good that we're going through this to explain all the details of dark matter.
Yeah, and it's interesting that most people seem to have heard of it, but people sort of don't quite have a good grasp of it.
Well. I think there's also a lot of abuse of the phrase dark matter. You see in science fiction. It's the title of several albums and bands that have nothing to do with dark matter. So it sort of entered like the popular or lexicon without caring along with the possibles. I would like a dark matter popsicle that it's entdered the popular lexicon without sort of carrying along with it what it actually means. So it's this phrase which exists in the language, and it's been stripped of scientific meaning and lots of context. I know that I've read a lot of science fiction novels that talk about dark matter title dark matter and have nothing to do with dark matter.
Right, Well, it's just two words that are tailor made for like science fiction, right, dark and like matter.
You know, like that's a great triumph. It's a great triumph of marketing. Right, it's an awesome sounding theory.
Yeah. Yeah, secure those jobs for those physicists.
That's right, that's how we get paid. Yeah, coming up with cool names for theories.
Well, we came up with the list of the four things you should know about dark matter. And the first thing you should know about dark matter is that it's a different kind of matter than what you and me and Daniel are made out of. So, Daniel, what does that mean that it's a different kind of matter that's.
A great question. Well, to answer that, we really to think for a moment about what we're made out of. Right, I'm made out of particles. You're made out of particles. This chair I'm sitting on is mading out of particles. Everything we know pretty much is made out of particles.
Particles like atoms.
Yeah, particles inside atoms. So you have the molecules your body's made out of, and those are made out of atoms like hydrogen and lithium and that kind of crazy stuff, right, And inside those are smaller particles, protons and neutrons and electrons, and the inside those, drilling down even further are quarks.
Everything in the universe, everything out there that we've seen, is made out of these things quarks.
That's exactly right, that's right. It's the stuff we can see. And what can we see where we can see stuff that sends us light like stars. We can see stuff that reflects light, like gas and dust and stuff like that that reflects light from other stars, like the moon. Right, the moon doesn't give off its own light, it's not it doesn't shine, but we see it in the sky because it reflects the light from the sun. So it's something that we can see it's a kind of matter. We know, we understand it.
You can think about the Earth and everything is made out of these three things. But dark matter is something different.
Right, dark matter is something else. It's a different kind of matter. It's not made out of quarks and electrons, and there are even other weird kind of quarks that we discovered, like by smashing particles together. We know dark matter is not made out of any of those some made of any kind of quarks or even weird kind of electrons. It's something else, something different, something new, and we don't know what that is. We don't know what that is at all. We don't know if it's another kind of particle. We don't know if it's a weird new kind of matter that's not made out of particles. We don't know, if it's something we haven't even imagined yet. That's my personal fantasy is I hope that when we do figure out what dark matter is, it totally blows our minds and turns out to be something that even science fiction writers had never thought of. That would be my favorite scenario.
So it's something that's made out of something entirely different than us. But there's a lot of it. And that's the second thing you should know about we wrote down you should know about dark matter, which is that there's a ton of it in the universe and it's all around us.
That's right. Dark matter is everywhere. So people talk about dark matter like, oh, it's this weird stuff out in space, or these other galaxies have dark matter. But dark matter is all around us. It's there's a huge blob of it in the center of our galaxy and then there's a big diffuse cloud of it that envelops the entire galaxy and pretty much every galaxy out there. Dark matter is matter. It's stuff, right, And when we say it's matter, we mean that it feels gravity. And that's actually how we figured out that it's there, after all, something that feels gravity.
But way back up a second. So it's like there's blobs of it floating out in space. Is that kind of what we know about dark matter, Like it floats and blobs.
Dark matter definitely forms blobs because it feels gravity. And like anything else, things that feel gravity are going to slowly accumulate and pull themselves together. So just like normal matter, you know, the gas and the dust pulled themselves together to form stars and galaxies. Dark matter also pulls itself together and form these big blobs. So those blobs aren't like out there in space. They're on top of us. They're here with us. If you lift up your hand right now and wave it all around, you're passing through a huge blob of dark matter that's there in your living room or kitchen or car or wherever you happen to be.
