News from the AAS
A large international team has made the most detailed 3-D map yet of how dark matter is distributed in the universe. The group observed a 1.6-square-degree patch of sky (9 times the area of the full Moon) with ground- and space-based telescopes, including a whopping 600 orbits of observing time with the Hubble Space Telescope the most time ever allotted for a single project.
The Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) found that dark matter is distributed in the same web-like structure as galaxies, and that dark matter, a mysterious form of matter that is invisible to telescopes but that accounts for about 6 times more mass than familiar “atomic” matter, and visible matter clump together as simulations of cosmic evolution have predicted. To tease out the location of dark matter, the team painstakingly studied how foreground concentrations of matter subtly distort the shapes of thousands of more distant galaxies, a phenomenon predicted by Einstein known as gravitational lensing.
The results bolster the prevailing view that dark matter provided the gravitational muscle that allowed galaxies to form in the early universe, and that binds them together in giant clusters. “We don’t have an answer on what dark matter is yet,” says team leader Nicholas Scoville (Caltech). “But we have made a first step: we know where it is.”
A team led by Stella Kafka (National Optical Astronomy Observatory) has found the first strong observational evidence that a star’s powerful magnetic field is penetrating a binary companion and stirring up starspots, flares, and prominences.
The system, EF Eridani, consists of a white dwarf and a brown dwarf in an orbit so tight it would fit inside the Sun. The system is normally active when material from the brown dwarf flows along magnetic field lines, smashing into the white dwarf’s magnetic pole. But occasionally the flow of material ceases, and the system settles down into a state of relative quiescence, which allows observations of the much fainter brown dwarf. Using telescopes in Chile and Arizona, Kafka and her colleagues found that during these periods, the system still emits very bright hydrogen-alpha light, a key indicator of magnetic activity. The pattern of the hydrogen-alpha light suggests strong magnetic activity on the brown dwarf of the type that the Sun would normally generate internally, but that rarely occurs in substellar objects.
“The magnetic field of the white dwarf penetrates the brown dwarf and acts like a conductor,” says Kafka. “It makes it come alive and leads to hyperactivity.” The system, adds Kafka, gives astronomers insights into some of the complex magnetic interactions that must be occurring in hot Jupiters: massive planets that orbit their host stars at close range.
“This shows us something we can’t explain right now,” says Cargile, who adds that according to models of how newborn stars shrink as they contract, the larger star should be 8 million years older than its companion. “But all the evidence shows that these stars should be the same age,” he says.





