How We Could Solve the Dark Matter Mystery | Chanda Prescod-Weinstein | TED

83,641 views ・ 2022-07-13

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:04
When we look at the night sky,
0
4417
1919
00:06
we see a vast cosmos
1
6378
1960
00:08
filled with stars and galaxies and dust,
2
8380
4087
00:12
a cosmos teeming with luminous phenomena.
3
12467
2753
00:16
So we've all heard some version of that famous Carl Sagan line,
4
16429
3087
00:19
"We are made of star stuff."
5
19558
1751
00:21
And it's true, we are.
6
21309
2503
00:24
And that makes it easy to believe that what matters is what's visible --
7
24396
3795
00:28
us, the trees, the stars --
8
28233
2919
00:31
because it helps us feel connected to everything that we can see.
9
31152
3212
00:36
Today, we know that everything visible in the universe
10
36992
2752
00:39
is composed from a basic set of building blocks
11
39744
2211
00:41
known as elementary particles.
12
41997
2002
00:44
We call this incredibly elegant picture
13
44499
2628
00:47
the standard model of particle physics,
14
47127
2252
00:49
and we understand it in great mathematical detail.
15
49421
3128
00:54
Comprehending the standard model is an enormous achievement.
16
54050
3796
00:59
But we are now certain that it describes very little of what's out there.
17
59055
3504
01:03
It turns out that most of the stuff which fills our universe
18
63476
2878
01:06
is completely invisible to us.
19
66354
2378
01:09
In other words, visible matter,
20
69274
2544
01:11
the kind that we and the stars are made from,
21
71860
3253
01:15
the kind that radiates light,
22
75113
1585
01:16
is not what's normal.
23
76740
1668
01:18
And we, the luminous matter,
24
78742
2502
01:21
we are the cosmic weirdos.
25
81286
2377
01:26
So how do we know?
26
86374
1502
01:28
Well, consider this invisible nonbinary person,
27
88710
3003
01:31
who's hiding in plain sight inside of their suit.
28
91755
2669
01:36
We can't exactly see a person,
29
96760
1585
01:38
but we know that they're there, because the suit is filled out.
30
98345
3253
01:41
So the presence of the invisible enby
31
101640
1918
01:43
is governing how the suit hangs in space-time.
32
103600
3045
01:47
So we can see a similar effect with visible matter.
33
107896
3086
01:51
We can see that stars and galaxies are affected
34
111024
2961
01:53
by the presence of something more,
35
113985
1877
01:55
something completely invisible to us.
36
115862
2669
01:58
So we now know that the universe is more queer and fantastical
37
118990
4213
02:03
than it looks to the naked eye.
38
123244
2044
02:05
(Cheers)
39
125330
1001
02:06
(Laughter)
40
126373
1001
02:07
That's right.
41
127374
1167
02:08
(Laughter and applause)
42
128583
1877
02:10
So how did the universe get this way,
43
130502
1918
02:12
and what exactly is inside?
44
132462
2127
02:15
So I'm a theoretical physicist
45
135048
1543
02:16
with expertise in particle cosmology.
46
136633
2461
02:20
And it's my job to use math
47
140095
1960
02:22
to study the origin and evolution of space-time
48
142055
3378
02:25
and every single thing that's inside of it.
49
145475
2252
02:28
I connect the very small -- elementary particles --
50
148853
3754
02:32
with the extremely large -- galaxies and galaxy clusters,
51
152649
4129
02:36
and I'm a griot of the universe.
52
156778
2127
02:39
I develop creative mathematical narratives
53
159322
2544
02:41
that may just be our cosmic origin story.
54
161866
3420
02:48
Now as a theoretical physicist, I really love doing math
55
168623
4379
02:53
and coming up with different ideas
56
173044
2294
02:55
that may describe our mostly invisible universe.
57
175380
2461
02:59
But it's important to be accountable to data too,
58
179300
2920
03:02
the real stuff.
