🌑 Dark Matter & Dark Energy
The 95% Mystery of the Universe · Dark Matter Evidence · WIMPs · MACHOs · Dark Energy Theories · Cosmological Constant · DESI 2024–25 · Euclid · LIGO-India · UPSC PYQs 2019 & MCQs
Composition of the Universe. The pie chart shows dark energy (blue, 68%) dominates the universe's total content, followed by dark matter (black, 27%). Ordinary (visible) matter — everything in the Standard Model — is just 5%, broken down further as: ~4% hydrogen and helium (H+He), <1% stars, <1% other elements. The atom diagram (right) represents ALL of ordinary matter — the protons, neutrons and electrons that make up everything we have ever seen or detected. This 5% includes all known chemistry, biology, planets, and stellar physics. (Uploaded image — Legacy IAS)
Mnemonic: "Five nerds (5%) don't (27%) eat (68%)" — Normal · Dark matter · Dark Energy
Or simply: Dark Energy (68%) > Dark Matter (27%) > Normal Matter (5%) — in increasing "darkness"!
The Universe's Expansion — From Big Bang to Dark Energy-Driven Acceleration. Reading left to right: The universe began at a singularity (Big Bang). Quantum Fluctuations in the earliest moments seeded all large-scale structure. Inflation (exponential expansion at 10⁻³² seconds) smoothed the universe. Afterglow Light Pattern (CMB) was released at 380,000 years when the universe became transparent. Dark Ages followed until the first stars formed at ~400 million years. Development of Galaxies, Planets occurred over billions of years with dark matter providing the gravitational scaffolding. Today, Dark Energy drives Accelerated Expansion — the universe is expanding faster than ever. The expanding cone shows space itself stretching over 13.7 billion years. (Uploaded image — Legacy IAS)
🔍 Evidence for Dark Matter
❌ What Dark Matter is NOT — UPSC Trap Buster
NOT antimatter: Antimatter annihilates with matter → gamma rays. We would detect these gamma ray bursts if dark matter were antimatter. Not observed.
NOT galaxy-sized black holes: Would cause extreme, widespread gravitational lensing. Not observed at the required scale.
NOT MACHOs (Massive Compact Halo Objects): MACHOs are baryonic objects (black holes, neutron stars, brown dwarfs) that emit little radiation. Ruled out because dark matter must be non-baryonic — CMB measurements constrain total baryonic matter to ~5%. MACHOs are baryonic, so they cannot explain 27% dark matter.
Subatomic particles with mass but not made of ordinary matter. Interact only via gravity and the weak nuclear force. Can pass through ordinary matter without any observable effect.
WIMP candidates:
• Neutrinos: Known to exist; very small mass; likely only a minor component of dark matter.
• Neutralinos: Predicted by supersymmetry (SUSY) — hypothetical partner particles. Not yet detected.
• Axions: Proposed to explain why neutrons have no electric dipole moment (strong CP problem). Have sufficient properties but yet to be detected.
Detection efforts: LUX-ZEPLIN (LZ, underground, USA), PandaX (China), XENON1T (Italy — also looking for dark energy signals), LHC at CERN.
