NASA Reveals New Details About Dark Matterβs Influence on Universe
With the Webb telescopeβs unprecedented sensitivity, scientists are learning more about dark matterβs influence on stars, galaxies, and even planets like Earth.
Scientists using data from NASAβs James Webb Space Telescope have made one of the most detailed, high-resolution maps of dark matter ever produced. It shows how the invisible, ghostly material overlaps and intertwines with βregularβ matter, the stuff that makes up stars, galaxies, and everything we can see.
Published Monday, Jan. 26, in Nature Astronomy, the map builds on previous research to provide additional confirmation and new details about how dark matter has shaped the universe on the largest scales β galaxy clusters millions of light-years across β that ultimately give rise to galaxies, stars, and planets like Earth.
βThis is the largest dark matter map weβve made with Webb, and itβs twice as sharp as any dark matter map made by other observatories,β said Diana Scognamiglio, lead author of the paper and an astrophysicist at NASAβs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. βPreviously, we were looking at a blurry picture of dark matter. Now weβre seeing the invisible scaffolding of the universe in stunning detail, thanks to Webbβs incredible resolution.β



Dark matter doesnβt emit, reflect, absorb, or even block light, and it passes through regular matter like a ghost. But it does interact with the universe through gravity, something the map shows with a new level of clarity. Evidence for this interaction lies in the degree of overlap between dark matter and regular matter. According to the paperβs authors, Webbβs observations confirm that this close alignment canβt be a coincidence but, rather, is due to dark matterβs gravity pulling regular matter toward it throughout cosmic history.
βWherever we see a big cluster of thousands of galaxies, we also see an equally massive amount of dark matter in the same place. And when we see a thin string of regular matter connecting two of those clusters, we see a string of dark matter as well,β said Richard Massey, an astrophysicist at Durham University in the United Kingdom and a coauthor of the new study. βItβs not just that they have the same shapes. This map shows us that dark matter and regular matter have always been in the same place. They grew up together.β
Closer look
Found in the constellation Sextans, the area covered by the new map is a section of sky about 2.5 times larger than the full Moon. A global community of scientists have observed this region with at least 15 ground- and space-based telescopes for the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS). Their goal: to precisely measure the location of regular matter here and then compare it to the location of dark matter. The first dark matter map of the area was made in 2007 using data from NASAβs Hubble Space Telescope, a project led by Massey and JPL astrophysicist Jason Rhodes, a coauthor of the paper.
Webb peered at this region for a total of about 255 hours and identified nearly 800,000 galaxies, some of which were detected for the first time. Scognamiglio and her colleagues then looked for dark matter by observing how its mass curves space itself, which in turn bends the light traveling to Earth from distant galaxies. When observed by researchers, itβs as if the light of those galaxies has passed through a warped windowpane.
The Webb map contains about 10 times more galaxies than maps of the area made by ground-based observatories and twice as many as Hubbleβs. It reveals new clumps of dark matter and captures a higher-resolution view of the areas previously seen by Hubble.
To refine measurements of the distance to many galaxies for the map, the team used Webbβs Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI), designed and managed through launch by JPL, along with other space- and ground-based telescopes. The wavelengths that MIRI detects also make it adept at detecting galaxies obscured by cosmic dust clouds.
Why it matters
When the universe began, regular matter and dark matter were probably sparsely distributed. Scientists think dark matter began to clump together first and that those dark matter clumps then pulled together regular matter, creating regions with enough material for stars and galaxies to begin to form.
In this way, dark matter determined the large-scale distribution of galaxies in the universe. And by prompting galaxy and star formation to begin earlier than they would have otherwise, dark matterβs influence also played a role in creating the conditions for planets to eventually form. Thatβs because the first generations of stars were responsible for turning hydrogen and helium β which made up the vast majority of atoms in the early universe β into the rich array of elements that now compose planets like Earth. In other words, dark matter provided more time for complex planets to form.
βThis map provides stronger evidence that without dark matter, we might not have the elements in our galaxy that allowed life to appear,β said Rhodes. βDark matter is not something we encounter in our everyday life on Earth, or even in our solar system, but it has definitely influenced us.β
Scognamiglio and some of her coauthors will also map dark matter with NASAβs upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope over an area 4,400 times bigger than the COSMOS region. Romanβs primary science goals include learning more about dark matterβs fundamental properties and how they may or may not have changed over cosmic history. But Romanβs maps wonβt beat Webbβs spatial resolution. More detailed looks at dark matter will be possible only with a next-generation telescope like the Habitable Worlds Observatory, NASAβs next astrophysics flagship concept.
More about Webb
The James Webb Space Telescope is solving mysteries in our solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).
To learn more about Webb, visit:
Media Contacts
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