Long ago, physicists identified and categorized the
components of the visible universe. Up until recently, 16 particles formed
everything in the known universe. But now, thanks to the efforts of physicists
at CERN working with the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), we have added another
particle, the Higgs boson, to the Standard Model of physics.
However, there is an entire hidden — or dark — aspect of
physics and our natural world for which the Standard Model just can’t account,
even with the Higgs boson. To put it
plainly, all of the matter that is visible is not enough for the universe to
behave as it does.
There has to be some kind of invisible matter and energy
making all of what we can see possible. To account for this mystery, scientists
theorized that there must be Dark Matter and Dark Energy. These would be made
up of a completely different set of particles that we have yet to discover,
probably because we simply do not know how to study them.
A new study by researchers from the Institute of BasicScience (IBS) in South Korea suggests that we have found the way to bridge the
gap between the visible world and the dark sector of physics — portals.
Portal to the Dark Sector
Now, when you hear of portals, you likely think of some science
fiction adventure or debates on whether the cake is a lie, but we’re not
talking about those kinds of portals. These portals would exist in the quantum
realm, the scale of which is nearly incomprehensibly small.
These portals have been dubbed “dark axion portals,” based
on the two hypothetical dark sector particles scientists have already
postulated — the axion and the dark photon. An axion is a theoretical particle
thought to be very light, much lighter than an electron, that theoretical
physicists believe could solve some mathematical problems with the standard
model. Dark photons are theoretically like photons that make up visible light,
except that we cannot easily interact with or detect them.
The communication between the visible and the “dark”
particles would be facilitated by heavy quarks (one of the quantum particles in
the Standard Model) also having a dark charge. Having such a charge would allow
the quark to couple to dark photons, thus bridging the gap between the two
“worlds.”
“The dark axion portal suggests the first meaningful
connection between the two physics, which have been studied separately: it
connects the dots, this will allow reinterpretation of the previous data, and
potentially make a breakthrough in the axion and dark photon searches.” lead
researcher LEE Hye-Sung said in an IBS press release.
The team is now working on proposing experiments that would
use these portals to actually decipher, once and for all, if axions and dark
photons really do exist. We may never know all there is to know about the
universe, but we are definitely working to close that gap.
References: ScienceAlert - Latest, ScienceDaily
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