🔬 Four Theories of Dark Energy
| Property | 🌑 Dark Matter | ⚡ Dark Energy |
|---|---|---|
| Nature | Hypothesised non-baryonic exotic particles (WIMPs, axions, neutralinos) | Hypothetical form of energy — property of space itself or a dynamic field |
| Abundance | 27% of universe | 68% of universe |
| Distribution | Clumped halos around galaxies and galaxy clusters — follows structure | Smooth and uniform across ALL space — no clumping |
| Gravitational Effect | Attractive — pulls matter together; scaffolding for galaxy formation | Repulsive — pushes space apart; drives accelerated expansion |
| Density over time | Dilutes as universe expands (like matter) | Remains constant — total dark energy increases as more space is created |
| Interaction with light | Does not emit, absorb, or reflect light | Does not interact with light (no emission/absorption) |
| Detection signatures | Gravitational effects: galaxy rotation curves, lensing, Bullet Cluster | Cosmic acceleration: Type Ia supernovae, CMB, BAO (large-scale structure) |
| Discovery key moment | Zwicky (1933), Vera Rubin (1970s), Bullet Cluster (2006) | Hubble + Type Ia SNe (1998) → Nobel Prize 2011 (Perlmutter, Schmidt, Riess) |
| Particle candidates | WIMPs (neutralinos, axions), neutrinos; MACHOs ruled out | Cosmological constant (Λ), quintessence field, vacuum energy |
| Cosmic role | Seeds galaxy and structure formation; holds galaxies together | Drives accelerated expansion; determines ultimate fate of universe |
| India connection | TIFR (Mumbai) — Bullet Cluster studies; INO (neutrino observatory, Theni) | TIFR Mumbai part of DESI collaboration; LIGO-India (Hingoli, ~2030) |
| Current frontier | LZ (LUX-ZEPLIN), XENON1T, PandaX, LHC (CERN) | DESI (6M→50M galaxies), Euclid (ESA), Nancy Grace Roman Telescope (NASA ~2027) |
• INO (India-based Neutrino Observatory, Theni, Tamil Nadu): Studies neutrinos (dark matter candidate). 1.3 km underground. Long pending regulatory clearances.
• LIGO-India (Hingoli, Maharashtra): Gravitational wave detector (~2030). Helps probe dark matter via gravitational wave observations (neutron star mergers, black holes).
• TIFR Mumbai: Part of DESI collaboration — contributed to dark energy mapping results.
| Mission / Experiment | Country/Agency | What it Studies | Key Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| DESI (Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument) | USA (+ India TIFR) | Dark energy via galaxy mapping (BAO) | DR1 (2024): 6M galaxies; DR2 (2025): 14M; dark energy may be time-varying |
| Euclid | ESA (2023–) | Dark matter (lensing) + Dark energy (BAO) | Mapping 2 billion galaxies; first results 2024 |
| Nancy Grace Roman Telescope | NASA (~2027) | Dark energy, dark matter, exoplanets | Wide-field infrared survey; successor to Hubble |
| XENON1T / LZ | Italy / USA (underground) | Direct WIMP dark matter detection | XENON1T: unexplained signal 2020 (possibly axions); LZ: ongoing, most sensitive ever |
| LHC (CERN) | Europe (India participates) | Dark matter particle production | Searching for supersymmetric particles (neutralinos) at 13.6 TeV (Run 3) |
| JWST | NASA/ESA/CSA | Early universe, dark stars, dark matter | Possible dark star detection (2025); early galaxy shapes challenge cold dark matter model |
| INO | India (TIFR, Theni) | Neutrino (dark matter candidate) study | Under development; 50,000 tonne magnetised iron calorimeter |
| LIGO-India | India (Hingoli, ~2030) | Gravitational waves (probe dark matter indirectly) | Under construction; improves sky localisation with LIGO USA + Virgo Italy |
- Dark energy consists of more than 90% of the universe.
- Dark energy has been hypothesised as a repulsive force or anti-gravity.
- a) 1 only
- b) 2 only ✓
- c) Both 1 and 2
- d) Neither 1 nor 2
Statement 2 CORRECT: Dark energy is indeed hypothesised as a repulsive force or anti-gravity. Unlike normal gravity which is attractive (pulls matter together), dark energy pushes matter apart — it drives the accelerating expansion of the universe. This is why astronomers observed in 1998 that the universe was expanding faster, not slower — gravity should be slowing expansion, but dark energy overcomes this. Einstein's cosmological constant (Λ) represents this repulsive energy density of empty space.
- a) 'Higgs boson particles' were detected.
- b) 'Gravitational waves' were detected. ✓
- c) Possibility of intergalactic space travel through 'Wormhole' was confirmed.
