The standard model of our Universe is defined by only a handful of numbers: the expansion rate of the Universe, a measure of how clumpy the dark matter is (S8), the relative contributions of the constituents of the Universe (matter, dark matter, and dark energy), the overall density of the Universe, and a technical quantity describing how the clumpiness of the Universe on large scales relates to that on small scales. Cosmologists are eager to test this model by constraining these numbers in various ways, such as by observing the fluctuations in the Cosmic Microwave Background, modeling the expansion history of the Universe, or measuring the clumpiness of the Universe in the relatively recent past.
A team led by astronomers from Kavli IPMU, the University of Tokyo, Nagoya University, Princeton University, and the astronomical communities of Japan and Taiwan, spent the past year teasing out the secrets of the most elusive material, dark matter, using sophisticated computer simulations and data from the first three years of the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program (HSC-SSP). The observation program used one of the most powerful astronomical cameras in the world, Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) mounted on the Subaru Telescope. The HSC-SSP data that the research team used covers about 420 square degrees of the sky, about the equivalent of 2000 full moons.
Clumps of dark matter distort the light of distant galaxies through weak gravitational lensing, a phenomenon predicted by Einstein's General Theory of Relativity. This distortion is a really small effect; the shape of a single galaxy is distorted by an imperceptible amount. But the team measured the distortion with quite high precision by combining the measurements for 25 million faint galaxies that are billions of light-years away. Then, the team measured the clumpiness of the Universe today (Figure3).
The discrepancy between the S8 values of HSC-SSP and the Planck satellite is very subtle. The team thinks that the measurement was done correctly and carefully. And the statistics show that there's only a one in 20 probability that the difference is just due to chance, which is compelling but not completely definitive. The team will further pursue this compelling inconsistency using the full HSC-SSP data set and refined methods. The team might discover something new about the Universe, so please stay tuned.
These results appeared as five papers available on a preprint server. They were submitted to Physical Review D and will undergo rigorous peer review by the scientific community. A full list of the 5 papers can be found here
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