The discovery of galaxies with little or no dark matter is perplexing to scientists and challenges existing notions of how galaxies form. In , a team of researchers led by Jorge Moreno, assistant professor of physics and astronomy at 麻豆影视, shares evidence they have found that may explain this baffling observation.
鈥淔or 40 years, astrophysicists have believed that all galaxies have dark matter,鈥 Moreno says. That hypothesis , when at Princeton University, who is the second author of the new paper, and Pieter van Dokkum of Yale published their finding of a galaxy in the real universe that lacked dark matter. A . Astronomers use the term 鈥渞eal universe鈥 to differentiate between what is seen in physical observation and that found through computer simulation.
鈥淭heir discovery posed a huge challenge to the dark matter model of galaxies,鈥 Moreno continues. 鈥淢any astrophysicists were suggesting that maybe we need to get rid of the idea of dark matter. Maybe we even need to modify the laws of gravity.鈥
Moreno took a sabbatical leave in 2020-21 to dig deeper into the challenge posed by these galaxies that lacked dark matter. He drew on his expertise in creating galaxy simulations and using supercomputers to model galaxy formation. Joining in the worldwide effort were astrophysicists from Princeton, the University of California-Irvine, Cal Tech, the University of Zurich, and other institutions.
The simulation modeled evolution over billions of years in a swath of the universe that was 60 million light years across. In it, the researchers identified seven galaxies lacking dark matter.
鈥淲hat we found is that these galaxies initially had a lot of dark matter, and they had a lot of gas,鈥 says Moreno. 鈥淏ut they fell into bigger systems. What we discover is that to become a galaxy without dark matter, it must interact with a galaxy that is a thousand times bigger than it is.鈥
Moreno drew on his identification with Indigenous peoples to name the galaxies found in the simulation. With the help of Doug Ingram, a Cherokee professor of physics, he obtained the permission of Cherokee leaders to give the galaxies the names of seven Cherokee clans: Bird, Blue, Deer, Long Hair, Paint, Wild Potato, and Wolf.
鈥淚鈥檝e identified with these galaxies,鈥 Moreno says. 鈥淭hese galaxies are not supposed to exist. They were supposed to be destroyed as they battled with massive galaxies, but they survived.鈥
Moreno finds a parallel in his Indigenous ancestry. Growing up in Mexico and the United States with a blossoming interest in mathematics, there weren鈥檛 many scientists of color with whom he could identify, and navigating the power structures of academia was often challenging.
Sometimes Moreno felt excluded, and more than once was mistaken for a janitor rather than a physicist. But, he says, 鈥淚 had many mentors who believed in me. Sometimes they were warm, and sometimes they were harsh. But both were helpful in my growth to be the best version of myself, not to give up.鈥
As a theoretical astrophysicist and professor, Moreno honors his roots by investing in the success of the next generation of scientists of color. In his classes, he says, he incorporates ideas, practices and principles from Indigenous communities to make astronomy research and pedagogy more inclusive. He leads a 20-minute class segment weekly about justice and equity, designed to help students feel comfortable speaking up in class. He also schedules three 鈥渢own hall鈥 meetings each semester so students can talk about the climate in the class and how to improve it. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want them to learn science,鈥 Moreno says. 鈥淚 want them to become scientists.鈥
Moreno is also committed to changing the type of descriptive language used in astrophysics. He challenges the use of violent terms鈥攕uch as 鈥渃annibalism,鈥 鈥渟trangulation,鈥 and 鈥渟tarvation鈥 to describe astronomical processes in favor of a nonviolent vocabulary such as 鈥渟haring,鈥 鈥減reservation,鈥 and 鈥渃ollaboration.鈥 In his most recent paper, for example, he writes about galaxies 鈥渇alling into鈥 or 鈥渋nteracting鈥 with larger ones. 鈥淧eople sometimes get sidetracked by the language,鈥 Moreno says. But what needs to be examined, he believes, is not the words themselves but the culture that gives rise to them.
While Moreno challenges all of his students to grow academically, he is invested in helping them find more than answers to questions in physics. He aims to help them discover, as he has, their place in the world of science. 鈥淔or me, the scientific endeavor has been one of the most joyful things,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he message I want to send to my students is one of hope: 鈥榊ou belong.鈥欌
Read Moreno鈥檚 blog post,