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1.7.7 Best Bet CDM-Type Models
As said at the outset, the fact that the original CDM model
did so well at predicting both the CMB anisotropies discovered by COBE
and the distribution of galaxies makes it likely that a large fraction
of the dark matter is cold - i.e., that one of the variants of the
SCDM model might turn out to be right. Of these, CHDM
is the best bet if 0
turns out to be near unity and the
Hubble parameter is not too large, while
CDM is the best bet if the
Hubble parameter is too large to permit the universe to be older than
its stars with
= 1 (e.g.,
Chs. 4 and 8, Section 11.4).
Both theories do seem less ``natural'' than SCDM, in that they are both hybrid theories. But although SCDM won the beauty contest, it doesn't fit the data.
CHDM is just SCDM with some light neutrinos. After all, we know that
neutrinos exist, and there is experimental evidence - admittedly not
yet entirely convincing - that at least some of these neutrinos have
mass, possibly in the few-eV range necessary for CHDM.
Isn't it an unnatural coincidence to have three different sorts of
matter - cold, hot, and baryonic - with contributions to the
cosmological density that are within an order of magnitude of each
other? Not necessarily. All of these varieties of matter may have
acquired their mass from (super?)symmetry breaking associated with the
electroweak phase transition, and when we understand the nature of the
physics that determines the masses and charges that are just
adjustable parameters in the Standard Model of particle physics, we
may also understand why
c,
, and
b are so
close. In any case, CHDM is certainly not uglier than
CDM.
In the CDM class of models,
the problem of too much power on small
scales that has been discussed here at some length for
0 = 0.3
and h = 0.7
CDM
implies either that there must be some physical
mechanism that produces strong, scale-dependent anti-biasing of the
galaxies with respect to the dark matter, or else that higher
0 and lower h
are preferred, with a significant amount of
tilt to get the cluster abundance right and avoid too much small-scale
power (KPH96).
Higher
0
0.5 also is more consistent
with the evidence summarized above against large
and in favor of larger
0,
especially in models such as
CDM
with Gaussian primordial fluctuations.
But then h
0.63
for t0
13 Gyr.
Among CHDM models, having N = 2 species share the neutrino mass
gives a better fit to COBE, clusters, and small-scale data than
N
= 1, and moreover
it appears to be favored by the available experimental data
(PHKC95).
But it remains to be seen whether CHDM
models can fit the data on structure formation at high redshifts,
and whether any models of the CDM type can fit all the data
- the data on the values of the cosmological parameters,
the data on the distribution and structure of galaxies at
low and high redshifts, and the increasingly precise CMB
anisotropy data. Reliable data is becoming available so
rapidly now, thanks to the wonderful new ground and
space-based instruments, that the next few years will be
decisive.
The fact that NASA and the European Space Agency plan to launch the COBE follow-up satellites MAP and COBRAS/SAMBA in the early years of the next decade, with ground and balloon-based detectors promising to provide precise data on CMB anisotropies even earlier, means that we are bound to know much more soon about the two key questions of modern cosmology: the nature of the dark matter and of the initial fluctuations. Meanwhile, many astrophysicists, including my colleagues and I, will be trying to answer these questions using data on galaxy distribution, evolution, and structure, in addition to the CMB data. And there is a good chance that in the next few years important inputs will come from particle physics experiments on dark matter candidate particles or the theories that lead to them, such as supersymmetry.
Acknowledgments
This work was partially supported by NASA and NSF grants at UCSC. JRP thanks his Santa Cruz colleagues and all his collaborators, especially Anatoly Klypin, for many helpful discussions of the material presented here. Special thanks to James Bullock, Avishai Dekel, Patrik Jonsson, and Tsafrir Kolatt for reading an earlier draft and of this manuscript and for helpful suggestions for its improvement.