Dark matter is a mysterious substance that glues galaxies together. This map from the James Webb Space Telescope could help ...
Dark matter doesn't absorb or give off light so scientists can't study it directly. But they can observe how its gravity ...
Astronomers puzzled out minuscule distortions in images of faraway galaxies taken by JWST in order to chart the invisible ...
The invisible stuff makes up about 85 percent of all matter in the universe, but researchers know little about it ...
A new high-resolution map of distant galaxies may help scientists understand a mysterious invisible substance that helps hold the universe ...
UC Santa Cruz physicist Stefano Profumo has put forward two imaginative but scientifically grounded theories that may help solve one of the biggest mysteries in physics: the origin of dark matter. In ...
Scientists have discovered that dark matter, the universe's most mysterious "stuff," obeys gravity on vast cosmological scales. This could help to dismiss the possibility of a fifth fundamental force ...
This may be remembered as one of the more important physics images of this generation. Credit: Tomonori Totani, The University of Tokyo Physicists from Japan's University of Tokyo have published a new ...
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