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I know dark matter. Nobody has ever seen dark matter, but I do ... I see it better than anyone ... I've got the best ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNInvisible hydrogen promises to unfold the secrets of neutron decay and dark matterThe hidden neutron decay route. Typically, when a neutron decays, it splits into three particles: a proton, an electron, and ...
However, the USTC researchers have revealed that dark matter halos hosting dwarf galaxies also exhibit halo bias, which is ...
Researchers repurposed an experiment originally intended to detect gravity, which involved a floating magnet in a ...
Besides particles like sterile neutrinos, axions and weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs), a leading candidate for ...
Researchers have an explanation for how dark matter emerged - beginning with weightless particles and ending with massive ...
A research team led by Prof. Wang Huiyuan from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) has made a ...
Never has this been the case more than with dark matter. Though it's far more abundant than the matter we can see and feel, dark matter as we know it is virtually immune to observation ...
Evidence suggests that we are suspended in a cosmic sea of dark matter, a mysterious substance that shapes galaxies and large structures in the universe but is transparent to photons, the carriers ...
Scientists call that dark matter, because it does not interact with light and is invisible. In the 1970s, American astronomers Vera Rubin and W. Kent Ford confirmed dark matter’s existence by ...
Dartmouth researchers propose a novel theory suggesting dark matter originated from high-energy, massless particles in the ...
But in a new study, published in Physical Review Letters, we show that both could be linked to one of the most elusive ingredients in the universe: dark matter. In particular, we propose that a ...
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