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Dark Matter a series of lectures at the crossroads of particle physics, astronomy, and cosmology Kai Martens Kavli-IPMU The University of Tokyo Outline of the Lecture Series: 1.) Dark Matter: Early Evidence from the Motion of Stars and Galaxies 2.) Cosmology and Dark Matter (or: Why it is not Neutrinos) 3.) Nothing New? MOND, MACHOS, and Their Limitations 4.) Ideas from Particle Physics: Axions and WIMPs 5.) Direct Detection Experiments for WIMPs 6.) Seminar: The XMASS 800kg Dark Matter Experiment 7.) WIMP Annihilation: Indirect Detection Experiments 8.) Axion Experiments and Searches Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 2 Initital Remarks science is a collaborative effort: communication is most important! neither Japanese nor German are the international languages of science → English is (American English, that is...) I will try to speak slowly and clearly, and I would love it if you: - ask questions during the lecture - talk to me and/or asked questions after the lecture - let me know if there is something that you do not understand personal interaction is very important, especially among scientists; if you really are too shy to talk: my e-mail address is: please start your subject line with: Sept. 28, 2012 [email protected] Konan: [your subject] Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 3 A Word About Myself from: Frankfurt am Main, Germany studied physics in Germany: Vordiplom in Freiburg PhD in Heidelberg: PhD experiment: WA89 (Hyperon Beam Experiment) @ CERN, Geneva: PostDoc: 1990 – 1995 University of Tokyo (ICRR) & SUNY at Stony Brook Super-Kamiokande & K2K: 1995 – 2000 Assistant/Associate Professor @ University of Utah, USA 2000 – 2008 experiments: HiRes, Flash (SLAC), & Telescope Array Associate Professor @ Kavli-IPMU, The University of Tokyo experiment: XMASS Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 2008 – … 4 Resources: http://arxiv.org/ http://pdg.lbl.gov/ http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 5 Outline of the First Lecture: - getting acquainted with each other: - - the historical path: - - discussion encouraged !!! measuring the motion of stars and galaxies evidence from our galaxy evidence from clusters of galaxies the local DM density next lecture (this afternoon): Sept. 28, 2012 Cosmology and Dark Matter Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 6 Something to Keep in Mind: skepticism, scepticism: a personal disposition toward doubt or incredulity of facts, persons, or institutions. (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/scepticism) http://pdg.lbl.gov/2011/reviews/rpp2011-rev-history-plots.pdf Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 7 Solar System Orbits: We know gravity. 1589 Galileo's experiment w/two balls → accerleration independent of mass (according to: Vincenco Vivani, Galileo's student) 1687 Newton's Principia Mathematica: F =G m1 m2 r 2 note the scale: AU Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU – not mm, – not parsec 8 How To Find Dark Objects... which was the first astronomical object found based on Newton's theory of gravitation? Urbain Le Verrier, a french mathematician, predicted Neptune's position applying celestial mechanics, especially to Uranus given Verrier's predictions the planet Neptune was observed with the telescope at the Berlin Observatory in the night of Sept. 23, 1846 great success: gravity works! Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 9 Not Always Though: planet Mercury: precession of the perihelion: why??? postulate: planet “Vulcan”... but that was the wrong answer; the right one is: general relativity's bent space near the Sun... Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 10 Circular Orbits and Mass: 1.7e-7 solar mass: 2x1030kg 2.4e-6 3.0e-6 planetary masses as fraction of solar 3.2e-7 9.5e-4 2.9e-4 4.4e-5 5.0e-5 7.5e-9 velocity Keplerian orbits to measure enclosed mass → measure orbital velocity Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 11 Milky Way Galaxy Milky Way: ~ 3x1011 stars ~ 1x1012 M⊙ ~ 100 kly across type: SBc barred spiral Sun: orbital period: ~200My distance to center: 27.2 kly (8.3kpc) Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 12 Velocity Dispersion and Mass galaxy (Milky Way...) stable; stars are “bound” to it. Q: How to get away? A: Run fast (escape velocity...) ! general idea: measure velocities of those who are bound → infer how strong the bond is Mm F =G 2 r gravitational bond → how big is the mass that binds statistical power: → need many objects, know their mass !!! → distribution of velocities: Sept. 28, 2012 (Gaussian:) μ, σ Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU ← “dispersion” 13 The Mass of Stars: we understand stars: - color represents temperature - temperature represents mass: for main sequence !!! Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 14 Starlight and Temperature: Wien's law: max 1/T Sun's surface: 5778 K solar spectrum (above atmosphere) absorption lines: velocity! blue stars: 30,000K – 60,000K O blue-white stars: 10,000K – 30,000K B white stars: 7,500K – 10,000K A yellow-white stars: 6,000K – 7,500K F yellow stars (Sun): 5,000K – 6,000K G yellow-orange stars: 3,500K – 5,000K K red stars: < 3,500K M Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 15 For Example: Hydrogen Lines absorption spectrum: emission spectrum photons (light): Eph = hfph = hc/ ph Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 16 Relative Velocity: Doppler Effect if the source of the light is in motion towards or away from the observer, spectral lines become blue- or red-shifted: λ obs v rel =1+ λ em c only radial motion becomes measurable; lateral does not: Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 17 Velocity of Stars, Galaxies, Clusters: λ obs v rel =1+ λ em c BAS11: 20 dense galaxy clusters > 10,000 galaxies ~ 1 GLy away note: the whole pattern moves without pattern (single line): which one is it ??? (sorry, could not find a picture of the supercluster; on the other hand: if its clusters were resolved...) Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 18 Perpendicular to Galactic Plane: use “vertical acceleration” (Oort Criterium) to measure local density (mass/volume): type of star A K giants M dwarfs dispersion [km/s] scale height [pc] 9 17 18 120 270 350 blue stars: 30,000K – 60,000K O scale height: different stars → different distribution around plane blue-white stars: 10,000K – 30,000K B white stars: 7,500K – 10,000K A yellow-white stars: 6,000K – 7,500K F yellow stars (Sun): 5,000K – 6,000K G yellow-orange stars: 3,500K – 5,000K K (not trivial !!!) red stars: < 3,500K M Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 19 1932: Stars in Galactic Neighborhood 1932: Jan Oort (Leiden, Netherlands) measures velocities of stars in our galactic neighborhood: gravitational mass needed to keep them in the galactic plane: 3 ~ 1M⊙/375ly > 2mstars,visible → dark matter same approach, better telescopes (star catalogues, Hipparcos) → local density today! Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 20 Clusters of Galaxies: Virial Theorem here gravitational mass is derived from the motion of the member galaxies: cluster → same distance → red-shift dispersion due to relative motion stable system (!), averaged over time: T = total kinetic energy, V = total potential energy 2 T =−∑ F⃗ i⋅r⃗i V ( r )=ar n 2 T =n V tot → calculate mass required to keep together (cluster) → compare to luminous mass in cluster (galaxies and gas...) Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 21 1933: Coma Cluster of Galaxies Fritz Zwicky (Caltech, USA): virial theorem: ΣT = ½ ΣU → galaxies in Coma cluster too fast for cluster's gravitational potential → dark matter Sept. 28, 2012 Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 22 contamination: forground/background galaxies bias: unobserved galaxies ~ 90% of mass in cluster is dark Sept. 28, 2012 http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap100502.html Today: Galaxies in the Coma Cluster Coma Cluster: - thousands of galaxies, mostly ellipticals - each galaxy: billions of stars ... - millions of Ly across, 321 MLy away: redshift 0.0231 (6.925 km/s), velocity dispersion: 1000 km/s Kai Martens, Kavli-IPMU 23