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Dazzling dark matter display previews online

13/03/2020 1491 views 8 likes
ESA / Space in Member States / Ireland

An illuminating visualisation of dark matter by Dutch artist Thijs Biersteker of Woven Studios has gone on show in the Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin.

Created in collaboration with ESA and Leiden University in the Netherlands, the installation will be on display from 13 March. As the gallery is temporary closed to visitors due to public health concerns, moving images of the creation will be shown online.

The work – ‘Dark Distortions’ – was inspired by Euclid, a forthcoming ESA mission to study the mysterious nature of dark matter and dark energy, which is due to launch in mid-2022.

The artwork bends light
The artwork bends light

Dark matter is thought to account for 85% of the matter in the universe. Visible stuff within galaxies – such as stars and planets and dust – has insufficient gravitational pull to prevent galaxies from disintegrating as they rotate. But galaxies don’t fly apart in this way, so astrophysicists proposed that they must contain “dark” matter that has sufficient mass to keep galaxies intact – but which has never been seen directly.

Multiple lenses bend the light
Multiple lenses bend the light

Thijs Biersteker’s art installation consists of a constellation of moving lenses, which bend light just as large concentrations of dark matter act as gravitational lenses. The constellation is surrounded by layers of lenses on lenses, which represent the way in which dark matter is thought to accumulate in a fractal-like pattern.

“The work uncovers the unseeable nature of dark matter in front of your eyes,” says Biersteker. “It shows how magical and powerful it is when art and science come together. Visitors experience how big scientific discoveries can be beautifully complex and simple at the same time.”

Henk Hoekstra of Leiden University, who is the cosmology coordinator of the Euclid mission, helped to inspire the work.

“We go for abstraction,” says Henk Hoekstra. “We have a model of the universe that is very abstract and far from how our senses experience the world.

“This artwork takes this abstraction and tries to make it something that connects to our senses. It is a very interesting synergy.”

‘Dark Distortions’ forms part of a free exhibition called Invisible at the Science Gallery Dublin that combines art, physics and philosophy and runs until 31 May.