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"Dark Flow" Outside Observable Universe

DynaSoar writes "NASA astrophysicists have discovered what they claim is something outside the observable universe exerting an effect on the observable. The material is pulling clusters of galaxies towards a region of space known not to contain sufficient matter to create the effect. They can only speculate on what the material is and how space might differ there: 'In these regions, space-time might be very different, and likely doesn't contain stars and galaxies (which only formed because of the particular density pattern of mass in our bubble). It could include giant, massive structures much larger than anything in our own observable universe. These structures are what researchers suspect are tugging on the galaxy clusters, causing the dark flow.'"

16 of 583 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Since looking farther = further in time by caffeinemessiah · · Score: 5, Informative

    Then are we also looking at near the time of the big bang?

    Since no one reads TFA anyway, and since you clearly didn't:

    The universe is thought to have formed about 13.7 billion years ago. So even if light started travelling toward us immediately after the Big Bang, the farthest it could ever get is 13.7 billion light-years in distance. There may be parts of the universe that are farther away (we can't know how big the whole universe is), but we can't see farther than light could travel over the entire age of the universe.

    And then:

    A theory called inflation posits that the universe we see is just a small bubble of space-time that got rapidly expanded after the Big Bang. There could be other parts of the cosmos beyond this bubble that we cannot see. In these regions, space-time might be very different, and likely doesn't contain stars and galaxies (which only formed because of the particular density pattern of mass in our bubble). It could include giant, massive structures much larger than anything in our own observable universe. These structures are what researchers suspect are tugging on the galaxy clusters, causing the dark flow.

    Finally, on a side note, years of watching slashdot paid off in a truly interesting story!

    --
    An old-timer with old-timey ideas.
  2. Preprint Versions of the Papers by Jazzer_Techie · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are preprints of the two relevant papers on astro-ph.

    More general version (ApJL)
    http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/0809.3734

    More technical version (ApJ)
    http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/0809.3733

  3. I forgot to say..... by DynaSoar · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'd intended to add this to the summary, but forgot.

    TFA has a very nice, if brief, explication on the "universe" vs. "observable universe". Too many people (science and science writing pros among them) make assertions about the former when they should specify the latter.

    Go ahead and read it, it's only a space.com article (ie. very short).

    --
    "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
  4. Re:Since looking farther = further in time by Plutonite · · Score: 4, Informative

    And there are aspects of many contemporary theories (and lesser recognized works) that are equally skeptical of, and orthogonal to, each other. I personally don't know enough GR to talk confidently about why this is not exciting, but if it does turn out to be exciting, expect some very well written and insightful roundups here:

    www.cosmicvariance.com

    Small note: I have found Sean Carrol's [and team] work on the internet to be some of the most accessible stuff available from brilliant minds in science today. Of course, every time you read something dumbed down mathematically (even if only slightly), you end up hating yourself for not spending the time instead on understanding the 3 years worth of adv.math courses you need to really grasp what is happening. But the upside is that you can spend 15 minutes reading some well written summary by people like these, and end up getting a fairly good idea of the issue at hand all the same. Kudos to science "bloggers" (esp world-leading academics) everywhere. You make the internet suck a lot less.

  5. Re:ermmm... by mcrbids · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yes but by the time those other ships were able to report to you the ships that they see that you can't, you can see those other ships, too.

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  6. Re:Since looking farther = further in time by rts008 · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Also, maybe we can also "observe" the stuff outside our bubble via the effects of "spooky action at a distance"?"

    Well, then when we 'observe' this stuff, WE will have on our conscience whether the cat is dead or alive.
    But we still may never find out which one; which bubble^Wbox was/is in? :-)

    All joking aside, this is very interesting data to work with.
    I can imagine a lot of theories to change/be scrapped/ be rewritten here in the near future.

    I am really excited about this! (but somewhat befuddled-[I am not a physicist, much less an astrophysicist!]Astrophysics is a serious hobby for me) I hope some good info comes with further research.
    That should open new 'doorways' and expand our understanding.

    I don't think I can imagine all of the ramifications of this, but it strikes me as: 'Holy Cow, Batman...that cow lit her fart and flew over the moon!!!'

    No doubt, this is the most exciting thing to happen with astrophysics (for me) in the past several years. The questions are ENDLESS!!!!!

    Who knows 'what doors will open' for us, and the potential to find out what possible uses could arise from this.