59
182220
1210
03:04
So after mathematics,
60
184681
2085
03:06
my second favorite tool for addressing these large cosmological questions
61
186766
5255
03:12
is the biggest laboratory we know,
62
192021
2920
03:14
the universe itself.
63
194941
1627
03:17
Observatories with capabilities from visible light
64
197610
3087
03:20
to high-energy X-ray and gamma-ray photons
65
200697
2919
03:23
are still some of the best ways to gain insight
66
203658
3087
03:26
into what's going on in space-time, with the invisible stuff.
67
206786
3295
03:31
So what you're looking at here is the Vera C. Rubin Observatory,
68
211291
3837
03:35
an exciting new facility
69
215128
1877
03:37
that's about to see its first light over the next two years.
70
217046
3504
03:41
It's a leading example of a new generation of telescopes
71
221342
3421
03:44
that are going to change the way we see this mostly invisible universe.
72
224804
4672
03:51
Now it's also the case that swarms of satellites
73
231186
3003
03:54
threaten images from ground-based facilities like this one.
74
234230
3712
03:58
But the Vera C. Rubin Observatory can help us understand
75
238359
3337
04:01
where the invisible stuff is and what it's doing,
76
241738
3086
04:04
which will help us determine what exactly it is.
77
244824
3295
04:10
So when it comes to the cosmic accounting,
78
250288
2377
04:12
here is what we know so far.
79
252707
1960
04:16
We're in the midst of a great cosmic drama,
80
256377
2837
04:19
where space-time is curved and it’s expanding.
81
259214
3670
04:23
And the history and future of that curvature and expansion
82
263176
3128
04:26
is determined by what's inside,
83
266304
2336
04:28
which is mostly not visible stuff like us --
84
268640
2627
04:31
that's only about five percent.
85
271267
2086
04:34
The majority of the energy-matter content in the universe
86
274729
3003
04:37
is something that we call dark energy.
87
277774
2127
04:39
So empty space seems to have an energy associated with it.
88
279901
3670
04:44
And that's increasingly affecting how space-time expands.
89
284280
3546
04:48
After dark energy,
90
288618
1960
04:50
the second-largest ingredient is something that we call dark matter.
91
290620
3837
04:54
So here's the funky thing about dark matter.
92
294916
2252
04:57
Unlike dark energy,
93
297752
1710
04:59
it gravitates exactly like visible matter.
94
299504
3503
05:03
But it's completely unlike us in every other way.
95
303675
4212
05:09
So you might be thinking,
96
309973
1209
05:11
"OK, dark matter.
97
311224
1209
05:12
It clearly has a color associated with it."
98
312475
2086
05:14
It's dark, like my pants.
99
314561
2002
05:17
Right?
100
317772
1418
05:19
But the first thing you should know about dark matter
101
319232
2544
05:21
is that it doesn't have a color,
102
321776
1585
05:23
and at least at first approximation,
103
323361
1793
05:25
light seems to go right through it, so we can't see it.
104
325154
3254
05:28
It's invisible, maybe transparent, maybe clear.
105
328408
3378
05:32
So if you put out your hands
106
332370
1877
05:34
and think about the weight of having a clump of dark matter in your hands --
107
334247
4838
05:39
that's how it would feel,
108
339085
1668
05:40
but your hands would look exactly the same.
109
340795
2628
05:46
Today, we believe
110
346634
1168
05:47
that 80 percent of the normally gravitating matter in the universe
111
347844
3128
05:50
is dark matter.
112
350972
1209
05:53
Dark matter is dominant on the outskirts of galaxies,
113
353474
3462
05:56
and it affects stellar motions on the edges.
114
356978
2878
05:59
This effect is actually how Vera C. Rubin and Kent Ford
115
359856
3712
06:03
found the first substantive evidence for the existence of dark matter.