It's like in the air around us. What does that mean? Like, it's like it's in the space between regular particles.
It's here with us, And there's a lot of space between particles. Right, particles are super duper duper tiny, and if you don't feel a force that the particles are pushing back on you with, then you can't even tell that they're there. There's lots of examples of that. For example, there's a lot of neutrinos that pass right through your body all the time. There's one hundred billion neutrinos passed through your fingernail every second. You can't feel them, and they just zip right through and don't even notice you. And the reason is that they don't have any way to talk to you. So if you can't communicate with them. You can't. There's no way for you to push them or pull them, or for them to push you or pull you. You can't even tell that they're You just walk right through them the way you walk through an empty room.
So you're saying, we're sort of swimming in dark matter.
Absolutely, we're almost drowning in it, because there's more dark matter than normal matter. So this, your room that you're sitting in, has five times as much dark matter as it has air in it. For example, it's five percent of all the energy in the universe is normal stuff, and then something like twenty seven percent is dark matter. So it's like, you know, one sixth of all the stuff that's in the universe, of all the matter that's in the universe, is what we used to call normal matter, and the rest of it is dark matter. And that's mind blowing to discover that what you thought was typical, we thought was normal, what you thought, you know, was the basic unit of the universe turns out to be a little extra bit. You know, it's like we've been eating the frosting and ignoring the cake, right, or we've been like focusing on the tail and ignoring the whole elephant.
I have so many questions for you, but before we dive in, let's take a short break.
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Okay, So that's why it's called dark, right, Like it's you can't see it exactly.
That's just what we mean by dark, like that awesome marketing campaign of dark Matter. That's the concept behind dark dark, meaning we don't see it or feel it.
Like sas is right by it doesn't care, that's.
Right, yeah, But then you might wonder, like, well, if we can't interact with it at all, How could we possibly know it's there? Right, if you can't feel it or see it in any way, is it not just some fantasy some speculations.
And like why should we care, Like if we can't see it or touch it, why why is it important to the universe?
That's right? And so there is one way we can interact with dark matter, and that's through gravity. Dark matter is and that's the matter part of it, right, dark meaning we can't see it, matter meaning it has stuff to it has gravity, So we know that it's matter. We know what it's made of something, and it does have gravity.
That's what's the matter is kind of defined is stuff that feels gravity and has mass.
Yeah, exactly. That's what makes matter matter, is that it has some stuff to it, some mass to it. Okay, anything that has mass to it is going to feel gravity. Okay. It's true that we can't feel or see dark matter because it doesn't have any electromagnetism, but it does have gravity and so we can detect it. But because gravity is so weak, it takes enormous amounts of dark matter for us to notice. So we're kind of actually, that is so much dark.
Like even in film, there's a blob of dark matter right in front of me. I know I can't see it or touch it because it doesn't feel alec chromonatic forces. But I know that you're telling me that I have like a gravity relationship with this blog, right, But it's right. It's I don't even feel the gravity from this blog.
It's definitely gravity between you and that room full of dark matter. Okay, And depending on what your mass is, we don't have to say on the yeah, yeah, even if you were a super massive guy who never left the house, or massively cool, right, or just massively funny and that's.
Not weird, right, Like like I have a gravity relationship with the error around me, I have a gravity relationship with the like the microphone in front of me, with the table in front of me, with the car when I'm driving. But you just don't really feel that gravity relationship, right.
That's right. You can't tell. It's drowned out by everything else in your life, and so you don't even notice. So you know, you can act like there's no gravitational force between you and the chair in front of you, because it's almost true.
It's only like with the entire Earth that I feel that gravity relationship, right, that's the one that pulls me down.
That's right. And it takes a huge blob of stuff the size of the Earth for you to even notice.
