|   |  Astronomy Picture of the Day  | 
 APOD: 2001 December 19 - Finding Dark Matter
APOD: 2001 December 19 - Finding Dark Matter  
 Explanation: 
Where is 
dark matter?  
Galaxies rotate and move in 
clusters as if a tremendous amount of 
unseen matter is present.  
But does dark matter exist in the greater universe too -- 
and if so, where?   
The answer can be found by comparing the 
distribution of galaxies 
observed with 
numerical simulations.  
This comparison became much more accurate recently 
when over 100,000 galaxy observations from the 
2-Degree Field Galactic Redshift Survey were used. 
In the above frame from a 
computer simulation of our 
universe, 
a 300 million light-year slice shows 
dark matter in gray and galaxies as colored circles.  
The red box indicates the location of a rich 
cluster of galaxies, while the green box shows a 
more typical cross-section of 
our universe. 
Analyses indicate that the immense gravity of the pervasive dark matter pulls normal matter to it, so that 
light matter and dark matter actually 
cluster together.
 APOD: 2003 August 14 - Dark Matter Map
APOD: 2003 August 14 - Dark Matter Map  
 Explanation: 
The total mass within giant galaxy cluster
CL0025+1654,
about 4.5 billion
light-years away,
produces a cosmic gravitational lens --
bending
light as predicted
by Einstein's theory of gravity and forming detectable images
of even more distant background galaxies.
Of course, the total
cluster mass is the sum of the 
galaxies themselves, seen as
ordinary luminous matter, plus the cluster's
invisible dark matter whose
nature
remains unknown.
But by analyzing the distribution of luminous matter and the
properties of the gravitational lensing
due to total cluster mass,
researchers have solved the problem of tracing
the dark matter layout.
Their resulting map
shows the otherwise invisible dark matter in blue,
and the positions of the cluster
galaxies in yellow.
The work,
based on extensive Hubble Space Telescope observations,
reveals that the cluster's
dark
matter is not evenly distributed, but
follows the clumps of luminous matter closely.
 APOD: 2005 September 25 - WMAP Resolves the Universe
APOD: 2005 September 25 - WMAP Resolves the Universe 
 Explanation: 
Analyses of a new high-resolution map of 
microwave light emitted only 380,000 years after the 
Big Bang appear to define 
our universe 
more precisely than ever before.  
The eagerly awaited results announced last year from the orbiting 
Wilkinson
Microwave Anisotropy Probe resolve several 
long-standing disagreements in 
cosmology rooted in less precise data.  
Specifically, 
present analyses of 
above WMAP all-sky image 
indicate that the universe is 13.7 billion years old 
(accurate to 1 percent), composed of 73 percent 
dark energy, 23 percent 
cold 
dark matter, and only 4 percent 
atoms, 
is currently expanding at the rate of 71 km/sec/Mpc (accurate to 5 percent), 
underwent episodes of rapid expansion called 
inflation, and will 
expand forever.  
 Authors & editors: 
Robert Nemiroff
(MTU) &
Jerry Bonnell
(USRA)
NASA Web Site Statements, Warnings, and 
Disclaimers
 NASA Official:  Jay Norris.
Specific rights apply.
A service of:
EUD at
NASA /
GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.