Dark Matter Evidence and Galaxy Dynamics
Flat galaxy rotation curves, the motions of galaxies in clusters, and gravitational lensing all reveal more gravitating mass than the visible matter can supply, the core evidence for dark matter.
Definition
The dynamical evidence for dark matter is the systematic excess of gravitating mass over visible mass inferred from the motions of stars and galaxies and from gravitational lensing, indicating an unseen mass component in galaxies and clusters.
Scope
This topic covers the observational pillars of dark matter: the flat rotation curves of spiral galaxies, the high velocity dispersions of galaxies in clusters, gravitational lensing mass maps including the bullet cluster, and the way these dynamical measurements quantify the amount and distribution of unseen mass.
Core questions
- Why do galaxy rotation curves stay flat at large radii?
- How do cluster dynamics and lensing reveal dark matter?
- What does the bullet cluster show about dark matter?
Key concepts
- Rotation curve
- Dark matter halo
- Velocity dispersion
- Gravitational lensing
- Mass-to-light ratio
- Bullet cluster
- Virial mass
Key theories
- Flat rotation curves
- The orbital speeds of stars and gas in spiral galaxies remain roughly constant far from the center instead of declining, implying an extended halo of unseen mass surrounding the visible disk.
- Cluster mass discrepancy
- Galaxies in clusters move too fast to be held together by the gravity of visible matter alone, and lensing confirms the large total mass, demonstrating substantial dark matter on cluster scales.
Mechanisms
Measured orbital velocities and lensing deflections are converted to enclosed mass using gravity; the resulting mass far exceeds that of stars and gas, and the spatial offset between lensing mass and X-ray gas in colliding clusters shows the dominant mass is collisionless dark matter rather than ordinary baryons.
Clinical relevance
These observations are the empirical foundation of dark matter: they establish that galaxies and clusters are embedded in massive dark halos, set the local dark-matter density relevant to detection experiments, and provide the strongest evidence that the missing mass is a new, weakly interacting substance.
History
Zwicky's 1933 cluster analysis first implied missing mass, but the case became compelling with Rubin and Ford's flat rotation curves around 1970; gravitational lensing surveys and the 2006 bullet-cluster observation later provided striking confirmation that dark matter is distinct from ordinary gas.
Debates
- Modified gravity alternatives
- Proposals such as modified Newtonian dynamics can fit some galaxy rotation curves without dark matter, but they struggle with clusters and the bullet cluster, fueling an ongoing debate over whether new matter or new gravity better explains the data.
Key figures
- Vera Rubin
- Kent Ford
- Fritz Zwicky
- Jeremiah Ostriker
- Douglas Clowe
Related topics
Seminal works
- rubin1970
- zwicky1933
Frequently asked questions
- What is a galaxy rotation curve?
- It is a plot of how fast stars and gas orbit a galaxy as a function of distance from its center; the observation that these speeds stay high far out, rather than falling off, is a hallmark sign of an extended dark-matter halo.
- Why is the bullet cluster considered strong evidence?
- In the bullet cluster, two galaxy clusters collided and the hot gas, the bulk of the ordinary matter, was slowed and separated from the bulk of the mass mapped by lensing; this offset is naturally explained if most mass is collisionless dark matter.