- d) It enabled scientists to understand 'singularity'.
Why this matters for dark matter/dark energy: Gravitational wave observations provide a completely independent way to measure the universe's expansion rate (Hubble constant). If the expansion rate from gravitational waves matches other measurements, it constrains dark energy models. If it doesn't match, it could indicate new physics. The "Hubble tension" (disagreement between different expansion rate measurements) is one of the biggest open questions in cosmology today. LIGO-India (Hingoli, Maharashtra, expected ~2030) will significantly improve this measurement capability.
- (a) The Bullet Cluster emits no visible light whatsoever, proving that all matter in galaxy clusters is dark matter — since visible matter always emits light and this cluster emits none
- (b) Infrared telescopes observed the Bullet Cluster glowing uniformly in all directions, whereas dark matter should glow in infrared — confirming dark matter's existence through its heat signature
- (c) When two galaxy clusters collided, X-ray observations showed the hot gas (visible matter) slowing down from electromagnetic collisions, while gravitational lensing maps showed the gravitational mass (dark matter) continuing straight through without slowing — spatially separating dark matter from normal matter and proving they are distinct substances
- (d) The merger of the two clusters released gamma rays matching the spectrum predicted for dark matter annihilation, directly proving that dark matter is made of WIMPs that destroy each other on contact
- (a) Oscillations in the magnetic field of baryonic matter (protons and neutrons) that can be detected using radio telescopes, which provide a direct measure of the density of normal matter in the universe
- (b) Regular patterns in the large-scale distribution of galaxies — imprints from sound waves that propagated through the early hot plasma of the universe before the CMB was released at 380,000 years. These patterns have a fixed physical scale (~150 Mpc) that can be measured at different cosmic epochs to determine how fast the universe has expanded over time, providing a "standard ruler" for dark energy studies
- (c) Oscillations produced when dark energy interacts with baryonic matter in galaxy clusters, creating ripples detectable as X-ray emissions that trace the dark energy distribution across the universe
- (d) The periodic brightening and dimming of quasars caused by the oscillation of baryonic matter around supermassive black holes at galactic centres, used to measure black hole masses and constrain galaxy formation models
- (a) MACHOs would have to be moving faster than the speed of light to account for the observed rotation curves of galaxies, which is physically impossible under Einstein's Special Relativity
- (b) MACHOs emit gamma rays when they interact with each other in galactic halos, and since no such gamma ray excess has been detected in the Milky Way's halo, MACHOs cannot be present in sufficient quantities to explain dark matter
- (c) MACHOs would create detectable microlensing events as they pass in front of background stars — while some microlensing has been detected, the number of events is far too small to account for 27% of the universe's content
- (d) Dark matter must be non-baryonic (not made of protons, neutrons, or normal atoms), as confirmed by CMB measurements of the total baryonic matter in the universe (~5%). MACHOs (black holes, neutron stars, brown dwarfs) are baryonic objects, so even if they contribute some fraction of dark matter, they cannot account for the full 27% required
| Topic | Key Facts |
|---|---|
| Composition (5-27-68) | Normal matter = 5% (4% H+He, <1% stars, <1% other). Dark matter = 27%. Dark energy = 68%. Dark matter + Dark energy = 95% (invisible universe). Standard Model explains only 5%. |
| Dark Matter — Definition | Hypothetical non-baryonic matter. Does not interact with electromagnetic force → invisible. Detected only via gravitational effects. ~27% of universe. Forms halos around galaxies. |
