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July 22, 2009 Enlarge
The left-hand panel shows the glow of 511 keV gamma rays coming from the
annihilation of electrons by their antimatter counterparts, the
positrons. The map shows the entire sky, with the galactic centre at the
middle. The emission can be seen extending towards the right-hand side
of the map. The right-hand panel shows the distribution of hard low mass
X-ray binary stars. This stellar population has a distribution that
matches the extent of the 511 keV map. Credits: ESA/ Integral/ MPE (G.
Weidenspointner et al.)
(PhysOrg.com) -- A team of researchers working with data
from ESA’s Integral gamma-ray observatory has disproved theories that
some form of dark matter explains mysterious radiation in the Milky Way.
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Several researchers have invoked a variety of dark matter to explain Integral’s observations. Dark matter is thought to exist throughout the Universe - undetectable matter that differs from the normal material that makes up stars, planets and us. It is also believed to be present within and around the Milky Way, in the form of a halo.
The recent study has found that the ‘positrons’ fuelling the radiation are not produced from dark matter but from an entirely different, and much less mysterious, source: massive stars explode and leave behind radioactive elements that decay into lighter particles, including positrons, the antimatter counterparts of electrons.
Enlarge
This is an artist’s impression of ESA’s orbiting gamma-ray observatory, Integral. Credits: ESA
The
reasoning behind the original hypothesis was that positrons, being
electrically charged, would be affected by magnetic fields and thus
would not be able to travel far. As the radiation was observed in places
that did not match the known distribution of stars, dark matter was
invoked as an alternative for the origin of the positrons.
But the recent finding by a team of astronomers led by Richard
Lingenfelter at the University of California at San Diego, proves
otherwise. The astronomers show that the positrons formed by radioactive
decay of elements left behind after explosions of massive stars are, in fact, able to travel great distances, with many leaving the thin Galactic disc. Taking this into account, dark matter is no longer required to explain what Integral saw. A better understanding of how positrons behave has explained the mysterious radiation in our Galaxy.
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