. 24/7 Space News .
Clustering Of Quasars 10 Billion Light Years Away Determine Relationship With Dark Matter

The illustration shows the distribution of dark matter, massive halos, and luminous quasars in a simulation of the early universe, shown 1.6 billion years after the Big Bang. Gray-colored filamentary structure shows the distribution of "invisible" dark matter. Small white circles mark concentrated "halos" of dark matter more massive than 3 trillion times the mass of the sun. Larger, blue circles mark the most massive halos, more than 7 trillion times of the sun, which host the most luminous quasars. The strong clustering of the quasars in the SDSS sample demonstrates that they reside in these rare, very massive halos. The box shown is 360 million light years across. Credit: Paul Bode and Yue Shen, Princeton University
by Staff Writers
Princeton NY (SPX) Feb 12, 2007
Using a map of more than 4,000 luminous quasars in the distant universe, scientists from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-II) have shown that these brilliant beacons are strongly clumped, with huge quasar superclusters separated by vast stretches of empty space. The strong clustering shows that the quasars lie within massive concentrations of dark matter.

"Previous maps showed that more nearby quasars cluster like 'normal' galaxies," explained Princeton University graduate student Yue Shen, who led the study. "But the clustering in our map is ten times stronger, the difference between a high contrast photograph and a washed out xerox."

Quasars are glowing, ultraluminous concentrations of swirling gas falling into supermassive black holes at the centers of otherwise ordinary galaxies. Their great luminosities allow them to be seen at enormous distances, and since light travels at a finite speed, quasar maps provide a glimpse of structure when the universe was a small fraction of its current age.

"Quasars lie in galaxies, which lie in extended halos of invisible dark matter," said Princeton University astronomer Michael Strauss, a member of Shen's team. "In a typical galaxy, the dark matter outweighs the stars by ten to one."

"We can't observe the dark halos directly," Strauss explained, "but we know from theoretical calculations how they should cluster with one another. By measuring the clustering of the quasars, we can infer the masses of the 'halos' in which they live."

"We've shown that the brightest quasars, powered by the biggest black holes, lie in the most massive halos of the early universe, several trillion times the mass of the sun," added Shen, "This is roughly what theories predict."

The luminous distant quasars -- powered by black holes up to a billion times the mass of the sun -- are extremely rare, with average separations of 200 million light years or more. Before the SDSS, only a few hundred quasars had been discovered beyond 11 billion light years, the minimum distance of Shen's sample,

"The SDSS made this possible by imaging a large area of sky to great depth, then following up the candidates to show which were true quasars," said team member Gordon Richards of Drexel University. "Until you have a few thousand objects in your map, you can't make this measurement."

Because gravity pulls dark matter into denser structures over time, the clustering of dark matter in the early universe was much weaker than it is today. Richards explained the strong clustering of the brightest quasars as analogous to that of the highest mountain peaks on earth. "Most of them lie in the Himalayas, the Andes, the Rockies or the Alps."

"There's a whole low-altitude landscape of galaxies and dark matter," said Richards, "but when you look for the brightest quasars you pick out just the snowcapped mountain ranges."

The new measurements shed light on the early growth of supermassive black holes, according to theorist Avi Loeb of Harvard University, who is not a member of the SDSS-II team.

"The existence of bright quasars at early cosmic times is one of the unsolved mysteries of cosmology," Loeb said. "How did black holes grow to a billion times the mass of the sun when the universe was only a tenth of its current age? The SDSS measurements will help us answer this question."

earlier related report
The results are described in the paper "Clustering of High Redshift (Z > 2.9) Quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey," which was posted to the astro-ph web archive. It has been accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal.

Email This Article

Related Links
Astronomy at Princeton
Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Hubble Illuminates Cluster Of Diverse Galaxies
Baltimore, MD (SPX) Feb 12, 2007
This image from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope shows the diverse collection of galaxies in the cluster Abell S0740 that is over 450 million light-years away in the direction of the constellation Centaurus.







  • NASA To Review Screening Process Amid Love-Triangle Case
  • Moonstruck Astronaut Returns Home After Murder Attempt Charge
  • Astronauts' Image Falls Back To Earth In Love Triangle Case
  • US Astronaut Charged With Attempted Murder Of Love Rival

  • Spring Comes To Spirit At Gusev
  • Detailing A Winter Haven On Mars At Gusev Crater
  • Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter CCDs On The Blink
  • Opportunity Passes Ten Kilometer Mark

  • Six Aurora-Research Rockets To Launch From Poker Flat
  • Sea Launch Zenit Explodes On Pad
  • Sea Launch Operations To Be Resumed Despite Liftoff Failure
  • SpaceWorks Engineering Releases Study On Emerging Commercial Transport Services To ISS

  • Gascom To Launch 4 Smotr Low-Orbit Remote Sensing Satellites
  • GeoEye Makes Final Debt Payment For The Purchase Of Space Imaging
  • Google Earth To Blur Key India Sites
  • Brazilian Satellite Undergoes Environmental Tests

  • New Horizons SWAP Instrument Observes Solar Wind Interactions Before Jupiter Encounter
  • One Year Down, Eight to Go, On The Road to Pluto
  • NASA Spacecraft En Route To Pluto Prepares For Jupiter Encounter
  • Jupiter Encounter Begins For New Horizons Spacecraft On Route To Pluto

  • Clustering Of Quasars 10 Billion Light Years Away Determine Relationship With Dark Matter
  • Hubble Illuminates Cluster Of Diverse Galaxies
  • Despite Chill Antarctica Offers Heavenly View To Astronomers
  • Magnetic Explosions In The Distant Universe Get The Gamma Going

  • X PRIZE Opens Registration For Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge
  • Why China Wants To Explore The Moon
  • NASA Moon-Impactor Mission Passes Major Review
  • 181 Things To Do On The Moon

  • GPS Upgrade Will Require Complicated Choreography
  • China Puts New Navigation Satellite Into Orbit
  • GMV Signs Galileo Contracts Worth Over 40 Million Euros
  • Port Of Rotterdam To Use SAVI Networks Savitrak For Cargo Security And Management Service

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement