Two tiny dots encircled and projected on a screen in the University of Minnesota's physics building Friday afternoon signaled a potentially monumental discovery.
As a roomful of sometimes skeptical scientists looked on, a researcher stated his case for why a group of physicists believe that in a northern Minnesota lab at the bottom of an old iron mine a half-mile underground, they may have discovered a key to understanding the universe:
Dark matter.
It is believed to account for most of the universe's total matter. If its existence can be proven, it would go a long way toward unlocking celestial mysteries that have baffled scientists.
"There is not enough gravity in observable matter to keep stars and galaxies together," said Marvin Marshak, the University of Minnesota physics professor who directs the lab at the Soudan underground mine near Ely. The fact that these spiraling entities don't fly apart suggests that something else holds them together, something humans can't see.
How they've searched for it reads like science fiction: Deep underground, away from the worst interference from cosmic rays, they installed 30 cryogenic detectors out of germanium and silicon and cooled them to nearly absolute zero -- minus 459.69 degrees Fahrenheit.
Then, those part of the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search experiment monitored the detectors for signs of collisions caused by weakly interacting massive particles [WIMPs], which could be a type of dark matter created just before the Big Bang.
Particle physics theories suggest that WIMPs would rarely interact with normal matter but may occasionally bounce off or scatter from an atomic nucleus like billiard balls, leaving a small amount of energy that is detectable under the right conditions. The Soudan lab has been searching for WIMPs since 2003.