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Gaping Hole in the
Universe
25 August 2007
University of Minnesota astronomers have found an enormous hole in the
Universe, nearly a billion light-years across, empty of both normal
matter such as stars, galaxies and gas, as well as the mysterious,
unseen "dark matter." While earlier studies have shown holes, or voids,
in the large-scale structure of the Universe, this new discovery dwarfs
them all.
Illustration
of the effect of intervening matter in the cosmos on the cosmic
microwave background (CMB). On the right, the CMB is released shortly
after the Big Bang, with tiny ripples in temperature due to fluctuations
in the early Universe. As this radiation traverses the Universe, filled
with a web of galaxies, clusters, superclusters and voids, it
experiences slight perturbations. In the direction of the giant
newly-discovered void, the WMAP satellite (top left) sees a cold spot,
while the VLA (bottom left) sees fewer radio galaxies.
"Not only has no one ever found a void this big, but we never even
expected to find one this size," said Lawrence Rudnick of the University
of Minnesota astronomy professor. Rudnick, along with grad student Shea
Brown and associate professor Liliya Williams, also of the University of
Minnesota, reported their findings in a paper accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journal.
Astronomers have known for years that, on large scales, the Universe has
voids largely empty of matter. However, most of these voids are much
smaller than the one found by Rudnick and his colleagues. In addition,
the number of discovered voids decreases as the size increases.
"What we've found is not normal, based on either observational studies
or on computer simulations of the large-scale evolution of the
Universe," Williams said.
Left:
A 25-degree region of the Cosmic Microwave Background emission around
the region of the WMAP cold spot (circled). The colors represent very
small variations (parts in 100,000) around the average temperature of
2.7 degrees above absolute zero, with blue colors being colder. Data are
from NASA's WMAP satellite.
Right: A heavily smoothed portion of the NRAO Very Large Array Sky
Survey (NVSS) showing the blended emission from radio galaxies along
each path. Blue colors represent brightnesses approximately 20% below
the average.
The astronomers drew their conclusion by studying data from the NRAO VLA
Sky Survey (NVSS), a project that imaged the entire sky visible to the
Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope, part of the National Science
Foundation's National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO). Their study of
the NVSS data showed a remarkable drop in the number of galaxies in a
region of sky in the constellation Eridanus, southwest of Orion.
"We already knew there was something different about this spot in the
sky," Rudnick said. The region had been dubbed the "WMAP Cold Spot,"
because it stood out in a map of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)
radiation made by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotopy Probe (WMAP)
satellite, launched by NASA in 2001. The CMB, faint radio waves that are
the remnant radiation from the Big Bang, is the earliest "baby picture"
available of the Universe. Irregularities in the CMB show structures
that existed only a few hundred thousand years after the Big Bang.
The WMAP satellite measured temperature differences in the CMB that are
only millionths of a degree. The cold region in Eridanus was discovered
in 2004.
Astronomers wondered if the cold spot was intrinsic to the CMB, and thus
indicated some structure in the very early Universe, or whether it could
be caused by something more nearby through which the CMB had to pass on
its way to Earth. Finding the dearth of galaxies in that region by
studying NVSS data resolved that question.
"Although our surprising results need independent confirmation, the
slightly lower temperature of the CMB in this region appears to be
caused by a huge hole devoid of nearly all matter roughly 6-10 billion
light-years from Earth," Rudnick said.
How does a lack of matter cause a lower temperature in the Big Bang's
remnant radiation as seen from Earth?
The answer lies in dark energy, which became a dominant force in the
Universe very recently, when the Universe was already three-quarters of
the size it is today. Dark energy works opposite gravity and is speeding
up the expansion of the Universe. Thanks to dark energy, CMB photons
that pass through a large void just before arriving at Earth have less
energy than those that pass through an area with a normal distribution
of matter in the last leg of their journey. 
In a simple expansion of the universe, without dark energy, photons
approaching a large mass -- such as a supercluster of galaxies -- pick
up energy from its gravity. As they pull away, the gravity saps their
energy, and they wind up with the same energy as when they started.
But photons passing through matter-rich space when dark energy became
dominant don't fall back to their original energy level. Dark energy
counteracts the influence of gravity and so the large masses don't sap
as much energy from the photons as they pull away. Thus, these photons
arrive at Earth with a slightly higher energy, or temperature, than they
would in a dark energy-free Universe.
Conversely, photons passing through a large void experience a loss of
energy. The acceleration of the Universe's expansion, and thus dark
energy, were discovered less than a decade ago. The physical properties
of dark energy are unknown, though it is by far the most abundant form
of energy in the Universe today. Learning its nature is one of the most
fundamental current problems in astrophysics. |