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We still can't see dark matter. But what if we can hear it?
Black holes smashing together may churn dark matter "butter," scientists say.
Morning Overview on MSN
NASA’s Fermi telescope just caught a halo of 20-GeV gamma rays wrapping the Milky Way’s center — the first-ever direct signal of dark matter
For more than a decade, physicists hunting dark matter in the Milky Way’s core kept circling the same clue: a faint glow of ...
Morning Overview on MSN
A proposed particle would open a channel between visible matter and the fifth dimension — and it looks exactly like the Higgs boson
The Higgs boson was supposed to be the final piece of the Standard Model puzzle. Confirmed at the Large Hadron Collider in ...
Modern cosmology assumes dark matter exists. But what makes us so certain that dark matter is the answer—and what if we're wrong?
An artistic illustration of the mechanism proposed by Professor Stefano Profumo where quantum effects near the rapidly expanding cosmic horizon after the Big Bang gravitationally generate dark matter ...
Dark matter is some kind of substance that has gravity—it holds galaxies together—yet cannot be directly seen with any instrument yet created. We know it’s out there because of the effects it has on ...
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