Oh okay, so dark matter is a different kind of matter. There's a ton of it in the yours. It's all around this. We can't see it because it doesn't feel electromagnetic forces. We can't touch it also because of that, but it does feel gravity. So how do we know that it was there? Like, how do we can't see it or touch it? How do we figure that out?
Yeah, it took people a while before they really accepted the dark matter was a thing. And it's a fun story because it started with just a discrepancy. What they were doing was they were checking to see if they understood how galaxies spin. Okay, so our galaxy, you know, we're in a solar system, and a solar system is part of a big group of stars called the galaxy that all spins around. And our galaxy is called the Milky Way. And there's lots of galaxies in the universe, trillions more even more than that, probably, And we can look out into the sky and you can see other galaxies also spinning. And you can think of a galaxy sort of the way you think about like a America Round. If you have America Round and you put a bunch of ping pong balls on it, you spin it, what's going to happen?
The ping pong balls will fly off, like.
Yeah, the shootout and hit your sister in the face.
And that's a different podcast, right.
And those are some dark matters. And so what happens with a galaxy, Well, in the case of a galaxy, it's got a bunch of stars in it, and the galaxy is spinning. So why don't the stars get thrown out into intergalactic space all the time the way the pingpong balls might from America Round?
Right, So galaxies are spinning their stars in it, why don't the stars just like spill out?
That's right. I wanted to get tossed out. And the answer is gravity. The galaxy is a lot of gravity from all those stars and the black hole in the center and all that stuff, and that gravity holds the stars in.
Place, it keeps everything in orbit, that's right.
Yeah, it pulls it together and keeps stuff from getting thrown out. So some grad student went out to check this and they got a crazy result. And the result is that these galaxies are spinning way, way, way too fast. There's no way that the amount of stuff that we see in those galaxies is providing enough gravity to hold the galaxies together.
Okay, something else had to be there, right.
That's right, because the stars are not getting thrown into space, right, the galaxies are getting held together. So you know, first time you have a crazy result, there's a lot of explanations people come up with, and so the simplest explanation is some sense is, well, there's some kind of gravity that that's from something we can't see. So let's invent a new kind of stuff. It has to be dark because we can't see it. It has to be matter because it's giving us gravity. So we'll come up with a cool name for this new thing, called it dark matter. Wow. And that sounds like a simple explanation, but on the other hand, it's not because there's not a tiny amount of stuff you have to add to these galaxies. Right. They're spinning way too fast, and that's how we know that there's a ton of dark matter, because to get enough gravity to hold these galaxies together, you have to multiply the amount of stuff you can see by a factor of five. Right, it tells you that, Yeah, it tells you that what you see of the galaxy is not most of the galaxy. You know, you're looking at the galactic toenails or you know, they're just the galactic fingertips or something. Most of the galaxy is something else, right, right.
Right, the milky toes of the universe.
And so for a long time didn't accept that, and there were other ideas. People thought, well, that's crazy because you can't just say, oh, my experiment didn't work. Maybe the universe is filled with it's a new kind of stuff that nobody's ever seen before, and there's a huge amount of it and it's everywhere. Right, it's sort of a convenient and crazy explanation. And remember in science we like simple explanations, right, We want the simplest set of ideas to explain everything we see.
So that was yeah, yeah, so that was the mindset.
Right.
It was like, okay, we know, we think we know the universe. Let's check to see if the galaxies are spinning as they should. But they foind out they're spinning too fast, and the only explanation someone could come up with was like, Nay, there's invisible gravity stuff in these galaxies that's like five times heavy than all of those stars.