    P.S. I wish I knew enough to actually correctly answer your questions, but this news seems to sprout far more questions than can be accurately answered at this time.

    Oh, and BTW, my head asplodes!!

    --
    Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
  7. Re:ermmm... by ByteSlicer · · Score: 5, Informative

    At cosmological scales, metric expansion of space becomes very important. Light that left 13.7 billion years ago will actually travel 47 billion lightyears because of metric expansion. Since metric expansion implies space-time is curved (at cosmological scales, locally it is flat, like the earth is flat locally), general relativity comes into play. This means the normal causality described by special relativity is no longer applicable.

    Imagine points A-B-C to be gravitationally bound. Because of metric expansion, space between A-B and B-C expands. This can cause A to move away from C at larger than lightspeed. Since space between B-C only expanded half of A--C, B will be withing light distance from C and thus visible by observers on C. Light from A can reach B, but it will never reach C. By the time it would, space between B and C will have expanded so much that observers from C will no longer see B.

  8. I think you're misinterpreting... by warrax_666 · · Score: 4, Informative

    the word "observable". AFAIUI, in this case it means directly observable. Given an expanding universe -- since nothing can travel faster than light (and c is finite) and the universe has a finite age there is a limit to how far you can "see" in any direction from any given vantage point (see "horizon problem"). However, you might still be able to see an object at the very edge of "your" observable universe being influenced by something beyond your particular observation horizon -- that is, you can tell that it is being influenced by something and that it's not being influenced by something inside horizon. So essentially very talking about indirect observation here.

    --
    HAND.
    1. Re:I think you're misinterpreting... by orkysoft · · Score: 3, Informative

      Your analogy is flawed, since speed of light does not play a role in it, while it does with this observable-object-influenced-by-object-outside-our-lightcone situation. For the information about the unobservable object to be able to travel to us, it must be within our lightcone, otherwise it would entail information travelling faster than light.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    2. Re:I think you're misinterpreting... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 4, Informative

      Would that object influencing the observed object not need to be inside your light cone for you to even observe the influencing that it is doing?

      No, it wouldn't. All that is necessary is that the influenced object be inside the light cone of the influencing object

      Yes, it would. Gravity works at lightspeed also, so any gravitic effect on an observable object must be detectable at the observer, making the influencing object "observable".

      Likewise, any other effect that we know of, all of which are limited to lightspeed. The only way that something outside the observable universe could affect something inside the observable universe and be seen by something else inside the observable universe is if the laws of physics that we know and love are basically a steaming pile of horse apples.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    3. Re:I think you're misinterpreting... by 49152 · · Score: 3, Informative

      That is wrong I am afraid.

      Nothing and that includes information can travel above the speed of light neither directly nor indirectly.

      Yes, it it possible for something at the edge of our observable universe to be affected by something outside our observable universe right now.

      But we do not (and cannot) observe what happens at the edge right now, but rather when light left that place heading in our direction a very long time ago.

      So in effect we are seeing what happened at the edge in the past. This also means that the light from anything capable of affecting that part of the universe at that time would also by now had time to reach us and so we would be able to see it.

      The summary is (as usual) a bit misleading.

      What the article is suggesting is not that something outside the observable universe is affecting something else inside it right now and that we can see the effect but not the cause, but rather that something influenced a part of the universe around the time of the great inflation shortly after the big bang.

      At that time those parts of the universe would have been close enough together that they could have affected each other. The inflation stage which was an extremely fast expansion of time and space itself has since moved some parts (in fact probably most of it) outside our observable universe so we cannot see this part.

      What they see is something having a great speed due to an earlier influence by something we cannot see now, not that it is still being accelerated because that would have been a violation of the speed of light.

      I hope I am not to unclear on this but English is not my first language so I find it a bit hard to explain any clearer.

    4. Re:I think you're misinterpreting... by Ambitwistor · · Score: 3, Informative

      Both of those are assumptions. If they were true, there wouldn't be a logical explaination for tachyons.

      Who cares if there's a logical explanation for tachyons, since we don't have evidence for any?

      Anyway, even if tachyons existed you'd never actually observe anything traveling faster than light; see this FAQ.

      In other dimensions things DO move faster then light.

      Says who? In any relativistic quantum field theory or string theory, c is the limit in any dimension.

