Astronomers have known that galaxies across the universe are behaving badly. Some are spinning too fast, while others are just way too hot and still others glommed into super structures too quickly.
But they don't know why. Perhaps some new hidden particle, like dark matter, could explain the weirdness. Or perhaps gravity is acting on these coalescing clusters of stars in a way scientists hadn't expected.
For decades, astronomers have debated the possibilities. While most astronomers believe that dark matter exists, some still think that we need to modify our theory of gravity. However, new research has found a critical flaw in modified gravity theories: They allow for effects to occur without causes and for information to travel faster than the speed of light. This is bad … for modified gravity.
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"It may change this … research area considerably, forcing it in rather new directions," lead researcher and Tufts University astrophysicist Mark Hertzberg told Live Science.
At galactic and cosmological scales, either astronomers' understanding of the force of gravity is totally off, or there's a new ingredient in our universe that exerts gravity but is otherwise invisible. The latter idea is known as cold dark matter (CDM), which is the name given to a hypothetical form of matter that is as yet unknown to physics. The "cold" is there to note that whatever exotic particle might be responsible for the dark matter, it moves relatively slowly, in contrast to other potential dark matter candidates like the neutrino — an example of a candidate for hot dark matter particles.
Related: The 11 biggest unanswered questions about dark matter
"If one gives up the principles of causality and locality, then it means we are essentially unable to explain the structure of the Standard Model of Particle Physics and General Relativity."
Mark Hertzberg, Tufts UniversityBy filling galaxies with a form of matter that is invisible to light, the CDM hypothesis is wildly successful at explaining the majority of observations of galaxies and the larger universe. It is by far the most commonly accepted explanation for why the universe behaves as it does.
But the CDM hypothesis isn't perfect. Whatever it is, it sits outside the Standard Model of particle physics, meaning we have no idea what it is. Also, it has difficulty explaining something called the Baryonic Tully-Fisher Relation. The observed relationship shows that the total mass of normal matter, called baryonic matter, of a galaxy is proportional to the fourth power of the rotation speed. But CDM models predict that the relationship should be to the third power, predicting that galaxies spin slower for a certain amount of mass than they actually do.
What else could be going on?
This Hubble Space Telescope photograph showcases the majestic spiral galaxy UGC 2885, located 232 million light-years away in the northern constellation Perseus. The galaxy is nicknamed Rubin's galaxy after Vera Rubin, who measured the galaxy's rotation, which provides evidence for dark matter. (Image credit: NASA, ESA and B. Holwerda (University of Louisville))
But the inadequacies of CDM to explain internal galactic dynamics provide an opening for MOND to survive. If a "MONDian" theory wants to compete on the galactic stage, however, it must be compatible with our other theories of physics, such as the special theory of relativity and quantum mechanics. So that's exactly what Hertzberg and his team set out to do. The results of their study were published in May to the preprint database arXiv, so the study hasn't been peer-reviewed.
"The only possibility to obtain something new [within the framework of relativity and quantum mechanics] is to add new degrees of freedom," Hertzberg told Live Science. In other words, in order to get MONDian theories to work with known physics, you have to add a whole bunch of funky stuff to theories. In examining that funky stuff, Hertzberg and collaborators Jacob Litterer and Neil Shah found "some theoretical problems lurking in these attempts."
If a theory violates locality and/or causality, it is unlikely to fit in with our theories of physics, which do protect both principles
"If one gives up the principles of causality and locality, then it means we are essentially unable to explain the structure of the Standard Model of Particle Physics and General Relativity, as they are some of the central principles that go into constructing these theories in the first place," Hertzberg said. "In other words, if causality were badly broken in nature, we likely would have seen it already in various corrections to particle physics in the lab or tests of gravity in space."
In other words, we should've noticed by now.
Since all available evidence indicates that locality and causality are preserved (at least at macroscopic scales), then they should be obeyed by any new theory of physics. The team of physicists put MONDian theories to the test and found that they contain features that allow for non-locality and acausality. In other words, if MONDian theories are correct, then it's possible for events to happen without a cause and for effects to travel instantaneously, which violates the speed-of-light limit in the universe.
"Since we found that the existing proposals for radically new dark matter and MOND-like theories have some form of acausality, then it suggests they may not be embedded into fundamental physics, at least in their present form," Hertzberg said.
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It might indeed be possible for locality and causality to be violated on galactic scales, but this would be extremely difficult to reconcile with everything else we know about physics.
As to the future of MONDian theories, Hertzberg speculated, "it motivates attempts to try to construct some classes of similar models that somehow maintain causality, but this looks difficult to achieve. In our paper, we show that a generalized form of these models fails the above tests for consistency."
Still, the "cold dark matter" paradigm has difficulty explaining the details of galactic physics. But there could be far more mundane reasons for this rather than upending all known physics. Modeling how galaxies form and evolve, even just accounting for all the messy processes where normal matter plays a role, is very difficult. Perhaps, a more sophisticated understanding of galaxies will provide an explanation for the observed Baryonic Tully-Fisher Relation.
And CDM is by far the best explanation we have.
"What is great about CDM is that it is theoretically on firm ground, and passes all the above theoretical consistency tests, even though it is not part of the Standard Model of Particle Physics," Hertzberg said. "The reason I say it is on firm ground is that there is no known theoretical reason why there shouldn't be some stable, neutral particles out there in the universe that don't couple to us very much. So CDM is reinforced, for now, as the leading idea."
Next, the team will look at models that try to combine both the successes of cold dark matter and MONDian dynamics, Hertzberg said.
Originally published on Live Science.
Editor's note: This article was updated to include Hertzberg's collaborators.