The Net Advance of Physics: The Nature of Dark Matter, by Kim Griest -- Section 2C.
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It would be best to measure
the amount of dark matter on the
largest possible scales so that the sample is representative
of the entire Universe. Within the past several years a host of
large-scale flow methods have been tried and are giving impressive
results [10].
These methods have the advantage stated above
but the disadvantage that they depend upon assumptions about
galaxy formation--that is, they depend upon gravitational
instability theory, the assumption of linear biasing, etc. Also,
the errors in these measurements are still large and the
calculations are complicated, but they do have great promise,
and tend to give values
of near unity.
A simple example comes from the observation that the local group
of galaxies moves at km/sec with respect to the cosmic
microwave background (CMB) (measured from the amplitude of
the CMB dipole). If this motion comes from gravity, then the
direction of the motion should line up with the direction where
there is an excess of mass, and the velocity should be determined by
the size of this excess. Thus, taking into account the expansion of
the Universe, one has
where the linear bias factor b has been introduced
to relate the
observed excess in galaxy number
counts to the excess in mass
density
.
Using galaxy counts from the IRAS satellite survey,
Yahil et al. [11] find
that the direction of the excess agrees
with the direction of the velocity vector to within about 20 degrees,
and that
Thus with the very conservative limit b>0.5, one has
, and
with the reasonable limit b>1, one finds .
For this method to
be reliable, must be measured
on very large scales to ensure
that convergence has been reached, and it is not sure that this is
the case.
The above technique is only one of many related methods used to
determine on large
scales. Another example is the detailed
comparison of the peculiar velocities of many galaxies with the
detailed maps of . This should not only
determine , but serve
as a stringent test for the theory that large-scale structure is formed
by gravitational instability. A recent review by Dekel [10] surveys
many such methods and concludes that reasonable evidence exists
for .
Although these techniques holds much promise, it
should be noted that different analyses of the same data sometimes
lead to different conclusions. So for the time being, these estimates
of should not yet be viewed as robust [12].
In conclusion, the observational evidence for large amounts of dark
matter on galactic halo scales is overwhelming. On larger scales, the
observational evidence
for in the 0.1 to 0.2 range is strong. On the
largest scales, substantial observational evidence exists for
,
and some evidence for near unity exists,
although this may be in
conflict with observations on cluster scales.
Large Scale Flows
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