| Dark Matter — Evidence | Galaxy rotation curves (Zwicky 1933, Vera Rubin 1970s) — flat instead of falling. Gravitational lensing — more bending than visible mass explains. Bullet Cluster 2006 — dark matter separated from gas during collision (most direct evidence). |
| Dark Matter — NOT | Not dark gas (would absorb radiation). Not antimatter (would produce gamma rays). Not large black holes (would cause massive lensing). Not MACHOs (baryonic — ruled out by CMB/BBN constraints). |
| Dark Matter — Candidates | WIMPs: Neutrinos (too light for major component), Neutralinos (supersymmetry, undetected), Axions (explain strong CP problem, undetected). Detectors: LZ, XENON1T, PandaX, LHC. India: INO (Theni, neutrino observatory). |
| Dark Energy — Definition | Hypothetical energy (~68%) driving accelerated expansion of universe. Repulsive force (anti-gravity). Density remains CONSTANT as universe expands (unlike matter). Discovered 1998 via Type Ia SNe. Nobel 2011 (Perlmutter, Schmidt, Riess). |
| Dark Energy — Theories | (1) Cosmological constant Λ (Einstein — property of space). (2) Quintessence (dynamic field — DESI hints support this). (3) Quantum vacuum energy (predicted 10¹²⁰× too large — vacuum catastrophe). (4) Modified gravity. |
| DESI 2024-25 | DR1 (April 2024): 6M galaxies; BAO standard ruler; expansion 68.5 km/s/Mpc; dark energy possibly time-varying. DR2 (March 2025): 14M measurements; strengthens hints dark energy evolves. Could revise ΛCDM model. TIFR Mumbai in team. |
| PYQ 2019 | Black hole merger observation → detected Gravitational Waves (Answer b). LIGO 2016 detection. Nobel 2017. LIGO-India (Hingoli) ~2030. |
| Practice Q | Dark energy >90%? WRONG (68%). Dark energy = repulsive? CORRECT. Answer: (b) 2 only. |
Trap 1 — "Dark matter and dark energy together are 90% of the universe" → WRONG (specific numbers)! DM (27%) + DE (68%) = 95% — not 90%. This is a precision trap. The exact numbers matter: 5-27-68. Remember: the question in the document asked whether dark energy is "more than 90% of the universe" — answer is NO (it's 68%). Don't confuse: (a) dark energy alone = 68%; (b) DM+DE together = 95%; (c) all dark components + normal = 100%.
Trap 2 — "Dark matter is MACHOs — compact dark objects in galactic halos" → WRONG! MACHOs (brown dwarfs, neutron stars, stellar black holes) are baryonic matter and have been RULED OUT as the dominant form of dark matter. CMB measurements constrain all baryonic matter to ~5% of the universe. Since MACHOs are baryonic, they cannot account for the required 27%. WIMPs (non-baryonic) are the favoured candidates, not MACHOs.
Trap 3 — "Dark energy density decreases as the universe expands" → WRONG! This is the defining peculiarity of dark energy. Normal matter's density decreases as space expands (same mass in larger volume). Dark energy density stays CONSTANT — because it is a property of space itself (not a collection of particles). As more space is created, total dark energy increases proportionally. This is why dark energy becomes more dominant over time and the expansion accelerates — dark energy grows while matter thins out.
Trap 4 — "LIGO detected dark matter particles" → WRONG! LIGO detected gravitational waves — ripples in spacetime from the merger of black holes and neutron stars. This is directly tested in UPSC 2019 (correct answer: gravitational waves, not Higgs bosons, not dark matter). Gravitational waves are indirect probes that help constrain dark energy models (via Hubble constant measurements) but are not direct detections of dark matter or dark energy particles.
Trap 5 — "The discovery of dark energy was a 2011 Nobel Prize for theoretical prediction" → WRONG! The 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics (Perlmutter, Schmidt, Riess) was for the observational discovery of dark energy in 1998 — not for theoretical prediction. They observed Type Ia supernovae (standard candles) in distant galaxies and found they were farther away than expected → the universe's expansion was accelerating, not decelerating. Einstein actually theoretically predicted something like dark energy earlier (cosmological constant, 1915) — but he later called it his "biggest blunder." The Nobel was for the empirical 1998 discovery, not Einstein's 1915 theory.


