- Nov 18, 2005
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http://arstechnica.com/science/2014/01/quasar-illuminates-a-cosmic-filament-and-a-mystery/
This was discussed and taught as essentially fact back when I had taken astronomy courses in college (2007-2008?), so it's been a theoretical mechanism quite well understood and predicted, but visualizing it in reality has been a challenge, apparently.
I think some original evidence was seen in imagery that resulted from studying the Cosmic Microwave Background. This latest news is a little more confirmation, seemingly illuminating what they had believed to be there in the first place.
For anyone not up to speed: the idea is that the dark matter filament structure is the defining structure of the universe. It is part of the "original gravity" that helped pull in normal matter gasses to coalesce into stars and galaxies.
It too has shape-shifted and spread over time, which it might be that the dark matter itself pulls the galaxies along and apart... and what is somewhat unknown is what is driving the dark matter to move. They might just be moved by the same source, and they just stick together due to their properties.
Original simulations and imagery from the background radiations (CMB, and the greater CBR itself) definitely suggest the filaments were far more clumped together, and the stars and protogalaxies that formed at that early "clumpy" time overlapped.
This was discussed and taught as essentially fact back when I had taken astronomy courses in college (2007-2008?), so it's been a theoretical mechanism quite well understood and predicted, but visualizing it in reality has been a challenge, apparently.
I think some original evidence was seen in imagery that resulted from studying the Cosmic Microwave Background. This latest news is a little more confirmation, seemingly illuminating what they had believed to be there in the first place.
For anyone not up to speed: the idea is that the dark matter filament structure is the defining structure of the universe. It is part of the "original gravity" that helped pull in normal matter gasses to coalesce into stars and galaxies.
It too has shape-shifted and spread over time, which it might be that the dark matter itself pulls the galaxies along and apart... and what is somewhat unknown is what is driving the dark matter to move. They might just be moved by the same source, and they just stick together due to their properties.
Original simulations and imagery from the background radiations (CMB, and the greater CBR itself) definitely suggest the filaments were far more clumped together, and the stars and protogalaxies that formed at that early "clumpy" time overlapped.
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