116
363610
4421
06:08
What you're looking at here
117
368907
1334
06:10
is an artist's rendering of our own galaxy, the Milky Way,
118
370241
3879
06:14
and it's enveloped in a halo of dark matter,
119
374120
2795
06:16
represented here by a blue gas.
120
376956
2044
06:19
We believe that every single galaxy,
121
379542
2169
06:21
or almost every single galaxy,
122
381711
1710
06:23
lives inside of a dark matter halo.
123
383463
2043
06:26
And we think that they're not alone.
124
386549
2211
06:28
The Milky Way itself has around 60 gravitationally bound satellite galaxies
125
388760
6089
06:34
that are in its orbit.
126
394891
1668
06:37
Some of these, you may have seen when observing the night sky,
127
397268
3003
06:40
or you may have heard of,
128
400271
1293
06:41
like the Large Magellanic Cloud and the Small Magellanic Cloud.
129
401564
3170
06:47
Each of these satellites
130
407028
1418
06:48
lives inside of its own dark matter subhalo.
131
408488
4129
06:53
So, like the invisible enby in their suit,
132
413242
2628
06:55
the presence of dark matter
133
415870
2002
06:57
is affecting how galaxies are distributed throughout space-time.
134
417914
4004
07:04
So we can also reverse-engineer where dark matter is --
135
424879
3170
07:08
it's represented here by the bluish purple.
136
428091
2794
07:11
We can look at how images of galaxy clusters
137
431344
3670
07:15
are distorted, which tells us something
138
435056
1877
07:16
about how dark matter is distorting space-time.
139
436933
2711
07:20
So we know something about how much dark matter there is,
140
440770
4296
07:25
and even how the dark matter is distributed,
141
445066
3420
07:28
but what kind of particle is it?
142
448528
2252
07:32
So all that we know
143
452031
1251
07:33
is that it's beyond standard-model physics.
144
453282
3003
07:37
It's not like any of the particles that we have ever seen
145
457078
3086
07:40
or had any kind of contact with.
146
460206
2127
07:44
Alright, so this seems like a potentially terrifying,
147
464085
2961
07:47
intractable problem,
148
467088
1752
07:48
because we're talking about something that we can't see,
149
468840
2669
07:51
something that we can't touch.
150
471551
1585
07:53
You might be thinking,
151
473511
1210
07:54
"OK, they haven't had many ideas about that over the years,
152
474762
2795
07:57
because that just seems really hard."
153
477598
1919
07:59
Right?
154
479851
1126
08:01
So here's the Venn diagram to end all Venn diagrams.
155
481769
3045
08:04
(Laughter)
156
484856
1209
08:06
[Theories of Dark Matter]
157
486107
1293
08:07
So I'll bet y'all a hundred dollars that you can't find a better one.
158
487400
4004
08:11
At least according to me.
159
491446
1501
08:12
(Laughter)
160
492947
1460
08:15
So Tim Tait created this diagram
161
495700
2169
08:17
to help us visualize just some of the hypotheses
162
497910
3337
08:21
that physicists have had over the years to explain the dark matter problem
163
501247
4296
08:25
and how these ideas overlap with each other.
164
505543
2836
08:29
So as you all can see, there's a lot happening here, right?
165
509005
3837
08:33
And hopefully, it's becoming increasingly clear
166
513843
2586
08:36
that this isn't just an astrophysics problem
167
516471
2794
08:39
of galaxies and galaxy clusters,
168
519265
2961
08:42
but this is also a particle physics problem.
169
522268
3086
08:45
In order to understand what's happening on the largest scales,
170
525396
4505
08:49
we need to understand something very small,
171
529942
2586
08:52
like a new particle,
172
532570
1668
08:54
or maybe primordial black holes.
173
534238
2002
08:57
So you've been looking at this for a moment,
174
537658
2128
08:59
and you know what you're all really thinking is,
175
539786
2502
09:02
"What's Chanda's favorite dark matter candidate?"
