Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dark_matterDark matter - Wikipedia

    In astronomy, dark matter is a hypothetical form of matter that appears not to interact with light or the electromagnetic field.Dark matter is implied by gravitational effects which cannot be explained by general relativity unless more matter is present than can be seen. Such effects occur in the context of formation and evolution of galaxies, gravitational lensing, the observable universe's ...

  2. Dark Matter: Created by Blake Crouch. With Joel Edgerton, Jennifer Connelly, Alice Braga, Jimmi Simpson. A man is abducted into an alternate version of his life. Amid the mind-bending landscape of lives he could've lived, he embarks on a harrowing journey to get back to his true family and save them from a most terrifying foe: himself.

  3. Jul 18, 2024 · dark matter, a component of the universe whose presence is discerned from its gravitational attraction rather than its luminosity. Dark matter makes up 30.1 percent of the matter-energy composition of the universe; the rest is dark energy (69.4 percent) and “ordinary” visible matter (0.5 percent).. Originally known as the “missing mass,” dark matter’s existence was first inferred by ...

  4. Jan 28, 2022 · Dark matter emits no light, and cannot be directly observed, but scientists think that it and dark energy make up most of the mass of the universe.

  5. Overview Everything scientists can observe in the universe, from people to planets, is made of matter. Matter is defined as any substance that has mass and occupies space. But there’s more to the universe than the matter we can see. Dark matter and dark energy are mysterious substances that affect and shape the cosmos, and […]

  6. May 9, 2018 · Illustration by Chris Gash. Physicists and astronomers have determined that most of the material in the universe is “dark matter”—whose existence we infer from its gravitational effects but ...

  7. Jul 9, 2024 · Dark matter is stuff in space that has gravity, but it is invisible and isn’t like anything else we know about. Dark matter makes up about 27% of the universe.

  8. home.cern › science › physicsDark matter | CERN

    Invisible dark matter makes up most of the universe – but we can only detect it from its gravitational effects Galaxies in our universe seem to be achieving an impossible feat. They are rotating with such speed that the gravity generated by their observable matter could not possibly hold them ...

  9. Dark matter is very different from the ordinary matter we see and interact with every day. Dark matter interacts very weakly or almost not at all with the ordinary matter that we and our measuring instruments are made of. The exception is that dark matter does exert gravitational attraction, just like ordinary matter.

  10. science.nasa.gov › mission › roman-space-telescopeDark Matter - NASA Science

    Scientists first suspected dark matter’s existence over 80 years ago when Swiss-American astronomer Fritz Zwicky observed that galaxies in the Coma cluster were moving so quickly they should have been flung away into space – yet they remained gravitationally bound to the cluster by unseen matter. Then in the 1970s, American astronomer Vera Rubin discovered […]

  1. People also search for