Study validates general relativity on cosmic scale, existence of dark matter

Posted In: Editors Picks | R&D Daily | Astrophysics | Physics | University of California, Berkeley

By Robert Sanders, Media Relations

Thursday, March 11, 2010

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A partial map of the distribution of galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, going out to a distance of 7 billion light years. The amount of galaxy clustering that we observe today is a signature of how gravity acted over cosmic time, and allows as to test whether general relativity holds over these scales. (M. Blanton, Sloan Digital Sky Survey)

An analysis of more than 70,000 galaxies by University of California, Berkeley, University of Zurich and Princeton University physicists demonstrates that the universe – at least up to a distance of 3.5 billion light years from Earth – plays by the rules set out 95 years ago by Albert Einstein in his General Theory of Relativity.

By calculating the clustering of these galaxies, which stretch nearly one-third of the way to the edge of the universe, and analyzing their velocities and distortion from intervening material, the researchers have shown that Einstein's theory explains the nearby universe better than alternative theories of gravity.

One major implication of the new study is that the existence of dark matter is the most likely explanation for the observation that galaxies and galaxy clusters move as if under the influence of some unseen mass, in addition to the stars astronomers observe.

"The nice thing about going to the cosmological scale is that we can test any full, alternative theory of gravity, because it should predict the things we observe," said co-author Uros Seljak, a professor of physics and of astronomy at UC Berkeley and a faculty scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who is currently on leave at the Institute of Theoretical Physics at the University of Zurich. "Those alternative theories that do not require dark matter fail these tests."

In particular, the tensor-vector-scalar gravity (TeVeS) theory, which tweaks general relativity to avoid resorting to the existence of dark matter, fails the test.

The result conflicts with a report late last year that the very early universe, between 8 and 11 billion years ago, did deviate from the general relativistic description of gravity.

Seljak and his current and former students, including first authors Reinabelle Reyes, a Princeton University graduate student, and Rachel Mandelbaum, a recent Princeton Ph.D. recipient, report their findings in the March 11 issue of the journal Nature. The other co-authors are Tobias Baldauf, Lucas Lombriser and Robert E. Smith of the University of Zurich, and James E. Gunn, professor of physics at Princeton and father of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.

Einstein's General Theory of Relativity holds that gravity warps space and time, which means that light bends as it passes near a massive object, such as the core of a galaxy. The theory has been validated numerous times on the scale of the solar system, but tests on a galactic or cosmic scale have been inconclusive.

"There are some crude and imprecise tests of general relativity at galaxy scales, but we don't have good predictions for those tests from competing theories," Seljak said.

Such tests have become important in recent decades because the idea that some unseen mass permeates the universe disturbs some theorists and has spurred them to tweak general relativity to get rid of dark matter. TeVeS, for example, says that acceleration caused by the gravitational force from a body depends not only on the mass of that body, but also on the value of the acceleration caused by gravity.

The discovery of dark energy, an enigmatic force that is causing the expansion of the universe to accelerate, has led to other theories, such as one dubbed f(R), to explain the expansion without resorting to dark energy.

Tests to distinguish between competing theories are not easy, Seljak said. A theoretical cosmologist, he noted that cosmological experiments, such as detections of the cosmic microwave background, typically involve measurements of fluctuations in space, while gravity theories predict relationships between density and velocity, or between density and gravitational potential.

"The problem is that the size of the fluctuation, by itself, is not telling us anything about underlying cosmological theories. It is essentially a nuisance we would like to get rid of," Seljak said. "The novelty of this technique is that it looks at a particular combination of observations that does not depend on the magnitude of the fluctuations. The quantity is a smoking gun for deviations from general relativity."

Three years ago, a team of astrophysicists led by Pengjie Zhang of Shanghai Observatory suggested using a quantity dubbed EG to test cosmological models. EG reflects the amount of clustering in observed galaxies and the amount of distortion of galaxies caused by light bending as it passes through intervening matter, a process known as weak lensing. Weak lensing can make a round galaxy look elliptical, for example.

"Put simply, EG is proportional to the mean density of the universe and inversely proportional to the rate of growth of structure in the universe," he said. "This particular combination gets rid of the amplitude fluctuations and therefore focuses directly on the particular combination that is sensitive to modifications of general relativity."

Using data on more than 70,000 bright, and therefore distant, red galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, Seljak and his colleagues calculated EG and compared it to the predictions of TeVeS, f(R) and the cold dark matter model of general relativity enhanced with a cosmological constant to account for dark energy.

The predictions of TeVeS were outside the observational error limits, while general relativity fit nicely within the experimental error. The EG predicted by f(R) was somewhat lower than that observed, but within the margin of error.

In an effort to reduce the error and thus test theories that obviate dark energy, Seljak hopes to expand his analysis to perhaps a million galaxies when SDSS-III's Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS), led by a team at LBNL and UC Berkeley, is completed in about five years. To reduce the error even further, by perhaps as much as a factor of 10, requires an even more ambitious survey called BigBOSS, which has been proposed by physicists at LBNL and UC Berkeley, among other places.

Future space missions, such as NASA's Joint Dark Energy Mission (JDEM) and the European Space Agency's Euclid mission, will also provide data for a better analysis, though perhaps 10-15 years from now.

Seljak noted that these tests do not tell astronomers the actual identity of dark matter or dark energy. That can only be determined by other types of observations, such as direct detection experiments.

Original article

 

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5 Comments

  • I agree with Ross. From the history of physics, I recall the conceptual struggles with “luminiferous aether,” an old idea which may be making a comeback. The present conundrum of “dark matter/dark energy” with its many failings parallels the earlier confusion that required clear thinking—and excellent, definitive experimental measurements for its resolution. “Einstein is correct?” Alas, we all have clay feet: Einstein’s original work on general relativity had real problems (i. e., “division by zero error”) and had to be corrected by others. With lots of time as a Swiss patent clerk, it is said that Einstein’s special “genius” came from his scientific “doodling,” followed by writing summaries of other peoples’ work; e. g., Brownian motion (Robert Brown), the photoelectric effect (Philipp Lenard), and special relativity (Hendrick Lorentz).

  • Einstein is correct. What the observations show is not invisible dark matter but additional invisible gravity associated with visible matter. For cosmic distances Newton's constant is not a universal constant but must add a term linear in distance in order to explain the new observations. Also there is no need for dark energy to explain the difference between distances determined from magnitudes of very remote stars and the distance determined from the associated redshifts. Hubble only showed a linear relationship between the distance and redshifts of stars, and not the assumed Doppler effect and apparent velocities. The linear extrapolation of the redshift dependence on distance must be limited at very large distances, because otherwise the photon energy decrease with distance will extrapolate to zero photon energy and then even negative. Thus there is no proof or need for dark energy. The red shift does not prove the receding stars and the Hubble constant can not be used to determine the age of the universe. Details are provided in a recent book, "The Misunderstood Universe".
    Also for more details, do a Google search on "sol Aisenberg +gravity.

  • Dark matter and energy are unnecessary assumptions if a theory will explicitly represent the expansion of the universe that observation undoubtably now comfirms. Carmeli's cosmological relativity which explicitly includes the velocity of the expansion and builds on Einstein's Relativity theory (not discarding it) can explain enigmas like galactic rotation curves, etc. without ad-hoc assumptions like 'dark enigmas'.

  • Good Comment, Ross

  • Since we admit that we can't detect dark matter, let's not say that this study confirms the existence of dark matter but rather that this study reinforces our hypothesis of dark matter. Let's also admit that we have hypothesized dark matter in an attempt to account for gravity beyond what we can observe in the universe.

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