176
542330
2294
09:04
Right? This is what you're dying to know?
177
544665
2294
09:07
So, I'll end the suspense by telling you ...
178
547543
2878
09:10
that my favorite candidate is something called the axion.
179
550463
2836
09:13
This is the hypothetical particle.
180
553341
1793
09:16
And the first thing that I want to tell you about the axion
181
556010
2795
09:18
is that it was almost called the higglet ...
182
558846
2127
09:20
(Laughter)
183
560973
1001
09:22
And whoever chose "the axion" just completely blew it, OK?
184
562016
3629
09:26
I'm pretty bummed about that.
185
566229
1960
09:28
But the axion is a compelling particle, because it's a twofer:
186
568898
3128
09:32
it addresses a problem that we already had,
187
572026
2336
09:34
a conflict between theory and experiment
188
574403
2002
09:36
in the realm of quark physics.
189
576447
1877
09:39
"OK," you say, "but, like, how can I visualize it?"
190
579534
3086
09:42
At this point in the talk, you should know better, right?
191
582662
2878
09:45
Because to first approximation, dark matter is invisible.
192
585581
2753
09:48
(Laughter)
193
588626
1084
09:49
But I know you really want a visual,
194
589752
1877
09:51
so I'm going to give you one.
195
591629
1668
09:54
Here's what it looks like to me, in my everyday work.
196
594048
2503
09:56
(Laughter)
197
596592
1377
09:58
(Applause)
198
598010
4046
10:02
Which is to say, it's OK if this is unintuitive.
199
602098
3628
10:05
(Laughter)
200
605726
1585
10:07
The universe is a wonderfully strange and fantastical place,
201
607353
4546
10:11
and that's why humans as a species have always wanted to study it.
202
611899
4630
10:16
And this is why we have so much fun, trying to understand it.
203
616571
3128
10:21
So how are we going to go looking for the axion
204
621492
2252
10:23
or any other dark matter particle?
205
623786
1835
10:26
You might think that we have to use traditional particle physics approaches,
206
626122
3712
10:29
like colliders, where we smash particles together
207
629834
2336
10:32
and see what comes out.
208
632170
1584
10:33
But astrophysical signals have something to say.
209
633796
3003
10:37
Telescopes from across the electromagnetic spectrum --
210
637216
3504
10:40
for example, the proposed NASA facility,
211
640720
2627
10:43
the STROBE-X X-ray space telescope --
212
643347
2920
10:46
can help us potentially determine what exactly dark matter is.
213
646267
3337
10:51
But telescopes look at the very large.
214
651814
2127
10:53
How can we use the extremely large to understand something so small?
215
653983
3670
10:58
Well, in the case of the axion,
216
658279
1877
11:00
it helps to pay attention to its quantum classification.
217
660198
3878
11:04
So all particles come in one of two quantum categories,
218
664076
3921
11:08
fermions and bosons.
219
668039
1501
11:10
So fermions, even when things get cold,
220
670374
2545
11:12
like to keep their distance from each other.
221
672919
2127
11:15
They're antisocial.
222
675046
1668
11:16
That's how it is.
223
676756
1543
11:18
Bosons, on the other hand,
224
678341
1334
11:19
when they get below a critical temperature,
225
679717
2419
11:22
they're like five-year-olds on a soccer field,
226
682136
2503
11:24
so they don't have a concept of formation,
227
684680
2044
11:26
they just bunch up together.
228
686724
1877
11:30
So in technical terms,
229
690019
1627
11:31
we call this the formation of a Bose-Einstein condensate,
230
691646
3211
11:35
where all the particles come together and act like one superparticle.
231
695942
3962
11:40
So importantly, axions are bosons,
232
700238
3920
11:44
and so now you have a sense of why I like working with them.
233
704158
2920
11:47
I'm completely enamored with the idea of axion Bose-Einstein condensates.
