{"id":6646,"date":"2020-08-27T08:42:32","date_gmt":"2020-08-27T07:42:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/?p=6646"},"modified":"2020-08-27T08:42:32","modified_gmt":"2020-08-27T07:42:32","slug":"searching-for-mysterious-dark-matter-particles-and-the-mass-of-neutrinos","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/searching-for-mysterious-dark-matter-particles-and-the-mass-of-neutrinos\/6646\/","title":{"rendered":"Searching for mysterious dark matter particles and the mass of neutrinos"},"content":{"rendered":"
With the term \u2018physical cosmology<\/a>\u2019, the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2019 to J Peebles honours the close connection between modern cosmology and particle physics: the world of the enormously large and the world of the smallest particles are closely linked. With the laws of the so-called \u2018Standard Model\u2019 of particle physics and the theory of general relativity formulated by Albert Einstein more than 100 years ago and recently so well confirmed by the discovery of gravitational waves (Nobel Prize for Physics, 2017), the evolution of the Universe<\/a> from its birth in the Big Bang about 13.8 billion years ago to its structure today can be described mathematically in great agreement with the experimental results.<\/p>\n However, despite all the mathematical beauty of the description and its agreement with the observations, there are still significant unanswered questions. For example, we know that one-sixth of the matter in the Universe is the atoms that make up our Solar System and all matter on Earth. But we do not know what the remaining five sixths are, the so-called \u2018dark matter\u2019, which embeds every galaxy in a \u2018halo\u2019 of gravitationally acting dark matter<\/a>.Dark matter<\/h3>\n
\nThe structure of today’s Universe, consisting of countless clusters of galaxies and billions of galaxies, requires that this dark matter has been strongly clumped and cannot have moved too fast at the time when these structures were formed. That is why researchers have been searching for decades for as yet unknown heavy particles, so-called WIMPs (weakly interacting massive particles). If these particles really exist, they would interact with matter only very weakly, except by gravitation. Although they would have formed at high temperatures shortly after the Big Bang, with the expansion of the Universe they would have cooled down so much that they would have been sufficiently slow for structure formation. However, dark matter could be other, much lighter particles, e.g. so-called axions, whose generation mechanism in the early Universe was such that they could also explain the present structure of the Universe.<\/p>\n