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Scientists think the mysterious glow in our galaxy could be from dark matter. What that means
A gamma ray glow at our galaxy’s center has puzzled scientists for almost two decades. New computer simulations back the ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Is This Mysterious Glow at the Center of the Milky Way Caused by Dark Matter?
An excess of gamma rays in the center of our galaxy could mean scientists have finally detected dark matter particles—or not ...
New research shows that dark matter has a different distribution in our galaxy than previously thought, and that advances ...
Scientists at Johns Hopkins may be closing in on dark matter’s elusive trail, uncovering a mysterious gamma ray glow at the ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Pulsars or dark matter? The Milky Way’s central glow just got more puzzling
For over a decade, a dim but persistent glow near the center of the Milky Way has confused astronomers. This mysterious ...
Scientists may have made an "out of this world" discovery. New research suggests that a mysterious glow in our galaxy might be caused by dark matter, an invisible form of matter believed to be five ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Dark matter may flow like cosmic superfluid, forming vortex lines inside galaxies: Study
Dark matter makes up about 85 percent of all matter in the universe. It neither emits nor absorbs light, making it invisible ...
At the heart of the Milky Way, a faint and widespread glow of gamma rays has puzzled astronomers for decades. The light could be the result of dark matter particles colliding, or it might come from ...
Detecting dark matter—the mysterious substance that holds galaxies together—is one of the greatest unsolved problems in ...
Japanese scientists simulated faint 21-centimeter radio waves from the Universe’s “Dark Ages,” offering a potential way to ...
The enigmatic existence of dark matter has been perplexing for scientists as it, for decades, remains stubbornly hidden from ...
Space.com on MSN
Not-so-dark matter? Mysterious substance might leave red and blue 'fingerprints' on light
"It's a fairly unusual question to ask in the scientific world, because most researchers would agree that dark matter is dark ...
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