234
707078
4462
11:53
So usually, we talk about creating these quantum states in the lab,
235
713960
3253
11:57
using atoms,
236
717213
1209
11:58
but now,
237
718464
1168
11:59
we're talking about the possibility of new, maybe galaxy-scale
238
719632
3754
12:03
Bose-Einstein condensates made out of dark matter.
239
723427
2920
12:07
So what you're looking at here
240
727723
1460
12:09
is a simulation developed by a team that I lead.
241
729183
3253
12:12
It's an axion condensate orbiting a central mass.
242
732436
3462
12:17
So it's like a subhalo orbiting its host galaxy.
243
737817
3712
12:21
Maybe the Large Magellanic Cloud orbiting the Milky Way.
244
741529
3378
12:26
As you can see, over the age of the universe,
245
746075
3003
12:29
the subhalo starts to get to get torn apart,
246
749120
2502
12:31
and what my team's work shows
247
751622
1919
12:33
is that the way that this happens with axions
248
753541
2419
12:35
is different than with other dark matter candidates,
249
755960
2627
12:38
because it goes into this special condensate state.
250
758629
2795
12:42
Now imagine the possibility
251
762967
1710
12:44
that there's more than one type of dark matter candidate.
252
764719
2711
12:47
Maybe there's more than one type of dark matter particle?
253
767430
3211
12:50
How much richer this picture can be.
254
770683
2002
12:53
There's no cosmic rule that says there can only be one.
255
773728
3169
13:00
So in the end,
256
780109
1251
13:01
I expect the universe to force us to reevaluate what we thought we knew.
257
781402
4421
13:05
[Making the invisible visible.]
258
785865
1501
13:07
When we honor the land and the sky ...
259
787366
2544
13:10
as our galactic relations ...
260
790661
2920
13:13
and their Indigenous stewards,
261
793581
1918
13:15
it becomes possible for us to imagine
262
795499
1919
13:17
new ways of being in good relations with each other.
263
797460
2919
13:20
That's why I, as a Black queer person,
264
800838
2461
13:23
am so proud to follow in the footsteps of my ancestors,
265
803341
3712
13:27
who studied and dreamed with the night sky,
266
807053
3044
13:30
sometimes of freedom.
267
810097
1710
13:32
Astronomers like Harriet Tubman,
268
812224
2211
13:34
for whom the recently launched James Webb Space Telescope
269
814477
2794
13:37
should be renamed.
270
817271
1627
13:38
(Applause)
271
818898
5797
13:44
I honor the gay NASA employees who were persecuted
272
824695
4463
13:49
under the leadership of JWST's namesake,
273
829158
3003
13:52
even as I share in the tremendous community-wide excitement
274
832203
3253
13:55
for what that facility is going to teach us about dark matter.
275
835498
3211
13:58
And I honor the memory of Vera C. Rubin,
276
838751
2753
14:01
the astronomer who first asked me,
277
841545
2044
14:03
as a young, terrified graduate student,
278
843589
3128
14:06
"How do you think we should solve the dark matter problem?"
279
846759
3253
14:11
We live in an amazing time to be doing dark matter research.
280
851180
3754
14:15
Over the next decade,
281
855393
1751
14:17
we're going to see the universe with incredible accuracy and clarity
282
857144
4505
14:21
thanks to these new telescopes on the ground and in the sky.
283
861649
3378
14:26
We'll probably get some answers,
284
866445
2211
14:28
but we're going to get a host of new questions.
285
868697
2586
14:31
And my team? We're going to be ready.
286
871325
2586
14:36
So the search for dark matter is on.
287
876163
3003
14:40
What's your favorite candidate?
288
880292
1877
14:42
(Laughter)
289
882211
1126
14:44
If it's not an axion, you better fix that.
290
884088
2919
14:47
(Laughter)
291
887007
1419
14:48
Thank you.
292
888467
1251
14:49
(Cheers and applause)
293
889718
5923
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7