Dark matter particle that may finally shed light on cosmic mystery the 'best of both worlds,' scientists say

An illustration of deep space.
An illustration of deep space. (Image credit: agsandrew/Getty Images)

A new dark matter model suggests a new candidate for the constituent particles of this mysterious form of matter that could mean it is detectable by future experiments.

Despite making up 85% of the matter in the universe, dark matter has remained frustratingly undetectable thanks to the fact that it doesn't seem to interact with light as does the "normal" everyday matter that makes up stars, planets, and us. The only way dark matter can be inferred currently is through its interaction with gravity, with this gravitational influence literally keeping galaxies from ripping apart as they spin. 

The new model suggests that dark matter could be composed of what its authors call HighlY Interactive ParticlE Relics, or HYPERs. This new model suggests that after the formation of dark matter in the early universe, the strength with which it interacts with everyday baryonic matter would have increased abruptly. This HYPER model would have the consequence of making dark matter detectable in the current epoch of the universe while also offering an explanation of why dark matter is so abundant.

Related: What is dark matter?

The new model was devised by PRISMA+ Cluster of Excellence postdoctoral researcher Gilly Elor, alongside University of Michigan scientists Robert McGehee and Aaron Pierce.

"The HYPER model of dark matter asks and answers the question: How 'hyperactive' can light dark matter be?" McGehee told Space.com. "More technically, how frequently might we find light dark matter scattering off nuclei in near-future direct detection experiments that are sensitive to dark matter lighter than even a proton."

One of the current leading suspects in the hunt for dark matter candidates, are so-called "Weakly Interacting Massive Particles" or "WIMPs." The fact the search for these and other massive particles has been fruitless has led researchers to start proposing lighter particles like HYPERs as dark matter candidates. 

Additionally, current dark matter investigations tend to neglect the idea of phase transitions, the change of one physical state to another such as the shift from a solid to a liquid, which are common in everyday matter.

The HYPER model instead hinges on a phase transition, demanding a transition in the early universe that changes how dark matter and everyday matter interact. The team behind the HYPER model thinks that this change of state could mean dark matter may actually be detectable in the universe as it is today.

"We found that concrete models of such dark matter may be realized if a special, new phase transition occurred in the early universe," McGehee said. 

This 3D map illustrates the large-scale distribution of dark matter, reconstructed from measurements of weak gravitational lensing by using the Hubble Space Telescope. (Image credit: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)

The "best of both worlds" for dark matter

The challenge faced by potential dark matter models currently is that if they suggest dark matter interacts strongly with baryonic matter, then the amount of dark matter formed in the early universe would be too small to conform with our observations of the universe. Conversely, models that produce the right amount of dark matter suggest interactions with baryonic matter that are too weak to be detected experimentally today. 

The HYPER model with its phase transition suggests one single abrupt change in the interaction between dark matter and baryonic matter. This allows for what McGehee called "the best of both worlds" —  both the right amount of dark matter to be created and a large enough interaction with everyday matter to be detectable. 

Interactions in particle physics require a "mediator," a specific messenger particle, usually force-carrying bosons such as photons, which are messenger particles of electromagnetic force, to proceed.

Interactions between dark matter and ordinary matter would also require a mediator. The strength of the interaction would depend on the mass of the mediator particle with a larger mass meaning a weaker interaction. So the mediator in this case must be heavy enough for the correct amount of dark matter to form, while still being light enough to grant a detectable interaction with matter.

The aforementioned phase transition in the HYPER model sees the mass of the mediator particle suddenly decrease with this change occurring after the formation of dark matter. This allows for the inferred amount to be created, while simultaneously allowing for a boosted interaction with ordinary matter that leads to scattering events that could allow dark matter to be directly detectable. 

While the HYPER model may address some of the challenges associated with developing a dark matter model, creating it was anything but easy. 

"One thing that shocked me about this research was how hard it was to circumvent the usual constraints on dark matter," McGehee said. "When I first thought about how a phase transition could circumvent stringent cosmological constraints and provide a serious dark matter benchmark, I was extremely excited and naively expected to write a paper within a few-month time period. 

"Years later, my collaborators and I had found that even the assumption of this phase transition was not enough to guarantee protection from the many serious bounds that any new model of dark matter must face and overcome."

McGehee pointed out that should a future dark matter detection experiment see what appears to be quite light dark matter scattering off nuclei frequently, the HYPER model may be the only model available to physicists to explain this observation.

"That would be an extremely exciting circumstance for myself and my co-authors," he concluded.

The team's research is published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

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Robert Lea
Contributing Writer

Robert Lea is a science journalist in the U.K. whose articles have been published in Physics World, New Scientist, Astronomy Magazine, All About Space, Newsweek and ZME Science. He also writes about science communication for Elsevier and the European Journal of Physics. Rob holds a bachelor of science degree in physics and astronomy from the U.K.’s Open University. Follow him on Twitter @sciencef1rst.

  • bwana4swahili
    Yet another attempt at defining nonexistent dark matter. And more research money wasted! But this search would make for a sorta interesting Sci-Fi documentary.
    Reply
  • Manix
    bwana4swahili said:
    Yet another attempt at defining nonexistent dark matter. And more research money wasted! But this search would make for a sorta interesting Sci-Fi documentary.
    I agree. I find it almost laughable that so much time is wasted in searching for something that doesn't exist. Funny how ghosts are dismissed because there is no evidence and yet this is EXACTLY what dark matter is ghosts. No one has seen them; detected them and we go off the "effects" happening we cannot understand. Maybe we should start looking at the facts, our science is wrong, that we are apporoaching the universel laws all wrong. it is also possible there is (and to a degree proven) that there is a FIFTH force at play in our universe. The other is that gravity as we know it doesn't act as we think it does, but depending on the circumstances there is a form of localized gravity that we're yet to understand. I am so done with them pushing the dark matter scenario as if it is FACT. it isn't. CERN hasn't discovered it and neither has any other experiment that has tested for it. It's time to swallow that pride and admit you got it wrong. Dark Matter does not exist and there is something else at play here.
    Reply
  • BDL
    Please! Stop this utter nonsense.

    Every time an experiment searching for dark particles matter is carried out, and fails, another even more way-out idea for an experiment looking for another sort of dark matter particle is suggested - and again fails. So another..... I'm sure you get the drift.

    I suggest we finally wake up to reality - that dark matter actually consists of teeny-tiny pink unicorns, who like playing with galaxies like their own versions of rondabouts, but that they're just very, very shy.

    Let's be honest. That's a "hypothesis" with just as much validity as any of the other of these failed suggestions.

    Let's get with reality. Einstein's GR is just the next level up from Newton, but it's just as much of an approximation.
    Reply
  • bwana4swahili
    BDL said:
    Please! Stop this utter nonsense.

    Every time an experiment searching for dark particles matter is carried out, and fails, another even more way-out idea for an experiment looking for another sort of dark matter particle is suggested - and again fails. So another..... I'm sure you get the drift.

    I suggest we finally wake up to reality - that dark matter actually consists of teeny-tiny pink unicorns, who like playing with galaxies like their own versions of rondabouts, but that they're just very, very shy.

    Let's be honest. That's a "hypothesis" with just as much validity as any of the other of these failed suggestions.

    Let's get with reality. Einstein's GR is just the next level up from Newton, but it's just as much of an approximation.
    The rule of the universe is the KISS principle. Dark Matter is NOT in this category! Look at something simple, like a change in the gravitational 'constant'.
    Reply