That's right. That was the idea of dark matter. There actually were other explanations that lived for a little while, and then recently they died because they they were rule that by other experiments. Since then, we're pretty sure that dark matter is a thing. And one way that we were able to figure out that dark matter is there and it's not just a misunderstanding of the way gravity works, is that we found a few other ways to spot it. So they're all almost all gravitational, but there are other ways to spot it that tell us that would give different results if it was actually dark matter or this other weird kind of theory about gravity. And I want to talk about that some more, but first let's take a quick break. When you pop a piece of cheese into your mouth, or enjoy a rich spoonful of Greek yogurt, you're probably not thinking about the environmental impact of each and every bite, But the people in the dairy industry are US Dairy has set themselves some ambitious sustainability goals, including being greenhouse gas neutral by twenty to fifty. That's why they're working hard every day to find new ways to reduce waste, conserve natural resources, and drive down greenhouse gas emissions. Take water, for example, most dairy farms reuse water up to four times the same water cools the milk, cleans equipment, washes the barn, and irrigates the crops. How is US Dairy tackling greenhouse gases. Many farms use anaerobic digestors that turn the methane from maneuver into renewable energy that can power farms, towns, and electric cars. So the next time you grab a slice of pizza or lick an ice cream cone, know that dairy farmers and processors around the country are using the latest practices and innovations to provide the nutrient dense dairy products we love with less of an impact. Visit us dairy dot com slash sustainability to learn more.
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So one way it's called gravitational lensing, and that's when dark matter in the sky bends the light and gives these crazy optical effects. And that's one way we can tell where dark matter is. It's in the blob here, it's in a blob there makes these little distortions in the sky because.
It has gravity, and it like not just pulls the stars and planets around it, but it also bends light around it, because we know that's what gravity does.
Right, Yeah, because that's what matter does. Matter, All matter has gravity, and dark matter can bend the space because it has gravity, so it acts like a cosmic lens in the sky. It's totally mind blowing and everybody out there should google gravitational lensing and see those images because they're gorgeous cool.
And then the other way that we know that it's definitely there through gravity is what's the other thing?
Yeah, the other thing was this amazing event that happened very far away, a long long time ago, when two clusters of galaxies smashed into each other. And what Every cluster of galaxies has both normal matter like me and you and gas and dust and also dark matter. So when they smash into each other, the normal matter smashes and creates explosions and gives off light. We can see that, but the dark matter passed right through to the other side, so we can see the dark matter there because of the gravitational lensing. So the dark matter got separated from some of the normal matter, and we can see its gravitational effects on its own And that was the key to knowing that dark matter really is its own thing with its own gravity. It's not just a misunderstanding of the way gravity works, right, because if that were the case, you wouldn't be able to separate this new gravity from the old gravity. But because you can, because you can say, oh, here's this dark matter separated from all that gas in the dust. We can see it has its own gravity. It must be its own thing. So that tells us there's a lot of dark matter. It's out there. We can see it kind of through gravity, but not directly, but doesn't really tell us that much more about dark matter.
Why do physic this care about dark matter?
Like?
Why is it? Why is it important? Why is it cool and interesting?
Well, we want to make awesome sunglasses, of course, that's the number.
One goal of dark How would you make dark matter sunglasses? That would be pretty pretty easy.
Yeah, well against dark matter for sure. No, it just comes out of a desire to understand. You know, we look at the world around us, we want to know, well, how does this all put together? You know, what is the principle that organizes this? Right, and part of it is a desire to build new kinds of stuff. I mean, if you understand the world around you, then you know how to manipulate it and use it and build transistors and all sorts of cool stuff. So there's thousands of applications as soon as you understand how matter works. But there's also just that core curiosity. We're like, you know, five dots away from being able to connect dark matter with anything specifically that's useful. But every time we found something new about the universe, some surprise, something crazy, something new, it's always led to, you know, economic revolutions or tech logical revolutions, or even just intellectual revolutions. Right. I mean, if you find out that the universe works in a way different from what you expected, it changes the way you think about your life and the whole human experience.
I mean it's not just a little bit. It's like we're the minority in the universe, you know, like we're not even we're not even the center of gravity of the universe by any means.
Right, that's right. If there's an election, we would definitely not have any represent it is.
But yeah, that's wild to know, right, Like, we're not the most kind of stuff in the universe, and so that's that's why dark matter is important. It's like, that's that's the bigger chunk of the universe, and so it kind of affects the way we know how things happen.
