Dark Matter May Collide With Atoms Inside You More Often Than Thought

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  • wa3zrm
    Member
    • May 2009
    • 4436

    Dark Matter May Collide With Atoms Inside You More Often Than Thought

    SPACE.com ^ | 4/27/12 | Charles Q. Choi


    Invisible dark matter particles may regularly pass through our bodies, and dozens to thousands of these particles may be colliding with atoms inside us every year, according to a new calculation.
    However, radiation from these impacts is unlikely to cause cancer, investigators added.
    Dark matter is one of the greatest scientific mysteries of our time — an invisible substance thought to make up five-sixths of all matter in the universe. Scientists think it might be composed of things called weakly interacting massive particles, or WIMPs, that interact normally with gravity but very weakly with all the other known forces of the universe.
    Its ghostly nature makes it exceedingly difficult to directly prove whether dark matter really exists or what its properties really are. Dark matter is largely thought to be intangible, its presence detectable only via the gravitational pull it exerts.
    Still, although dark matter particles are thought to interact only very rarely with normal matter, Earth and everything on it should be hurtling through a dense sea of dark matter, with billions of these particles rushing through us every second. Though the large majority of these particles would pass straight through us without hitting any of the atoms that make up our bodies, a few collisions would be likely. And the aftermath of such impacts could shed light on dark matter's nature. [Gallery: Dark Matter Throughout the Universe]
    Scientists calculated how many times dark matter particles ought to collide with atomic nuclei in adult-size bodies — lumps of flesh about 154 pounds (70 kilograms) in mass largely composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen.
    Dark matter should most often collide with the hydrogen and oxygen nuclei in the body — the former makes up 60 percent of the atoms in the body, while the latter makes up about 60 percent of the mass of the body. Given the most common assumptions regarding what dark matter is, roughly 35 impacts between dark matter particles and atoms in your body should happen annually.
    However, if the latest models are correct and dark matter interactions are more common than previously thought, there might be about 100,000 collisions annually for each human on the planet.
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  • Darwin
    Member
    • Mar 2010
    • 1372

    #2
    Two words; Majorana fermions.

    http://www.gizmag.com/majorana-fermions-detected/22241/

    Comment

    • sgreger1
      Member
      • Mar 2009
      • 9451

      #3
      Originally posted by Darwin

      Wow that was really interesting Darwin, I don't know how this article escaped me previously. So essentially the theory is that this particle which is both a particle and it's own anti-particle, are what makes up the other 80% of the universe's mass that we can't seem to account for, and that the reason it has gone undetected is because our instruments weren't sensitive enough to detect it? So essentially we may be in a universe composed of mainly this type of matter (currently referred to as dark matter)? What are the properties of this particle and how is it so prevalent?

      I have always subscribed to the theory that dark matter is just something we don't have the instruments to detect yet, and this seems to be sort of saying the same thing. Very interesting.

      Comment

      • precious007
        Banned Users
        • Sep 2010
        • 5885

        #4
        :^)

        and most people don't know what the black matter is, so far it's said that it can't interfere with atoms

        so basically that means there no way it can affect humans,

        you're safe wa3zrm :^)

        Comment

        • Darwin
          Member
          • Mar 2010
          • 1372

          #5
          Dark Matter, and its mysterious counterpart, Dark Energy don't affect living things directly very much at all but due to the totality of their gravitational influences they do control what goes on in the wider universe. Fortunately what goes on in the wider universe, for the most part, happens on time scales that are are almost entirely irrelevant to what happens in a human lifespan, or even a thousand of them. There are exceptions such as supernovas which if they occur nearby in cosmic terms could be disastrous but that's extremely unlikely.

          Speaking of supernovas Sgreger you might be interested in a new paper by Prof. Henrik Svensmark of the Technical University of Denmark that makes some remarkable claims. Here is a quicky explanation from the Royal Astronomical Society site:

          http://www.ras.org.uk/news-and-press...arth-to-thrive

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