WEBVTT FILE

1
00:00:00.020 --> 00:00:04.040
[Music]

2
00:00:04.060 --> 00:00:08.090
[Music]

3
00:00:08.110 --> 00:00:12.110
[Music]

4
00:00:12.130 --> 00:00:16.160
Narrator: Dark matter makes up about 27 percent

5
00:00:16.180 --> 00:00:20.170
of the cosmos, but so far no one knows what it is.

6
00:00:20.190 --> 00:00:24.170
Dark matter neither emits nor absorbs light and it

7
00:00:24.190 --> 00:00:28.180
interacts with the rest of the universe primarily through gravity.

8
00:00:28.200 --> 00:00:32.240
In fact, it's thought dark matter traced the initial framework of the

9
00:00:32.260 --> 00:00:36.260
cosmos, attracting normal matter that formed stars and galaxies.

10
00:00:36.280 --> 00:00:40.320
Black holes are astronomical objects famed for their

11
00:00:40.340 --> 00:00:44.330
extreme gravity. Jeremy Schnittman, an astrophysicist at

12
00:00:44.350 --> 00:00:48.370
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, wondered if they could serve as a kind of

13
00:00:48.390 --> 00:00:52.440
laboratory for exploring different dark matter models. [Dr. Schnittman]: The leading

14
00:00:52.460 --> 00:00:56.540
particle physics model for dark matter is called weakly

15
00:00:56.560 --> 00:01:00.630
interacting massive particles, or also known as WIMPS. These guys just

16
00:01:00.650 --> 00:01:04.650
fly through the universe without even bumping into anything

17
00:01:04.670 --> 00:01:08.690
or each other. The idea of two WIMPS coming together,

18
00:01:08.710 --> 00:01:12.720
annihilating, and forming gamma rays, is kind of like two bullets hitting

19
00:01:12.740 --> 00:01:16.740
head-on in a crossfire--it's very rare. But when you

20
00:01:16.760 --> 00:01:20.810
go to the area around a supermassive black hole, we expect the

21
00:01:20.830 --> 00:01:24.830
density to be much higher so the probability of annihilation is much higher

22
00:01:24.850 --> 00:01:28.950
and thus detection with a gamma-ray telescope.

23
00:01:28.970 --> 00:01:33.040
Narrator: In Schnittman's computer simulation, a population

24
00:01:33.060 --> 00:01:37.070
of dark matter particles orbits a rapidly spinning black hole.

25
00:01:37.090 --> 00:01:41.170
Close in, at the brink of the black hole's event horizon, the particles

26
00:01:41.190 --> 00:01:45.190
are orbiting at nearly the speed of light. The lightly shaded region

27
00:01:45.210 --> 00:01:49.210
farther out is the ergosphere, a zone where all particles are forced

28
00:01:49.230 --> 00:01:53.280
to move in the same direction as the black hole's spin.

29
00:01:53.300 --> 00:01:57.350
The concentrated dark matter collides and makes gamma rays,

30
00:01:57.370 --> 00:02:01.370
but not all of this light can escape the ergosphere. The gamma rays

31
00:02:01.390 --> 00:02:05.410
most likely to make it out come from the left side, where the black hole spins

32
00:02:05.430 --> 00:02:09.440
toward us. The result is an asymmetric glow.

33
00:02:09.460 --> 00:02:13.490
The highest energy gamma rays come from the center of this region,

34
00:02:13.510 --> 00:02:17.560
corresponding to the black hole's equator. Schnittman's work has

35
00:02:17.580 --> 00:02:21.610
uncovered previously overlooked orbits that can produced extremely energetic

36
00:02:21.630 --> 00:02:25.670
gamma rays, and has shown that the peak energy attainable for this escaping light

37
00:02:25.690 --> 00:02:29.750
is a strong function of the black hole's rotation.

38
00:02:29.770 --> 00:02:33.850
So far, the initial work is focusing on setting upper limits on dark matter

39
00:02:33.870 --> 00:02:37.900
annihilation rates by looking at otherwise quiescent galaxies. But Schnittman's

40
00:02:37.920 --> 00:02:41.950
ultimate ambition is nothing short of an unambiguous detection of dark matter

41
00:02:41.970 --> 00:02:45.990
annihilation around supermassive black holes. [Dr. Schnittman]: To me,

42
00:02:46.010 --> 00:02:50.130
dark matter, black holes, two of the most elusive things in the

43
00:02:50.150 --> 00:02:54.190
universe coming together to help explain each other

44
00:02:54.210 --> 00:02:58.240
is quite poetic. [Music]

45
00:02:58.260 --> 00:03:02.310
[Beeping]

46
00:03:02.330 --> 00:03:06.350
[Beeping]

47
00:03:06.370 --> 00:03:13.240
[Beeping]

