from the site :
Science A-Go-Go
 
 
19 April  2012
New blow to dark matter  theory
by  Will Parker
 
A study of the motions of stars in the Milky Way  has found no evidence for 
the existence of dark matter in a large volume around  the Sun. According 
to widely accepted theories, the solar neighborhood was  expected to have 
dark matter - estimated to constitute 83 percent of the matter  in the Universe 
- in relative abundance. But a new study by a team of  astronomers at the 
European Southern Observatory's La Silla facility in Chile  has found that 
these theories do not fit the observational facts. Their analysis  appears in 
The Astrophysical Journal.  
The team based their findings on the motions of more than 400 stars up to  
13,000 light-years from the Sun. From this new data they calculated the mass 
of  material in the vicinity of the Sun, in a volume four times larger than 
ever  considered before.  
"The amount of mass that we derive matches very well with what we see -  
stars, dust and gas - in the region around the Sun," said team leader 
Christian  Moni Bidin, from the Universidad de Concepción, Chile. "But this 
leaves 
no room  for the extra material - dark matter - that we were expecting. Our 
calculations  show that it should have shown up very clearly in our 
measurements. But it was  just not there."  
Dark matter is thought to be a substance that cannot be seen, but shows  
itself by its gravitational attraction for the material around it. It was  
originally theorized to explain why the outer regions of galaxies, including 
our  own Milky Way, rotated so quickly.  
Dark matter theory has continued to evolve, and it is now also an essential 
 component of theories about galaxy formation. Today, it is widely accepted 
that  this mysterious dark component constitutes the bulk of the mass in 
the Universe,  despite the fact that it has resisted all attempts to 
understand its nature and  all experiments to detect it have failed.  
Moni Bidin explained that by measuring the motions of many stars,  
particularly those away from the plane of the Milky Way, the astronomers could  
work 
backwards to deduce how much matter was present. These motions, he  
explained, are a result of the mutual gravitational attraction of all  material 
- 
both normal matter and dark matter.  
Currently accepted theories predict that the average amount of dark matter 
in  the Sun's part of the galaxy should be in the range 0.4-1.0 kilograms of 
dark  matter in a volume the size of the Earth. But the new measurements 
found  evidence for only 0.00-0.07 kilograms of dark matter in the same 
volume.  
Existing models of how galaxies form and rotate suggested that the Milky 
Way  is surrounded by a halo of dark matter. Astronomers are not able to 
precisely  predict what shape this halo takes, but they had expected to find 
significant  amounts in the region around the Sun. Moni Bidin says that only 
very unlikely  shapes for the dark matter halo - such as a highly elongated 
form - could  explain the observations in the new study.  
"Despite the new results, the Milky Way certainly rotates much faster than  
the visible matter alone can account for. So, if dark matter is not present 
 where we expected it, a new solution for the missing mass problem must be 
found.  Our results contradict the currently accepted models. The mystery of 
dark matter  has just become even more mysterious," Moni Bidin  concluded.

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