uah researchers using pulsar measure ments to probe dark matter find milky way galaxy is highly dynamic graph copy
UAH Pei-Ling Chan Endowed Chair Dr. Sukanya Chakrabarti, professor in physics and astronomy.
Michael Mercier | UAH

Dark matter comprises over 80% of all matter in the cosmos but is invisible to conventional observation, because it seemingly does not interact with light or electromagnetic fields. Now , the Pei-Ling Chan Endowed Chair in the Col-lege of Science at 哔哩传媒 (UAH), along with lead author , a UAH postdoctoral associate, have written a to help illuminate just how much dark matter there is in our galaxy and where it resides by studying the gravitational acceleration of binary pulsars. Chakrabarti gave a on this work and other methods to measure galactic accelerations at the 243rd meeting of the American Astronomical Society in New Orleans in January.

Pulsars are rapidly rotating neutron stars that blast out pulses of radiation at regular intervals ranging from seconds to milliseconds. A binary pulsar is a pulsar with a companion that allows physicists to test general relativity because of the strong gravitational fields accompanying these objects. 鈥淧ulsars are fantastic galactic clocks that have a timing stability that rivals atomic clocks,鈥 Chakrabarti explains. 鈥淧ulsars have been used for decades in precision tests of the theory of general relativity. We are using them to directly measure the tiny accelerations of stars that live in the gravitational potential of our galaxy. These accelerations are only about 10 centimeters per second over a decade, or about the speed of a crawling baby, which is why it鈥檚 been difficult to measure these tiny changes previously. The pulsar timing data from facilities such as NANOGrav and other pulsar timing facilities made the measurements feasible.鈥

, or the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves, is a consortium of astronomers who detect gravitational waves using the Green Bank Telescope, Arecibo Observatory, the Very Large Array and the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment.

鈥淏y obtaining extreme-precision measurements of accelerations, we now have the most direct probe of the gravitational potential of the galaxy beyond what has been done in astronomy over the last century,鈥 Chakrabarti notes. 鈥淭here are now many independent lines of evidence that show the galaxy has actually had a highly dynamic history. Tom鈥檚 analysis of the larger pulsar timing sample shows directly for the first time that the galaxy has been disturbed by dynamical interactions, such as by passing dwarf galaxies.鈥

Obtaining an accurate model of the galaxy鈥檚 gravitational potential caused by dark matter is something like counting the ripples on a pond after the stone is thrown.

鈥淲e used every pulsar we could get, as long as it had all the measurements we need,鈥 lead author Donlon says. 鈥淚n order to measure an acceleration from a pulsar, they need to be in a stable binary system. You also need to know how far away the pulsar is, its movement on the sky and details about its orbit; all these things require extremely precise measurements that take years of observations! As time goes on, we should have more pulsars we can use for future studies.鈥

Donlon reports there are two main ways these accelerations help us learn about the universe. 鈥淭he first, is that binary pulsars emit gravitational waves, which cause their orbits to get smaller over time, and eventually the two objects crash into each other. Because the gravitational field is very strong in this type of system, and the pulsar timing measurements are very precise, it鈥檚 possible to test the predictions made by general relativity against the observed decay of the pulsar's orbit. The second way is through tests of dark matter. Dark matter can't be seen, but still interacts with regular matter through gravity, and that additional gravity causes accelerations on these pul-sars. By comparing the accelerations we actually see with the accelerations we expect to get from just normal matter, we can figure out how much dark matter there is, and where it is.鈥

Looking to the future of this research, Donlon concludes, 鈥淲e can plan experiments that require many more pulsars, which will become possible as we get more pulsar timing measurements. As the number of data points grows, we will be able to map our galaxy's gravitational field with incredible precision, including things like any clumps of dark matter.鈥


Contact

Kristina Hendrix
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kristina.hendrix@uah.edu