An international collaboration of scientists from Durham University in the UK, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and École ...
Scientists are shining a brighter light on dark matter thanks to a new high-resolution map, unveiling the invisible material ...
By Will Dunham WASHINGTON, Jan 26 (Reuters) - Using observations from the James Webb Space Telescope in a patch of the sky ...
A new simulation tool lets scientists explore whether self-interacting dark matter could reshape galaxies from the inside out ...
Findings allow scientists to learn more about dark matter’s influence on stars, galaxies, and planets ...
This new map is not only the most detailed view of the universe’s invisible scaffolding to date, it also allows astronomers to look deeper into cosmic history.
Physicists have unveiled a new way to simulate a mysterious form of dark matter that can collide with itself but not with ...
The new research suggests an alternative origin. Dark matter could have instead been born extremely hot, opening up ...
Recent studies suggest a revolutionary perspective on dark matter, proposing that it behaves like a cosmic superfluid, flowing dynamically and forming vortex lines within galaxies. This challenges ...
The map provides insights into the universe's evolution, tracing dark matter's influence back to when galaxies were forming ...
Just as the sun has planets and the planets have moons, our galaxy has satellite galaxies, and some of those might have smaller satellite galaxies of their own. To wit, the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC ...
The standard model for how galaxies formed in the early universe predicted that the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) would see dim signals from small, primitive galaxies. But data are not confirming ...