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Most astronomers and physicists now believe that the matter content
of the Universe is dominated by dark matter: hypothetical particles
which interact with normal matter primarily through the force of
gravity. Though invisible to current direct detection methods, dark
matter can explain a variety of astronomical observations. This
book describes how this theory has developed over the past 75
years, and why it is now a central feature of extragalactic
astronomy and cosmology. Current attempts to directly detect dark
matter locally are discussed, together with the implications for
particle physics. The author comments on the sociology of these
developments, demonstrating how and why scientists work and
interact. Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND), the leading
alternative to this theory, is also presented. This fascinating
overview will interest cosmologists, astronomers and particle
physicists. Mathematics is kept to a minimum, so the book can be
understood by non-specialists.
Most astronomers and physicists now believe that the matter content
of the Universe is dominated by dark matter: hypothetical particles
which interact with normal matter primarily through the force of
gravity. Though invisible to current direct detection methods, dark
matter can explain a variety of astronomical observations. This
book describes how this theory has developed over the past 75
years, and why it is now a central feature of extragalactic
astronomy and cosmology. Current attempts to directly detect dark
matter locally are discussed, together with the implications for
particle physics. The author comments on the sociology of these
developments, demonstrating how and why scientists work and
interact. Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND), the leading
alternative to this theory, is also presented. This fascinating
overview will interest cosmologists, astronomers and particle
physicists. Mathematics is kept to a minimum, so the book can be
understood by non-specialists.
Written in an informal and engaging style, this volume traces the
discoveries that led to our understanding of the size and structure
of the Milky Way, and the conclusive evidence for a massive black
hole at its center. Robert H. Sanders, an astronomer who witnessed
many of these developments, describes how we parted the veil of
interstellar dust to probe the strange phenomena within. We now
know that the most luminous objects in the Universe - quasars and
radio galaxies - are powered by massive black holes at their
hearts. But how did black holes emerge from being a mathematical
peculiarity, a theoretical consequence of Einstein's theory of
gravity, to become part of the modern paradigm that explains active
galactic nuclei and galaxy evolution in normal galaxies such as the
Milky Way? This story, aimed at non-specialist readers and students
and historians of astronomy, will both inform and entertain.
The advent of sensitive high-resolution observations of the cosmic
microwave background radiation and their successful interpretation
in terms of the standard cosmological model has led to great
confidence in this model's reality. The prevailing attitude is that
we now understand the Universe and need only work out the details.
In this book, Sanders traces the development and successes of
Lambda-CDM, and argues that this triumphalism may be premature. The
model's two major components, dark energy and dark matter, have the
character of the pre-twentieth-century luminiferous aether. While
there is astronomical evidence for these hypothetical fluids, their
enigmatic properties call into question our assumptions of the
universality of locally determined physical law. Sanders explains
how modified Newtonian dynamics (MOND) is a significant challenge
for cold dark matter. Overall, the message is hopeful: the field of
cosmology has not become frozen, and there is much fundamental work
ahead for tomorrow's cosmologists.
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