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Missing matter found in deep space
Reuters on Yahoo ^ | 5/20/08 | Maggie Fox

Posted on 05/20/2008 3:17:25 PM PDT by NormsRevenge

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Astronomers have found some matter that had been missing in deep space and say it is strung along web-like filaments that form the backbone of the universe.

The ethereal strands of hydrogen and oxygen atoms could account for up to half the matter that scientists knew must be there but simply could not see, the researchers reported on Tuesday.

Scientists have long known there is far more matter in the universe than can be accounted for by visible galaxies and stars. Not only is there invisible baryonic matter -- the protons and neutrons that make up atoms -- but there also is an even larger amount of invisible "dark" matter.

Now about half of the missing baryonic matter has turned up, seen by the orbiting Hubble space telescope and NASA's Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer, or FUSE.

"We think we are seeing the strands of a web-like structure that forms the backbone of the universe," said Mike Shull of the University of Colorado, who helped lead the study published in The Astrophysical Journal.

The matter is spread as superheated oxygen and hydrogen in what looked like vast empty spaces between galaxies.

However, observations of a quasar -- a bright object far off in space -- show its light is diffused much as a lighthouse can reflect on a thin fog that was invisible in the dark.

"It is kind of like a spider web. The gravity of the spider web is what produced what we see," Shull said in a telephone interview. "It's very thin. Some of it is very hot gas, almost a million degrees."

This is where the dark matter comes in. The dark matter is heating up the gas, Shull said.

"Dark matter has gravity. It pulls the gas in," Shull said. "This causes what I call sonic booms -- shock waves. This shock heats it to a million degrees. That makes it even harder to see."

The atoms of oxygen are in a stripped-down, ionized form. Five of the eight electrons are gone. It emits an ultraviolet spectrum of light that instruments aboard FUSE and Hubble can spot, Shull said.

These web-like filaments of matter are the structure upon which the galaxies form, he said.

"So when we look at the distribution of galaxies on a very large scale, we see they are not uniform," Shull said. "They spread out in sheets and filaments."

Some faint dwarf galaxies or wisps of matter in these structures could be forming galaxies right now, the researchers said.

Shull and colleagues said these webs of hydrogen and oxygen are too hot to be seen in visible light and too cool to be seen in X-rays.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: deepspace; found; fuse; hubble; matter; missing; stringtheory
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To: wideminded

That’s right. The proof was just that. It was proved to the satisfaction of topologists. That wouldn’t be me.


61 posted on 05/21/2008 11:08:54 AM PDT by RightWhale (You are reading this now)
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To: samtheman

I wonder if this discovery will have implications for the closed or open Universe debate?


62 posted on 05/21/2008 11:10:16 AM PDT by AU72
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To: NormsRevenge
I think a lot of that dark missing matter might be near The Rosie O planet hugging Heranus. Maybe a galactic cleansing will help us to find it.
63 posted on 05/21/2008 11:15:39 AM PDT by Empireoftheatom48 (Tag line under construction Please watch your step, not responsible for any accidents)
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To: AU72

In my understanding, the debate is over. We will not crunch. We will evaporate.

No matter how much “missing mass” we find out there, it doesn’t change the fact that the rate of expansion is accelerating.

No Big Crunch for us.

Call it: the Big Rip.


64 posted on 05/21/2008 11:16:23 AM PDT by samtheman
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To: samtheman

So there won’t be a do-over.


65 posted on 05/21/2008 11:18:49 AM PDT by AU72
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To: jongaltsr
"It is effectively just a lot of hot air and little tangible substance."

Which would not seem to be able to generate the gravitational effects which are ascribed to "dark matter".

66 posted on 05/21/2008 11:25:33 AM PDT by joebuck (Finitum non capax infinitum!)
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To: RightWhale

Since I’ve never been to the center of the universe I could hardly have any perspection of where it may or not be. All I know is that when Stars go nova they explode in all direction along the equitorial plane. I would think that the original (Big Bang) would work the same way.

FYI - I’m not THAT old.....


67 posted on 05/21/2008 2:34:48 PM PDT by jongaltsr (Hope to See ya in Galt's Gulch.)
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To: samtheman
Stars burn hydrogen and get helium. They burn helium to get heavier substances, which in turn fuel the fires to get even heavier elements, all the way up to iron. (Heavier than iron requires a supernova.) So what kind of stellar burn sequence produced all that oxygen without producing the intermediate elements between hydrogen and oxygen?

The pyhsics of such a Massive explosion was possibly far beyond the chemistry that exists at this point. I beleive that one of the theories is that physical dynamics is far different now then on the few nano seconds of the initial (Big Bang).

The gravitional dimensions, temperatures and molecular structures would all have been more intense than anything that exists now - even in the largest starts.
68 posted on 05/21/2008 2:42:10 PM PDT by jongaltsr (Hope to See ya in Galt's Gulch.)
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