      Furthermore, the speed of gravity is much greater then c.

      van Flandern's website is a bunch of crackpot nonsense. He was pretty notorious on Usenet for years. He misapplies perturbation theory; if you apply his same arguments to electromagnetism, you "conclude" that light travels faster than light too (see here). In fact, you can rigorously prove in general relativity that the speed of gravity cannot exceed c (see here, assuming that the gravitational waves aren't produced by weird things like negative mass). The 1993 Nobel prize in physics was awarded, in part, for an observational determination of the speed of gravity. (You can deduce it by the rate at which gravitational energy is radiated by orbiting bodies.) The measurements indicate that the speed of gravity is c, to within a few percent accuracy.

    5. Re:I think you're misinterpreting... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 3, Informative

      Why is this wrong?

      Because gravity works at the speed of light.

      If gravity from B left there at some time in the past, and reached A, it then continued past A toward O.

      Light from A went from A to O.

      Light and gravity move at the same speed, so, the light from A reaches us at the same time as the gravity from B.

      Therefore, B is within the "observable universe".

      In order for the above to not work, some part of the process above must include "faster than light". Which, so far as current physics is concerned, isn't part of the picture.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  9. Re:Since looking farther = further in time by Ambitwistor · · Score: 4, Informative

    we have no means of determining the extent of this "bubble".

    Effectively, we can: we can't see past the surface of last scattering where the cosmic microwave background radiation originates.

    Therefore, claiming that there could be "giant, massive structures much larger than anything in our own observable universe" just outside this bubble seems somewhat... convenient.

    Well, the chaotic inflationary theory has long predicted such structures should exist at all scales outside the observable universe. Anyway, we see matter near the boundary of the observable universe. There are almost certainly large structures outside the boundary too. We see some of that matter moving in a way it ordinarily wouldn't according to the usual cosmological expansion. It's not that big a leap to hypothesize that it's being pulled by something on the other side of what we can observe.

    It's not a small leap, either — obviously it's hard to compile statistics on how these boundary clusters are moving, and thereby infer anything really solid about possible unseen gravitational sources. But it's not completely ad hoc. The explanation involves something that has been suggested by theory in the past for independent reasons, and observationally there don't appear to be any nearby sources of matter that could explain why the motion is so far from the Hubble flow. I suppose you could postulate a bunch of dark matter right near the boundary, but since (as you say) the cosmological horizon isn't some special physical place, but is just the region beyond which light hasn't reached us, that would be weird.

    This should be taken with the usual grain of salt: it's a brand new paper and in a year or two could potentially be explained in a much more mundane way. I'd personally give it less than a 50% chance of being right. But it's not a priori ridiculous either. As another poster said, I hope that Cosmic Variance covers the result ... a real expert second opinion would be valuable.

  10. Re:Doesn't make much sense to me by Karma+Bandit · · Score: 4, Informative

    You should read the abstracts of the articles, since it turns out you're right. From the abstract:

    "This flow is difficult to explain by gravitational evolution within the framework of the concordance LCDM model and may be indicative of the tilt exerted across the entire current horizon by far-away pre-inflationary inhomogeneities."

    They would, at least, find it less plausible to describe it with a huge mass of dark matter.

  11. Re:which space? between galaxies or atoms? by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Informative
    Does that mean the size of an apple gets larger? or the distance between two apples gets larger? What is it the atom radius? or the distance between galaxies?

    What is happening is that the underlying geometry of space is expanding. Best estimate of the rate of expansion is something like 72 kilometres per second per megaparsec. So if two objects are one million parsecs apart (that's 3.26 million lightyears), then one second later they'll be one million parsecs and 72 kilometres apart.

    In addition, objects in that space are free to move within it, and so if they are subject to mechanical forces they'll follow those forces just as normal. So atoms and apples are held together by their internal electromagnetism, and the Solar System by the gravitational attraction between the Sun and the planets. Objects like these drift along with cosmic expansion, but do not themselves expand.

    It's only on the cosmic scale that the universal expansion becomes significant. Remember, we're talking kilometres per second per megaparsec - on such a huge scale, forces pulling objects together drop to tiny levels, while the expansion of space becomes greater and greater. The Andromeda Galaxy is only two-thirds of a megaparsec away, and so the cosmic expansion is small compared to the local motion of the galaxies - indeed, we're on a collision course with Andromeda. The largest known object in the Universe, the Great Wall, is maybe a hundred times more distant; on this scale, the cosmic expansion becomes significant. It's really the distance between galactic clusters and superclusters which is being expanded.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.