Yeah, and it's responsible for the basic structure of the universe. Yeah, we've done simulations. For example, we say, what would the universe look like if there hadn't been any dark matter? Right, we run those simulations forward and fourteen billion years in, you don't have any galaxies really, and the reason is that, yeah, you don't have dark matter pulling together normal matter and compressing it. No, we wouldn't be here at all. The universe would be much more diffuse and boring. We wouldn't have any podcasts at all. That's not to say like dark matter is the reason for creation or is more important than us. I mean, we don't really know what it is at all. It could be totally boring and sterile and just a bunch of little particles that are kind of aloof and ignore.
Us, all right.
It could be something more interesting though.
So dark matter it's a different kind of stuff of matter than us. We were made out of quarks and electrons. Dark matter is maybe made out of something different that is not quite the same thing as we were made out of.
Right, And it could be particles. It could not be particles.
Whoa, it could be stuff.
It could be some new kind of stuff how other stuff works.
So it's different in us. There's a ton of it in the universe. There's five times more dark matter than regular matter. And it's all around us. It's like it's it's almost on top of us.
Yeah, we're in it, and it's inside us. It's everywhere and passing through us. And you're waving your arms through it right now? Feel that dark matter?
Yeah, I feel it. It's inside of you. It's been inside of you all along.
Well that sounds a little in appropriate.
No, it's like a like courage, you know, it's like cart courage or wisdom.
Summon the dark matter within you. Yes, yeah, okay, Yeah.
It could be like complex stuff, right. Dark matter could be interesting and complex and have different kinds of properties.
To it, right, that's right, because there could be other checkboxes. We talked about, you know, the strong and the weak force, and electromagnetism and gravity. Those are the four forces we know, but there could be a fifth force that only dark matter feels, and it feels it with itself. It's easy to say, well, the simplest idea is dark matter is all just one part of them. That's simple idea, and we like to start with simple ideas to work for it.
It's just like a weird homogenous blog.
Yeah, but you know, look at the five percent of the universe we've studied. It's not just kind of particle. It's a bunch of different kind of particles, and it's complicated and interesting. Right, So there's no real reason to expect that dark matter is different. It could be even more complicated, and that's assuming remember that dark matter is a particle. We have actually no evidence whatsoever proving that dark matter is a particle. All the normal matter we've ever seen is made out of particles, and that's the assumption we're using to say, well, probably dark matter is also made out of particles.
Right.
That's like saying I've only ever seen the tail of the elephant, so the rest of the elephant must also be tails. Right, it's all tails all the way down. It sort of falls apart, and it's a good way to start, you know. But I'm hoping that we discover the dark matter is something else, something weird, some different kind of matter. It just sort of expands our minds out of our current way of thinking into some new direction where we consider possibilities we hadn't even considered before. Do you have a question you wish we would cover, Send it to us. I love to hear from you. You can find us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram at Daniel and Jorge One Word, or email us to feedback at Danielandhorge dot com. When you pop a piece of cheese into your mouth, you're probably not thinking about the environmental impact. But the people in the dairy industry are. That's why they're working hard every day to find new ways to reduce waste, conserve natural resources, and drive down greenhouse gas emissions. House US dairy tackling greenhouse gases. Many farms use anaerobic digestors to turn the methane from manure into renewable energy that can power farms, towns, and electric cars. Visit you as Dairy dot COM's last sustainability to learn more.
We're just days away from our twenty twenty four iHeartRadio Music Festival by Capital One.
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Hi, I'm David Eagleman from the podcast Inner Cosmos, which recently hit the number one science podcast in America. I mean neuroscientists at Stanford and I've spent my career exploring the three pound universe in our heads.
Join me weekly to explore the relationship.
Between your brain and your life. Because the more we know about what's running under the hood, better we can steer our lives. Listen to Inner Cosmos with David Eagleman on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.