Dark matter is a mysterious substance composing most of the material universe, now widely thought to be some form of massive exotic particle. An
intriguing1 alternative view is that dark matter is made of black holes formed during the first second of our universe's existence, known as
primordial2 black holes. Now a scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, suggests that this
interpretation3 aligns4 with our knowledge of cosmic
infrared5 and X-ray background glows and may explain the unexpectedly high masses of
merging6 black holes detected last year. "This study is an effort to bring together a broad set of ideas and observations to test how well they fit, and the fit is surprisingly good," said Alexander Kashlinsky, an astrophysicist at NASA Goddard. "If this is correct, then all
galaxies7, including our own, are
embedded8 within a vast sphere of black holes each about 30 times the sun's mass."
In 2005, Kashlinsky led a team of
astronomers9 using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope to explore the background glow of infrared light in one part of the sky. The researchers reported excessive patchiness in the glow and concluded it was likely caused by the
aggregate10 light of the first sources to
illuminate11 the universe more than 13 billion years ago. Follow-up studies confirmed that this cosmic infrared background (CIB) showed similar unexpected structure in other parts of the sky.
In 2013, another study compared how the cosmic X-ray background (CXB) detected by NASA's Chandra X-ray
Observatory12 compared to the CIB in the same area of the sky. The first stars emitted mainly optical and ultraviolet light, which today is stretched into the infrared by the expansion of space, so they should not contribute significantly to the CXB.
Yet the irregular glow of low-energy X-rays in the CXB matched the patchiness of the CIB quite well. The only object we know of that can be
sufficiently13 luminous14 across this wide an energy range is a black hole. The research team concluded that primordial black holes must have been abundant among the earliest stars, making up at least about one out of every five of the sources contributing to the CIB.
The nature of dark matter
remains15 one of the most important unresolved issues in astrophysics. Scientists currently favor theoretical models that explain dark matter as an exotic massive particle, but so far searches have failed to turn up evidence these hypothetical particles actually exist. NASA is currently investigating this issue as part of its Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer and Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope missions.
"These studies are providing increasingly sensitive results, slowly shrinking the box of
parameters16 where dark matter particles can hide," Kashlinsky said. "The failure to find them has led to renewed interest in studying how well primordial black holes -- black holes formed in the universe's first fraction of a second -- could work as dark matter."