Despite making up most of the matter in the universe, dark matter doesn't interact with light. So how do astronomers know it is there?| Space
Scientists used a fossil relic left over from the Big Bang to perform the earliest detection of dark matter ever.| Space
Dark matter from billions of years ago has finally been detected by scientists on Earth.| The Independent
Dark matter was likely the starting ingredient for brewing up the very first galaxies in the universe. Shortly after the Big Bang, particles of dark matter would have clumped together in gravitational “halos,” pulling surrounding gas into their cores, which over time cooled and condensed into the first galaxies.| AZoQuantum
AZoQuantum talks to Dr. Sunny Vagnozzi, a researcher at the University of Cambridge, about his work relating to the direct detection of dark energy.| AZoQuantum
Cosmic ray research spanning a century has led us to a new era where these rays hold the potential to shed light on unresolved topics such as dark matter and dark energy, thanks to their energies surpassing those achievable by accelerators on Earth.| AZoQuantum
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AZoQuantum spoke to Matthew Walker, associate professor of astrophysics and cosmology at Carnegie Mellon University, about the James Webb Telescope and the dark matter research that hopes to draw on its findings.| AZoQuantum